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              <text>Students' junk mail&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Dane- VanDyke&#13;
keeps "posted&#13;
Page 7&#13;
99 Sports features:&#13;
Dannehl and Oberbruner&#13;
Page 12&#13;
Chancellor to leave for Ohio position&#13;
Alan E. Guskin, Parkside Chancellor,&#13;
has accepted the presidency&#13;
of Antioch University in Yellow&#13;
Springs, Ohio, a national university&#13;
with a distinctive niche in American&#13;
higher education. He will assume&#13;
his new duties on Sept. 1, exactly&#13;
ten years after assuming the&#13;
~ Parkside chancellorship.&#13;
Guskin, 48, will become the 17th&#13;
president of Antioch, whose founding&#13;
president in 1852 was noted&#13;
educator and social reformer Horace&#13;
Mann.&#13;
The announcement of Guskin's&#13;
appointment was made Wednesday&#13;
morning in Yellow Springs by Robert&#13;
Aller, Antioch's Board of Trustees&#13;
chairman, who co-chaired a national&#13;
search involving 250 nominations&#13;
to replace William M. Birenbaum,&#13;
who resigned last year after&#13;
eight years as Antioch president.&#13;
Antioch University consists of innovative&#13;
Antioch College in Yellow&#13;
Springs, a law school in Washington,&#13;
D.C., adult degree centers in&#13;
Philadelphia, Keene, N.H., San&#13;
Francisco, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara&#13;
and Seattle, and overseas programs&#13;
with learning centers in London&#13;
and Tubingen, West Germany.&#13;
Current enrollment on all campuses&#13;
is about 3,000.&#13;
Guskin's salary at Antioch will be&#13;
$82,000. His current Parkside salary&#13;
is $69,000.&#13;
Aller said the 15-member search&#13;
committee included Antioch trustees,&#13;
faculty and students as well as&#13;
four prominent educators who are&#13;
Antioch alumni: the dean of the&#13;
Ohio State School of Engineering,&#13;
the vice chancellor and graduate&#13;
school head at the University of&#13;
Kansas, the Kirstein Professor of&#13;
Human Relations at Harvard and&#13;
the dean of the Johns Hopkins&#13;
School of International Studies.&#13;
Antioch's unique reputation in&#13;
higher education rests on its pioneering&#13;
efforts in areas such as&#13;
cooperative education, in which&#13;
students alternate school with work&#13;
experience; use of diverse settings&#13;
for learning; individualized education;&#13;
study abroad programs; and&#13;
opportunity for disadvantaged,&#13;
women and minority students.&#13;
Antioch was the first private college&#13;
to institute cooperative education,&#13;
and still has the most extensive&#13;
program, with six co-op quarters&#13;
of work experience required&#13;
for graduation.&#13;
In 1852 Antioch was the first college&#13;
to admit women as equals to&#13;
men and the first to have a female&#13;
faculty member hold an equal position&#13;
with men. In 1863 it was one of&#13;
the first colleges in America to formally&#13;
prohibit race discrimination&#13;
in admissions.&#13;
"Alan Guskin's coming to Antioch&#13;
is a cause for rejoicing," Aller&#13;
said in announcing the appointment.&#13;
"His extensive experience as&#13;
a senior academic administrator,&#13;
teacher and scholar has had an unmistakable&#13;
Antioehian flavor, with&#13;
focus on innovation with quality,&#13;
development of values central to&#13;
the educational experience, service&#13;
to the disadvantaged and a strong&#13;
collaborative leadership style,''&#13;
Aller said.&#13;
"It is extremely difficult to leave&#13;
such a special place as Parkside,"&#13;
said Guskin. "This university is a&#13;
jewel within the UW System. It has&#13;
come so far in such a short period&#13;
of time, and still has so much potential.&#13;
We have an outstanding faculty&#13;
and staff.&#13;
"The future of this university&#13;
and this corner of Wisconsin are inseparably&#13;
linked," Guskin continued.&#13;
"With effort and cooperation,&#13;
that future can be brighter than&#13;
most of us have yet dreamed.&#13;
"This has been our life for a decade,&#13;
and there will be much pain in&#13;
leaving our many friends and colleagues,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
"But it is a rare opportunity and&#13;
grear honor for me to become&#13;
president of an insititution which I&#13;
have respected and admired for so&#13;
long as one of the most distinctive&#13;
and worthwhile in the country.&#13;
Antioch has always stood for important&#13;
social and educational&#13;
values which Judy and I hold dear&#13;
and which have influenced our&#13;
lives. Those values were important&#13;
in the decision to accept the presidency&#13;
of Antioch," he said.&#13;
Guskin's wife, Judy, an adjunct&#13;
associate professor of anthropology&#13;
at Parkside who has enjoyed success&#13;
as an independent producer of&#13;
educational television programs,&#13;
has accepted a position as television&#13;
producer in residence at Antioch&#13;
and will work closely with public&#13;
television stations in the Dayton-&#13;
Cincinnati area.&#13;
Robert O'Neil, UW System president,&#13;
said he was "delighted for&#13;
Alan and Judy since Antioch is the&#13;
perfect match for them." He cited&#13;
the "many natural affinities between&#13;
Parkside and Antioch"&#13;
under Guskin, saying "For the very&#13;
reasons that he has been an outstanding&#13;
chancellor at Parkside, he&#13;
will be an absolutely superb president&#13;
of Antioch."&#13;
Under Guskin, Parkside has significantly&#13;
upgraded the quality of&#13;
its faculty, academic programs and&#13;
research commitment, increased&#13;
the number of majors and focused&#13;
on those which relate to area&#13;
needs, begun master's degree programs,&#13;
implemented a comprehensive&#13;
outreach program of involvement&#13;
with the communities, and&#13;
achieved positions of national leadership&#13;
for its 'teaching' library, its&#13;
academic skills competency requirements&#13;
and its high school motivational&#13;
program for minority&#13;
youth.&#13;
Guskin's achievements at Parkside&#13;
have earned him recognition as&#13;
a national leader in higher education.&#13;
He has served on the national&#13;
board of directors of the American&#13;
Association of State Colleges and&#13;
Universities and has written and&#13;
consulted widely on university leadership&#13;
and directions for the future&#13;
of higher education.&#13;
He came to Parkside in 1975&#13;
from Clark University in Worchester,&#13;
Mass., where he was provost&#13;
and acting president. He was a faculty&#13;
member there and at the University&#13;
of Michigan, where he was&#13;
assistant director of the Center for&#13;
Research on the Utilization of Scientific&#13;
Knowledge.&#13;
As graduate students, Guskin and&#13;
his wife Judy, also a Michigan&#13;
Ph.D., organized the student movement&#13;
at Michigan which was widely&#13;
credited with inspiring John F.&#13;
Kennedy to found the Peace Corps.&#13;
The Guskins later went on to become&#13;
among the first Peace Corps&#13;
volunteers to Thailand. Guskin&#13;
later helped establish VISTA as a&#13;
member of the President's Task&#13;
Force on the War Against Poverty&#13;
and served as director of VISTA's&#13;
selection division.&#13;
The Guskins have two daughters,&#13;
Sharon 19, a sophomore at Yale,&#13;
and Andrea, 14 a freshman at Prairie&#13;
School in Racine.&#13;
A search and screen committee&#13;
will be appointed to conduct a national&#13;
search for a successor to&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Hearing held today on requirement changes&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee&#13;
will hold a hearing on proposed&#13;
changes in graduation requirements&#13;
today, March 28, at 3 p.m. in Moln.&#13;
105.&#13;
The following is a discription of&#13;
the proposed requirements:&#13;
1. Students must obtain a passing&#13;
grade in English 102. (Note: English&#13;
102 is the second semester of a&#13;
year-long freshman English course.&#13;
Students may place into, but not&#13;
beyond, English 102 by achieving a&#13;
satisfactory score on the English&#13;
Placement Exam. The student's&#13;
score on the placement exam will&#13;
determine whether he/she places&#13;
into English 99, pre-college English,&#13;
English 101 first-semester&#13;
English or English 102.)&#13;
2. Students must obtain satisfactory&#13;
grades (as determined by an&#13;
English Proficiency Committee) on&#13;
both of the following proficiency&#13;
examinations: A. An objective English&#13;
composition proficiency examination&#13;
(normally taken before the&#13;
student enrolls in English 102). B.&#13;
A writing sample examination.&#13;
(Note: The student must successfully&#13;
complete Examination A before&#13;
taking Examination B. Both&#13;
» examinations must be retaken until&#13;
performance is satisfactory. Course&#13;
work does not satisfy the proficiency&#13;
requirement).&#13;
The proposal is recommended to&#13;
replace the current reading-writinglibrary&#13;
skills requirement. In addition,&#13;
APC plans to incorporate library&#13;
skills into English 99,101 and&#13;
102.&#13;
James Shea, Chair of APC, said&#13;
the committee has been working on&#13;
the proposal since the fall.&#13;
"The general feeling is that students&#13;
need more time in class and&#13;
they also need all the help they can&#13;
get in writing skills. Many students&#13;
who enter college are sadly deficient&#13;
in their writing skills. We&#13;
tried to deal with that problem&#13;
with the skills tests route but that&#13;
hasn't been altogether satisfactory.&#13;
I personally think the proposal&#13;
makes a lot of sense. Students who&#13;
need more help will get it and&#13;
those who have ability will not be&#13;
held up," said Shea.&#13;
If the proposal is sent to and&#13;
adopted by the Faculty Senate, it&#13;
would apply to students who begin&#13;
taking courses at Parkside in the&#13;
fall of 1988 or later.&#13;
Shea urges anyone who would&#13;
like to comment on the proposal to&#13;
attend the hearing today.&#13;
2 Thursday, March 28,1985 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Shared governance&#13;
is essential&#13;
Shared governance — tw o words that are very important and very&#13;
necessary in the operation of this university. Ask any administrator if&#13;
shared governance is important or if they believe in it. They would&#13;
answer with a resounding "YES!" But of course, shared governance&#13;
is mandated by law (Wisconsin State Merger Statute, article 36.9 (5)).&#13;
It guarantees students' rights to have a voice in the policy making of&#13;
educational institutions.&#13;
Administrators would be foolish to outwardly deny the importance&#13;
of such a law. But how many administrators, or students for that&#13;
matter, realize the full implications of those two words, shared governance?&#13;
It is more than just an impressive article to quote at cocktail&#13;
parties, it is the thread that links students to the heart of the university&#13;
—. these two words evoke the powerful realization that students&#13;
do have a voice in the intricate policy making of their university.&#13;
Recently, on several occasions, the necessity of shared governance&#13;
has been overlooked.&#13;
• The amount of campus reserve monies and the projections for its&#13;
use for campus organizations were withheld from the Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee, the student committee in charge&#13;
of campus funding, but the projections appeared in a Racine Journal&#13;
Times newspaper article.&#13;
• The Student Organizations Council was not informed about an&#13;
administrative decision to provide office space for the Black Student&#13;
Organization until after the club had already moved into the space.&#13;
BSO is a recognized club through SOC.&#13;
• The Parkside Union Advisory Board was not consulted with, or&#13;
informed of the Union management's decision to limit the Union&#13;
Square Grill's operating hours.&#13;
It is not that we feel the Parkside administration is purposely withholding&#13;
important information from students, like the above examples,&#13;
but it appears shared governance is becoming an afterthought&#13;
rather than a forethought.&#13;
We urge the administration, as well as students, to work harder toward&#13;
the goal of total shared governance. Students must have the opportunity&#13;
to participate in policy making on this campus.&#13;
Campaign finance&#13;
laws bite back&#13;
Senate Majority Leader Tim Cullen&#13;
(D-Janesville) has introduced&#13;
legislation which he says will "put&#13;
teeth into" Wisconsin's campaign&#13;
finance laws.&#13;
"It's time we made a serious effort&#13;
in Wisconsin to bring the cost&#13;
of campaigns back in line," Cullen&#13;
said, adding that many candidates&#13;
are funded privately.&#13;
"The key to controlling the influence&#13;
of special interest money in&#13;
elections is to limit the total spending&#13;
on legislative races," he said.&#13;
Under the proposal, a candidate&#13;
for legislative office will be eligible&#13;
to receive double the amount of&#13;
public funding if his or her opponent&#13;
chooses not to accept a grant&#13;
from the Wisconsin Election Campaign&#13;
Fund.&#13;
Under Wisconsin law, candidates&#13;
for public office who receive a campaign&#13;
finance grant are subject to&#13;
spending limits. "However, if one&#13;
candidate refuses the grant, all limits&#13;
are off," Cullen explained.&#13;
Cullen pointed out that the limits&#13;
for the November 1984 elections&#13;
were $32,225 for a candidate for the&#13;
State Senate and $16,100 for a candidate&#13;
for the State Assembly. Of&#13;
this amount, a Senate candidate&#13;
was eligible for a $14,501 grant&#13;
from the Wisconsin Election Campaign&#13;
Fund and an Assembly candidate&#13;
was eligible for a $7,245 grant&#13;
from the fund.&#13;
But in one race last fall where no&#13;
limits were in place, nearly $95,000&#13;
was spent by one candidate.&#13;
Cullen has also proposed to allow&#13;
tax filers who have no tax liability&#13;
to designate $1 to the Wisconsin&#13;
Election Campaign Fund. This&#13;
provision will generate approximately&#13;
$100,000 in additional&#13;
money to the fund.&#13;
"I am convinced that the adoption&#13;
of these two proposals will&#13;
make the public financing of campaigns&#13;
for legislative offices so appealing&#13;
that very few candidates&#13;
will choose not to accept the&#13;
grant," Cullen said.&#13;
IF YOU IN THE CONGRESS&#13;
DONT GIVE US THIS AID&#13;
FOR THE CONTRAS, WE'LL&#13;
JUST HAVE TO COMMIT&#13;
OUR OWN TROOPS TO A&#13;
WAR WITH NICARAGUA&#13;
LATER ON.&#13;
AND IF YOU DON'T&#13;
LET US GO TO WAR WITH&#13;
NICARAGUA, WE'LL HAVE&#13;
TO FIGHT BOTH THEM&#13;
AND THE CUBANS.'&#13;
AND IF WAT'S NOT&#13;
ENOUGH, WE'LL&#13;
HAVE TO DROP&#13;
150 THOUSAND ,&#13;
icmpMhtl-&#13;
PA0M OM&#13;
AND YOU WON'T&#13;
LET US FIGHT CUBA&#13;
AND NICARAGUA, WE'LL&#13;
HAVE TO DECLARE WAR&#13;
ON CUB A, NICARAGUA, „&#13;
AND THE WHOLE \ frSTER^roitfM&#13;
SO YOU MIGHT&#13;
AS WELL GIVE IN TO&#13;
ADMINISTRATION&#13;
REQUESTS NOW...&#13;
WHILE WE'RE STILL&#13;
BEING NZASOA/ABLE.&#13;
Nobody asked me, but...&#13;
Women are exploited by men&#13;
by Joan Mattox&#13;
Women are the hearts, souls and&#13;
victims in society. A woman is the&#13;
reliable backbone when her man&#13;
faces hardships, disappointments&#13;
and failures. Her sturdy limbs support&#13;
his ambitions as his jellied&#13;
shanks falter under the unexpected&#13;
difficulties. She rises at 5 a.m. to&#13;
fix his breakfast and is beaten at 6&#13;
p.m. that night for not having his&#13;
dinner on the table, but the breakfast&#13;
is on the table at 5 a.m. the&#13;
next morning, as usual.&#13;
What is it about a woman that&#13;
makes her a victim in so many&#13;
ways? Where do women get the resilience&#13;
to bounce back day after&#13;
day after being exploited so severely&#13;
by the male population? Is it&#13;
a woman's dependence on a man, is&#13;
it a kind heart, or is it just plain ignorance?&#13;
Let's examine 'the subject of&#13;
prostitution. A 13-year-old girl on&#13;
the streets is hustling for chump&#13;
change that tailors and Cadillacs&#13;
her pimp. He feeds off his little&#13;
prodigy until she reaches the ripe&#13;
old age of 16, then tells her that her&#13;
services are no longer needed. He&#13;
leaves her with nothing — no&#13;
home, no security, no money and&#13;
no self-esteem. She has been exploited&#13;
to the point that she probably&#13;
identified with this low-life as a&#13;
father figure. The other girls he exploited&#13;
were her sisters and her&#13;
home was the streets. She is a girl&#13;
who only feels self-worth when others&#13;
use and feed off of her because&#13;
this gives her that feeling of being&#13;
needed.&#13;
Sexual exploitation usually ties in&#13;
with mental exploitation. Many&#13;
men have this uncanny ability to&#13;
make a woman feel less than she&#13;
really is. The constant reminder of&#13;
who brings the money in and who&#13;
belongs in the kitchen is an example&#13;
of this ability. "Stick to what you&#13;
do best, scrubbing and shopping."&#13;
It is as if some men want women to&#13;
live in a vacuum and just let men&#13;
run the world. Many goals and ambitions&#13;
that women have are quickly&#13;
shot down by just one sour note&#13;
from a man. It's nothing but a&#13;
mind game. If women were more&#13;
confident about what they want&#13;
and how they can go about getting&#13;
it, things that men say wouldn't&#13;
take such a high priority. Confidence&#13;
in ourselves is all it takes.&#13;
Economic exploitation seems to&#13;
be the "now" thing to do to&#13;
women. While a man may have the&#13;
same job as a woman, the man's&#13;
salary may be considerably higher.&#13;
This is the case in many jobs, but&#13;
more and more women are taking a&#13;
stance against this exploitation.&#13;
They claim and demand that their&#13;
salaries match those of their male&#13;
co-workers. A woman's promotion&#13;
may take a back seat to a man's,&#13;
even if she is more qualified.&#13;
It seems as if men want all the&#13;
high positions in this world to be&#13;
run by men; men want to be the&#13;
dominant force. That says male supremacy&#13;
to me. It seems as if men&#13;
want the female to be dependent&#13;
upon the male for everything. I&#13;
think they feel that if a woman has&#13;
a comparable job and income, the&#13;
female won't need males anymore.&#13;
That sounds like insecurity. Men&#13;
need someone to depend on them&#13;
so they can feel self-worth, so they&#13;
try to exploit the woman and keep&#13;
her down. They do not want her to&#13;
advance herself socially or economically,&#13;
so they oppress her.&#13;
They oppress her physically as well&#13;
as mentally.&#13;
I feel for the woman who has&#13;
gone through life and not found&#13;
herself, a woman who jumps to fulfill&#13;
a man's every want and need&#13;
while forsaking her own, a woman&#13;
who has never discovered her likes&#13;
and dislikes, abilities and inabilities.&#13;
I feel for the woman who is a&#13;
man's "doormat."&#13;
«O0&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz....&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
Rick Luehr&#13;
Carol Kortendick.&#13;
Dave McEvoy&#13;
Jill Whitney Nielsen.&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Pat Zirkelbach&#13;
Brenda Buchanan..&#13;
Editor&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
Community News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
.... Advertising Manager&#13;
... Distribution Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Kan Dixon, Natal ie Haberman, Darryl&#13;
Hahn, Kimberlie Kranich, Steve&#13;
Kratochvil, Jeff Leisgang, Robb Luehr,&#13;
Joan Mattox, Julie Pendleton, Kevin&#13;
Zirkelbach.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
Jay Crapser, Scott Curty, Darryl Hahn,&#13;
Kris tine Odegaard, Ann Rupert.&#13;
Ranger is written end edited by students at UW-Parkside end they are solely responsible&#13;
for its editorial policy end content. Published every Thursday during the&#13;
academic year except during breaks and holidays.&#13;
Renger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger. University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Box No. 2000. Kenosha. Wl 53141. Telephone (414) 553-&#13;
2295 or (414) 553-2287.&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
size paper. Letters should be less than 350 words and must be signed, with a telephone&#13;
number included for verification pu rposes. Names will be withheld upon request.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 10 aun. for publicatio n Thursday. Ranger&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters and refuse letters containing false and defamatory&#13;
content.&#13;
RANGER 3 Thursday, March 28,1985&#13;
Direct mail aims at students here&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
Community News Editor&#13;
Parkside students, especially juniors&#13;
and seniors, have a lot in common&#13;
with other students around the&#13;
country.&#13;
They get lots of junk mail.&#13;
Since college students are a big&#13;
market — they are estimated to&#13;
spend $50 bill ion yearly — th ey are&#13;
of particular interest to mass marketers,&#13;
and direct mail is perhaps&#13;
the quickest, easiest and most effective&#13;
way to tap that market.&#13;
College students, espcially upperclassmen,&#13;
are believed to be good&#13;
credit risks, and companies like&#13;
American Express or oil companies&#13;
who have their own credit systems&#13;
believe that catching their customers&#13;
early helps to develop brand&#13;
loyalty.&#13;
Phil Blackburn, spokesman for&#13;
Texaco, said his company has traditionally&#13;
targeted upperclassmen. In&#13;
fact, Parkside juniors and seniors&#13;
were recently the target of a direct&#13;
mail campaign for the company's&#13;
credit cards.&#13;
Texaco has had a marketing program&#13;
for several years designed to&#13;
get students to trust the man who&#13;
wears the star and to bring in a&#13;
''good portion" of their disposable&#13;
income earmarked for petroleum&#13;
products, he said.&#13;
In a recent mailing the company&#13;
made to this area, the words "UWParkside"&#13;
were printed under the&#13;
addressee's name.&#13;
What is not known, though, is&#13;
how mass merchandisers get the&#13;
students' names. Registrar Sue&#13;
Johnson said the school does not&#13;
release information about students,&#13;
except to verify attendance dates&#13;
for prospective employers.&#13;
She said, however, that campus&#13;
directories are freely available, and&#13;
all someone interested in getting a&#13;
list of students' names and addresses&#13;
has to do is come here and buy&#13;
one for a dollar.&#13;
Bill Robbins, coordinator of&#13;
news and information, said Parkside&#13;
does not honor requests for directories,&#13;
but they are available on&#13;
campus. "If people really want to&#13;
get a directory, they can get one,"&#13;
he said. "It's a public document."&#13;
Johnson said students are not required&#13;
to be listed in the directory.&#13;
She said it is necessary that a request&#13;
to withhold a student's name&#13;
from the directory be filed at the&#13;
registrar's office.&#13;
A large portion of the mail students&#13;
receive is from the military.&#13;
The armed forces, said Marine&#13;
Staff Sgt. Ted Skierkiewicz of Racine,&#13;
are interested in students in&#13;
both high school and college. College&#13;
students, who usually receive&#13;
mail for officers' programs, receive&#13;
their mail from the recruiting district's&#13;
offices in Milwaukee.&#13;
"What we're selling is jobs," he&#13;
said, "and where better to find&#13;
people without jobs than in high&#13;
school and college?"&#13;
Most companies are more secretive&#13;
about their direct mailing efforts,&#13;
however, and none of those&#13;
asked would comment on specific&#13;
programs.&#13;
Parkside's official position is that&#13;
the university does not release information&#13;
for direct mail campaigns.&#13;
Even so, if a student buys a&#13;
product from another company and&#13;
is identified as a student, they may&#13;
get mail from other companies.&#13;
PSGA officers talk to legislators&#13;
Three members of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government (PSGA) went&#13;
to Madison over spring break to&#13;
talk to state representatives about&#13;
the Student Regent Bill, Stop 21&#13;
and veterans' financial aid. The&#13;
representatives seen were assemblymen&#13;
Peter Barca and John Antaramian&#13;
(Kenosha), Cloyd Porter&#13;
(Burlington) and Jeff Neubauer,&#13;
Scott Fergus and James Ladwig,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
"All the legislators were supportive&#13;
of the Student Regent Bill,"&#13;
stated Chris Baierl, vice-chair of&#13;
the PSGA Legislative Affairs Committee.&#13;
"Porter suggested a clause&#13;
be put into the bill requiring that a&#13;
different UW-System school be&#13;
represented each year."&#13;
The legislators were not as supportive&#13;
of Stop 21. Baierl stated&#13;
that most of them would follow&#13;
their constituents who are "screaming&#13;
for something to be done about&#13;
the drunk driving problem real&#13;
soon."&#13;
The legislators also seemed very&#13;
interested in helping Parkside veterans&#13;
who aren't receiving their&#13;
Federal financial aid on time. Antaramian&#13;
told members of PSGA that&#13;
if enough veterans contacted him,&#13;
he would see what he could do to&#13;
help. Porter said he would help&#13;
with applications.&#13;
Baierl stated "They were very receptive&#13;
and supportive of our efforts."&#13;
Sue Walborn stated that&#13;
they all expressed an interest in&#13;
students' views and "all wanted to&#13;
visit the campus directly."&#13;
I'm driving" hits dead end&#13;
by Jill Whitney Nielsen&#13;
The Parkside Union has no plans&#13;
to implement the "I'm Driving"&#13;
club on campus but does support&#13;
the program. This decision was&#13;
made by the Parkside Union Advisory&#13;
Board (PUAB) at last Friday's&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Bill Niebuhr stated in a report&#13;
that only Marquette had implemented&#13;
the program. "The intial reaction&#13;
to it has been that it isn't being&#13;
utilized much." Jennie Tunkieicz,&#13;
Ranger editor, stated "It's a nice&#13;
concept, but if you are that concerned&#13;
about your friends, you're&#13;
going to drink soda anyway."&#13;
PUAB also discussed the food&#13;
service in the Union Square being&#13;
closed daily from 2 p.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.m. Jack Kemper, Student Organization&#13;
Council (SOC) representative,&#13;
wondered why PUAB wasn't&#13;
notified of the change ahead of&#13;
time. "By having it closed, we're&#13;
limiting the food service on this&#13;
campus to only the coffee shop.&#13;
PUAB is concerned with falling&#13;
sales and ways to make the Union&#13;
more attractive, and then we turn&#13;
around and limit services. How is&#13;
this helping the Union?"&#13;
Niebuhr explained that according&#13;
to statistics, it's just not profitable&#13;
to keep the Union food service&#13;
open between those hours.&#13;
Keith Harmann, Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) representative,&#13;
didn't like the idea of cutting services&#13;
either, and suggested trying&#13;
something like the specials to help&#13;
draw people. Tunkieicz suggested&#13;
more activities like bands to help&#13;
draw people. Niebuhr told PUAB&#13;
that generally with activities, sales&#13;
drop instead of increase.&#13;
Michael Farrell, the newest&#13;
member of PUAB, wondered how&#13;
closing the food service would affect&#13;
sales for the rest of the evening.&#13;
Farrell, who bartends in the&#13;
Square Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
nights, told PUAB that since the&#13;
food service started closing, sales&#13;
for the night have been down. "A&#13;
lot of people might think it's closed&#13;
for the rest of the night and leave,"&#13;
he said. Niebuhr said it would be a&#13;
few weeks until they know how the&#13;
food service's closing has affected&#13;
sales.&#13;
Kemper asked Niebuhr if the&#13;
real reason the food service was&#13;
being closed was to make the bidding&#13;
for a new food service company&#13;
more attractive. Niebuhr admitted&#13;
that had something to do with&#13;
it. "The Union is presenting a contract&#13;
(to potential bidders) that has&#13;
a lot of negatives in it, especially&#13;
with the loss of Gen Con. We have&#13;
to try and make it as attractive as&#13;
possible."&#13;
By law the Union has to re-bid&#13;
for a new food service every five&#13;
years. Niebuhr explained that between&#13;
six and ten companies will&#13;
come to a bidders' meeting at Parkside.&#13;
They will be shown the campus&#13;
and the food service facilities&#13;
and given an opportunity to ask&#13;
questions. The companies then&#13;
have three weeks to send a bid. The&#13;
final decision is made by University&#13;
Purchasing Office in Madison, but&#13;
the campuses do have input.&#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 Unlvarsaltet)&#13;
Woman's Club • 6028 8tti Ave.&#13;
Rov. Tony Larson, Minister&#13;
9:30 am. Sorvlcos A Sun day School&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
Students protest aid cuts&#13;
"Education Cuts Never Heal."&#13;
"Minds, Not Missiles."&#13;
These were two of the signs carried by several hundred students&#13;
who marched in Washington, D.C. several weeks ago and capped a&#13;
day of protest at the Department of Education, the Associated Press&#13;
reported.&#13;
They called on Secretary of Education William Bennett to apologize&#13;
for his comments that students give up their cars, stereos and&#13;
beach vacations to offset proposed cuts in student aid.&#13;
The rally was staged by the United States Student Association, a&#13;
national coalition of student government leaders.&#13;
Edward Elmendorf, an aide for post-secondary education, met privately&#13;
with 21 of the protesters at the department and said he&#13;
"learned that there's a great deal more misinformation about our&#13;
proposals out there than I suspected."&#13;
He did say, however, that the cuts, including elimination of guaranteed&#13;
student loans for students whose families earn more than $32,-&#13;
500 and a $4,000 c ap on other forms of aid, would deny aid to one&#13;
million students.&#13;
Profs to get $8,000 raise&#13;
The average salary of a full professor at Parkside will rise $8,067 to&#13;
$44,138 by January 1987 under Gov. Anthony S. Earl's budget proposals,&#13;
the Associated Press reported.&#13;
That compares to a $12,596 pay increase at Madison, increasing salaries&#13;
there to an average of $52,000, and includes a "catch up" pay increase&#13;
as well as regular state employee pay increases and inflation&#13;
adjustments.&#13;
The increase at Parkside is the fifth largest in the UW-System in&#13;
dollars, and total estimated salaries here rank fourth.&#13;
Travanti helps police effort&#13;
In the wake of the shooting of two Milwaukee police officers, efforts&#13;
to get private funds for bulletproof vests are continuing, the&#13;
Milwaukee Sentinel reported.&#13;
Even Daniel J. Travanti, who plays Capt. Frank Furillo on "Hill&#13;
Street Blues," has supported the fundraising efforts.&#13;
The Kenosha native is appearing in a public service announcement&#13;
asking for donations.&#13;
WTMJ-TV and WKTI radio started the fund raising effort with the&#13;
cooperation of the Milwaukee Police Association and Milwaukee&#13;
Police Chief Robert Ziarnik.&#13;
Ziarnik estimated the cost of the vests to be about $600,000 for the&#13;
department's 2,100 of ficers.&#13;
A rxt i reek, look for the Stranger...&#13;
Believe it or not.&#13;
A/so i n the Ranger next week:&#13;
• Housing Survey Results&#13;
• Rape - . and how t o avoid i t&#13;
• Pink people&#13;
• And more!&#13;
COLLEGE COSTS ARE GOING UP.&#13;
BUT SO IS THE&#13;
ARMY COLLEGE FUND.&#13;
Tuition, books, lab fees, college living expenses—all seem&#13;
to be climbing relentlessly. Well, here's some good news from the&#13;
Army. Today's Army College Fund is climbing too. You can now&#13;
accumulate over $25,000 for college, if you qualify.&#13;
What's more, you'll study, learn and become proficient in&#13;
a useful skill. It could be a skill with so wide an application in both&#13;
military and civilian life that it might help you decide what to take&#13;
in college.&#13;
If you're determined to go on to college, but you don't know&#13;
where the money is coming from, pick up an Army College Fund&#13;
booklet from your local recruiter. It offers several options you'll want&#13;
to investigate. Stop by or call:&#13;
SFC David Hutson&#13;
3315 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha 697-0520&#13;
ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
A &lt; T hursday, March'28,1985 ? 5 , . &lt; . •RANGER&#13;
Scholarships for women Excellence sought at UW-P&#13;
The Phi Chi Theta Foundation&#13;
offers three $1,000 scholarship&#13;
awards for the academic year beginning&#13;
Sept. 1985 to women students&#13;
pursuing degrees (bachelors&#13;
or masters) in approved courses of&#13;
study in the fields of business&#13;
and/or economics.&#13;
To qualify for consideration, applicants&#13;
must:&#13;
Be full-time women students in&#13;
approved courses in colleges and&#13;
universities in the United States&#13;
leading to bachelors or masters degrees&#13;
in the field of business and/or&#13;
economics; and&#13;
Have completed at least one&#13;
semester or two quarters of college&#13;
level study in the United States.&#13;
High school seniors and entering&#13;
freshmen are not eligible.&#13;
Scholarships will be awarded on&#13;
a competitive basis. The criteria for&#13;
evaluating applicants are scholastic&#13;
achievement, leadership potential,&#13;
motivation and financial need.&#13;
Application forms are available&#13;
from Mineva Reichenstein, Moln&#13;
344. The application deadline is&#13;
May 1.&#13;
International studies&#13;
sponsors advising&#13;
An academic advising session for any students interested in a&#13;
major or minor in International Studies will be held at 3 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
March 29, in Union 207. On hand will be a number of faculty&#13;
who teach in the International Studies Program, including political&#13;
science professor John Harbeson, program coordinator.&#13;
After the session, the group will go to a local restaurant for pizza&#13;
for a fee, Harbeson said.&#13;
"If you have built castles in the air, now put the&#13;
foundations under them.'' Henry D avid Tho™&#13;
Study in London for $2775 per semester. Includes air fare,&#13;
resident tuition, field trips, family stay with meals.&#13;
Study in Seville, Spain, for $2100 per semester. Includes resident&#13;
tuition, field trips, family stay with meals. No foreign language&#13;
profiency required.&#13;
Summer programs in&#13;
London and Seville&#13;
Semester programs also&#13;
in France, Mexico, and&#13;
Sweden&#13;
For further information, write or call:&#13;
Institute for Study Abroad Programs&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Platteville&#13;
308 Warner Hall&#13;
Platteville, Wisconsin 53818&#13;
608-342-1726&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
In their book, "In Search of Excellence,"&#13;
Thomas Peters and Robert&#13;
Waterman talk about the shared&#13;
basic principles of management —&#13;
action stimulating, people oriented&#13;
and profit maximizing — all practices&#13;
which are readily transferable.&#13;
In attempting to increase the&#13;
quality of an institution, whether a&#13;
big business, a small business or an&#13;
educational institution, the investigation&#13;
involved will be a complicated&#13;
and time-consuming task.&#13;
Parkside has recently developed&#13;
the Freshman/Sophomore Taskforce&#13;
to address some problems that&#13;
relate to increasing Parkside's quality.&#13;
"It's a fairly broad charge," commented&#13;
Dr. Robert Canary, Committee&#13;
chair. "We're trying to investigate&#13;
ways in which the university&#13;
can move forward, especially&#13;
during the freshman and sophomore&#13;
years when so many of our&#13;
students transfer."&#13;
One of the main problems the&#13;
task force deals with is retention.&#13;
"Retention is a problem, not so&#13;
much as a problem itself, but as a&#13;
symptom to realize there are things&#13;
we could be doing better," stated&#13;
Canary. "We have a lot of people&#13;
entering who have a good potential&#13;
to make it through, but they drop&#13;
out. For some reason they get sidetracked.&#13;
It's not necessarily a lack&#13;
of academic skill, it may be a failure&#13;
on the part of the university to&#13;
make clear what it takes to get&#13;
through early enough in the game."&#13;
Canary explained that Parkside's&#13;
problems don't exist just because&#13;
it's an urban public college. "We do&#13;
have a better program to offer. We&#13;
have a good curriculum and we&#13;
have very high standards for our&#13;
faculty. It's really a matter of taking&#13;
advantage of that."&#13;
The committee is looking at&#13;
questions of more active preparation&#13;
in regard to the local high&#13;
schools and Gateway Technical Institute.&#13;
"We want to expand the&#13;
ways we deal with people when&#13;
they first arrive. We have to let&#13;
them know what it takes to survive&#13;
in the Skills Program, in the Breadth&#13;
of Knowledge program. Factors&#13;
that will help students develop are&#13;
part of a good feedback to involvement."&#13;
Canary talked about involvement&#13;
as central in general to the success&#13;
of the university and the students&#13;
within it and he talked of involvement&#13;
as central to retention. "We&#13;
have to ask ourselves if there are&#13;
ways we can build an environment&#13;
that makes students more involved.&#13;
CROSSWORD PUZZLER&#13;
Puzzler answers on Page 10&#13;
ACROSS 39 Channels&#13;
42 Organs of&#13;
hearing&#13;
43 River Islands&#13;
44 Fruit&#13;
46 Middle East&#13;
peninsula&#13;
48 Flying Insect&#13;
51 Sum up&#13;
52 Small bottles&#13;
54 Born&#13;
55 Dance step&#13;
56 Roman official&#13;
57 Female: colloq.&#13;
1 Opening&#13;
4 Slumber&#13;
9 Solemn promise&#13;
12 Ventilate&#13;
13 Kind of beer&#13;
14 Retirement-plan&#13;
inits.&#13;
15 Delaying&#13;
17 Spanish pots&#13;
19 Doom&#13;
20 Bad&#13;
21 Twirl&#13;
23 Russian tea&#13;
urns&#13;
27 Liquid measure&#13;
29 Same as&#13;
30 Italy: abbr.&#13;
31 Abstract being&#13;
32 Choice part&#13;
34 Resort&#13;
35 Latin&#13;
conjunction&#13;
36 Danish measure&#13;
37 Guide&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Aeriform fluid&#13;
2 Be ill&#13;
3 Gains&#13;
4 Narrow opening&#13;
5 Paths&#13;
6 Urge on&#13;
7 College degree:&#13;
abbr.&#13;
8 Incites to anger&#13;
9 Pretentious&#13;
rural residence&#13;
10 Anglo-Saxon&#13;
money&#13;
11 Existed&#13;
16 Diminish&#13;
18 Animated&#13;
20 Send forth&#13;
21 Slumber&#13;
22 One of&#13;
Columbus's&#13;
ships&#13;
24 Place in line&#13;
25 More mature&#13;
26 Asterisks&#13;
28 Pertinent&#13;
33 Limbs&#13;
34 Scorching&#13;
36 A continent&#13;
38 Athletic group&#13;
40 Smoothes&#13;
41 Short period&#13;
45 Gaelic&#13;
46 Weaken&#13;
47 Mountain on&#13;
Crete&#13;
48 Siamese native&#13;
49 Beverage&#13;
50 Lamprey&#13;
53 Cyprinoid fish&#13;
© 1985 United Feature Syndicate&#13;
Involvement isn't like teaching in&#13;
the classroom. It's a teaching, a&#13;
learning within the university, it's&#13;
what the student takes out, it's&#13;
what the student learns that is our&#13;
real measure of success."&#13;
Getting students directly involved&#13;
in the learning process is on&#13;
the agenda for the task force. "We&#13;
should take advantage of our current&#13;
and advanced students in dealing&#13;
with those students coming in.&#13;
At a residential campus people&#13;
learn a lot about how to cope with&#13;
college. If we could set up some&#13;
thing here to encourage that, it&#13;
would be great. A l ot of times students&#13;
are a lot more willing to listen&#13;
to other students. You tend to&#13;
understand something better when&#13;
you teach it. You tend to become&#13;
more involved in it and more interested&#13;
in it when you can pass it&#13;
along."&#13;
The development of Parkside's&#13;
excellence in education will depend&#13;
a great deal on the students themselves.&#13;
"It depends on the students'&#13;
intellectual and personal development.&#13;
It's part of what the traditional-&#13;
age students are going&#13;
through. What is it that they want&#13;
to be? College can help them figure&#13;
that out. We don't want to choose&#13;
between preparing people for a job&#13;
or giving them a liberal education.&#13;
All the evidence suggests that there&#13;
will be 4 or 5 shifts in what we will&#13;
do with our lives. Career Preparation&#13;
is important, but a general skill&#13;
and knowledge to adapt to the&#13;
changes will be vital."&#13;
Conscience&#13;
Crises&#13;
"Crises of Conscience: Present&#13;
Moral Problems" will be the topic&#13;
of a non-credit course offered by&#13;
Parkside's Continuing Education&#13;
Office from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. on&#13;
five consecutive Thursdays beginning&#13;
April 18.&#13;
Cost of the course, to be taught&#13;
by Rabbi Marc Gruber of Kenosha's&#13;
Beth Hillel Temple, is $19.&#13;
To register, call 553-2312.&#13;
The course will include an introduction&#13;
to different types of ethical&#13;
thinking, systems for making value&#13;
judgments and the various procedures&#13;
for deciding ethical conflicts.&#13;
Crises of conscience in the areas&#13;
of war and peace, economic justice,&#13;
environmental concerns and decisions&#13;
about life and death will be&#13;
explored. The course will focus on&#13;
how advancing technology affects&#13;
ethical questions.&#13;
Brown bag&#13;
health luncheon&#13;
"Non-Traditional Sources of&#13;
Health Care" will be the topic of a&#13;
free public Wellness Brown Bag&#13;
Luncheon, sponsored by Parkside's&#13;
Office of Continuing Education&#13;
from 11:50 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, April 17, in Union&#13;
Room 104.&#13;
Speaker will be John Burkhardt,&#13;
of the Kenosha Youth Foundation.&#13;
Persons are encourage to bring&#13;
their own lunches or purchase food&#13;
at the Parkside Union Dining facility.&#13;
Preregistration is requested by&#13;
calling 553-2312.&#13;
See Castles in the Air&#13;
And learn your way around the world&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Platteville&#13;
RANGER 5&#13;
BSE Graduate grants open&#13;
for studies abroad&#13;
Nationally known scholar visits&#13;
The United States Information&#13;
Agency (USIA) and the Institute of&#13;
International Education (HE) announced&#13;
that the official opening of&#13;
the 1986-87 competition for grants&#13;
for graduate study or research&#13;
abroad in academic fields and for&#13;
professional training in the creative&#13;
and performing arts is scheduled&#13;
for May 1, 1985. It is expected that&#13;
approximately 700 awards to over&#13;
70 countries will be available for&#13;
the 1986-87 a cademic year.&#13;
The purpose of these grants is to&#13;
increase mutual understanding between&#13;
the people of the United&#13;
States and other countries through&#13;
the exchange of persons, knowledge&#13;
and skills. The grants are provided&#13;
under the terms of the Mutual Educational&#13;
and Cultural Exchange Act&#13;
of 1961 (Fulbri ght-Hays Act) and by&#13;
foreign governments, universities,&#13;
corporations and private donors.&#13;
Applicants must be U.S. c itizens&#13;
at the time of ap plication, who will&#13;
generally hold a bachelor's degree&#13;
or its equivalent before the beginning&#13;
date of the grant and, in most&#13;
cases, will be proficient in the language&#13;
of the host country. Except&#13;
for certain specific awards, candidates&#13;
may not hold the PhD at the&#13;
time of application. Candidates for&#13;
1986-87 are ineligible for a grant to&#13;
a country if they have been doing&#13;
graduate work or conducting research&#13;
in that country for six&#13;
months or more during the academic&#13;
year 1985-86.&#13;
Creative and performing artists&#13;
are not required to have a bachelor's&#13;
degree, but they must have&#13;
four years of professional study or&#13;
equivalent experience. Candidates&#13;
in medicine must have an M.D. or&#13;
equivalent degree (e.g., D.D.S,&#13;
O.D.) at the time of application.&#13;
Application forms and further information&#13;
for students currently enrolled&#13;
at Parkside may be obtained&#13;
from the Fulbright Program Adviser&#13;
John Campbell, WLLC 346 (552 -&#13;
2006). The deadline for filing applications&#13;
is September 16, 1985.&#13;
Professor Ralph K. White is the&#13;
visiting scholar on campus this&#13;
week, sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Honors Program.&#13;
Dr. White, whose specialties include&#13;
international conflict and war&#13;
propoganda, is currently Professor&#13;
Emeritus in Social Psychology at&#13;
George Washington University.&#13;
White earned his Ph.D in Psychology&#13;
at Stanford University. He&#13;
has taught Psychology at several&#13;
universities, has worked for the&#13;
CIA i n the analysis of Communist&#13;
propaganda, has done research on&#13;
public opinion overseas — especially&#13;
in the USSR, has worked with&#13;
Kurt Kewin and Ronald Lippitt on&#13;
autocratic and democratic atmospheres&#13;
in children's groups, and has&#13;
first-hand experience in Moscow,&#13;
Berlin and Saigon. His numerous&#13;
articles and publications vary in&#13;
subject from the nature of war&#13;
propaganda, the Cold War autocracy&#13;
and democracy, the Vietnam&#13;
War and the Arab-Isaeli conflict, to&#13;
US-Soviet relations and the prevention&#13;
of nuclear war. His extensive&#13;
experience and knowledge in these&#13;
areas have proved to generate&#13;
much interest on the part of fa culty&#13;
and students.&#13;
White, whose stay extended from&#13;
Tuesday, March 26 to Thursday&#13;
March 28, enjoy ed a busy schedule&#13;
of class lectures, lunches with faculty&#13;
members, dinners with faculty&#13;
and students and a public presentation,&#13;
"Teaching Peace at the College&#13;
Level." His lectures in the political&#13;
science and history classes dealt&#13;
with US-Soviet relations and efforts&#13;
to keep peace.&#13;
Author Antler reads poems Friday&#13;
The poet who calls himself "Antler"&#13;
and is the author of the nationally-&#13;
acclaimed poem "Factory" will&#13;
give a free public reading of his&#13;
work at 1 p.m. Friday, March 29 in&#13;
the Overlook Lounge of the Library.&#13;
Antler is a native of Milwaukee&#13;
who, according to prominent poet&#13;
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, publisher of&#13;
City Lights in San Franciso, is "the&#13;
next Great Lakes poet to be discovered."&#13;
"Factory" is a long poem that recalls&#13;
the months Antler was employed&#13;
at Milwaukee's American&#13;
Can Co. The monotonous routine&#13;
and noisy machinery "released&#13;
Harbeson spoke at Harvard&#13;
Parkside political science professor&#13;
John Harbeson spoke recently&#13;
at a major symposium at Harvard&#13;
University on the subject of pluralism&#13;
and democracy in Africa.&#13;
Harbeson, a recognized authority&#13;
on African politics, presented a&#13;
paper titled "Constitutions and&#13;
Constitutionalism in Africa: A&#13;
Tentative Theoretical Exploration."&#13;
The symposium was attended&#13;
by internationally-known&#13;
scholars from throughout the&#13;
world.&#13;
Harbeson is author of the book&#13;
Sample ballot for election&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Mayor&#13;
Dale C. Zierten&#13;
Stephen F. Olsen&#13;
Circuit Court Branch i&#13;
John C. Ahlgrimm&#13;
Circuit Court Branch VI&#13;
Wayne J. Marik&#13;
William R. Binetti&#13;
Justice of Supreme&#13;
Court&#13;
Nathan S. Heffernan&#13;
State Superintendent&#13;
of Public Instruction&#13;
I.W. Poehlman&#13;
Herbert J. Grover&#13;
Racine Unified School&#13;
District No. 1&#13;
Members at Large&#13;
(3 seats)&#13;
E. John Graham, Jr.&#13;
Margaret Smedegaard&#13;
Marilyn L. Langdon&#13;
Bernice M. Thomson&#13;
Diane B, Tetrault&#13;
Eileen R. Boutan&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Supreme Court Justice&#13;
Nathan S. Heffernan&#13;
State Superintendent of&#13;
Public Instruction&#13;
I.W. Poehlman&#13;
Herbert J. Grover&#13;
Circuit Court Branch I&#13;
David M. Bastian&#13;
Circuit Court Branch II&#13;
William U. Zievers&#13;
Circuit Court Branch VI&#13;
Jerold W. Breitenbach&#13;
Mario J. Ventura, Jr.&#13;
Kenosha Unified School&#13;
District No. 1&#13;
Members at Large&#13;
(3 seats)&#13;
Jeffrey L. Leisner&#13;
Joan Haubrich&#13;
Renee C. Leisner&#13;
Irwin Stengert&#13;
Carl W. Podella&#13;
APPLICATIONS&#13;
Now Being Accepted for&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
AMBASSADORS&#13;
A New Student Orientation Program&#13;
The campus ambassador at Parkside is responsible for&#13;
assisting faculty and administration with the introduction&#13;
of the total university experience to incoming students.&#13;
Applications are due&#13;
Thursday, April 4, at noon&#13;
and are available at:&#13;
Student Activities Office (Union 209)&#13;
Student Development (WLLC D 175)&#13;
Union Info Desk&#13;
flights of speculation and anger&#13;
which Antler captured in long-lined&#13;
verses that sing with driving rhythms...'&#13;
Factory' makes clear the feeling&#13;
of restraint common to people&#13;
trapped in the urban routines of the&#13;
Great Lakes' states industrial setting,"&#13;
said a Milwaukee Sentinel reviewer.&#13;
Antler also writes about nature,&#13;
calling himself t he "Ambassador of&#13;
the Wilderness." He spent years&#13;
traveling through the rural wilderness&#13;
of the West Coast.&#13;
Antler, who holds a bachelor's&#13;
degree in anthropology and a master&#13;
of fine arts degree in English&#13;
from UW-Milwaukee, has written&#13;
poems that have appeared in many&#13;
publications, including American&#13;
Poetry Review, Total Abandon,&#13;
Earth First!, New Directions Anthology,&#13;
Minnesota Review and The&#13;
World.&#13;
"Nation Building in Kenya: The&#13;
Role of Land Reform," and is currently&#13;
working on two other books.&#13;
He served as research fellow and&#13;
lecturer at the University of Nairobi&#13;
from 1965 to 1967 and as visiting&#13;
professor of political science at&#13;
Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia&#13;
from 1973 to 1975.&#13;
He recently helped draft, for the&#13;
Agency for International Development,&#13;
development and management&#13;
policies for the African nations&#13;
of Botswana, Lesotho, Liberia,&#13;
Uganda and Kenya.&#13;
RA applications available&#13;
Applications are now being accepted&#13;
for Resident Assistants at&#13;
Ranger Hall in the Racine YMCA&#13;
for the 1985-86 year. Applications&#13;
are available in the Student Housing&#13;
Office, Union 209. They a re due&#13;
immediately.&#13;
A Resident Assistant earns a free&#13;
room at Ranger Hall for performing&#13;
required duties. To qualify a&#13;
student must have at least a 2.0&#13;
grade point average.&#13;
The job of an RA is one of responsibility.&#13;
It is definite plus on a&#13;
student's resume when they look&#13;
for positions in the future.&#13;
Direct any questions concerning&#13;
the available RA positions to Shirley&#13;
Schmerling, Housing Coordinator,&#13;
553-2320, or stop in at Union&#13;
209.&#13;
Logo contest announced&#13;
The Parkside Orientation Program,&#13;
POP, is sponsoring a logo&#13;
contest for all interested artists. All&#13;
entries should be centered around&#13;
the Parkside campus and the development&#13;
of a solid student life here.&#13;
All des igns should be submitted to&#13;
Alice Johnson in WLLC D-175 by&#13;
April 12. T he Parkside Orientation&#13;
Program Committee is a newly&#13;
formed organization on campus&#13;
with the goal of creating a dynamic&#13;
orientation program for new and&#13;
incoming students.&#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: &gt; | | ,&#13;
6 5 4 - 5 1 7 9 Americans at their best.&#13;
6 Thursday, March 28, 1985 RANGER&#13;
Week at the Park&#13;
Of lampoons, libels and lies Club Events&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Thursday, March 28&#13;
MOVIE: "The Terminator" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 3:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission at the&#13;
door is $1 for a Parkside student&#13;
and $1 for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Problem Solving&#13;
and Decision Making" by Ruth Huitema&#13;
at 6:30 p.m. in Union 106. Call&#13;
ext. 2047 for more information.&#13;
SLIDE/LECTURE: "The Faces of&#13;
Southern India: People, Places and&#13;
Precambrian Rocks" by Prof. Richard&#13;
Ojakangas of the University of&#13;
Minnesota-Duluth at 8 p.m. in Moln&#13;
105. The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Friday, March 29&#13;
WORKSHOP: "How to Survive&#13;
From 9 to 5" starts at 9 a.m. in&#13;
Union 104-106. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
more details.&#13;
POETRY READING: "Factory"&#13;
by Antler of Milwaukee at 1 p.m. in&#13;
the WLLC Overlook Lounge. The&#13;
event is free and open to the public.&#13;
TALK: "Recognition of Proterozoic&#13;
Glacial Deposits: North American,&#13;
Finland and South Africa," by&#13;
Dr. Richard Ojakangas, Department&#13;
of Geology, University of&#13;
Minnesota-Duluth, 1 p.m., Greenquist&#13;
113. The lecture is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE: "The Terminator" will be&#13;
repeated at 1:30 p.m. and at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Sunday, March 31&#13;
MOVIE: "The Terminator" will be&#13;
repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Monday, April 1&#13;
ROUNDTABLE: "Of Lampoons,&#13;
Libels and Lies," by cartoonist&#13;
Gary Huck at 12:15 p.m. in Union&#13;
104-106. The event is open to the&#13;
public at no charge.&#13;
COURSE: "What to Look for in&#13;
Art" starts at 6:30 p.m. in CA 129.&#13;
Excellence award sought&#13;
The Teaching Excellence Awards&#13;
Committee is accepting nominations&#13;
for the 1985-86 T eaching Excellence&#13;
Awards. The awards are&#13;
given to up to two faculty members&#13;
who have shown outstanding teaching&#13;
ability during the past year.&#13;
Nomination forms will be available&#13;
in the PSGA Office (WLLC&#13;
D137), Ranger Office (WLLC D139),&#13;
SOC Office (Union 203), Library&#13;
Learning Center, all division offices&#13;
and at the Union Information Desk.&#13;
The nomination forms may be deposited&#13;
at the pickup locations.&#13;
Forms will be accepted from&#13;
March 21 to March 29.&#13;
Students may nominate one faculty&#13;
member and give their reason&#13;
for the nomination. Students are&#13;
limited to one nomination each. All&#13;
continuing full-time members of&#13;
the faculty and academic staff are&#13;
eligible to receive the award. The&#13;
winners of the award in the last&#13;
two years will not be considered eligible&#13;
to win the award this year.&#13;
In addition to the student nominations,&#13;
division heads will be&#13;
asked to nominate the top ten percent&#13;
of the faculty in their divisions.&#13;
The Awards Committee,&#13;
composed of four students and four&#13;
faculty members, will then weigh&#13;
the divisions chairs' recommendations,&#13;
along with the student nominations,&#13;
to determine the award&#13;
winners.&#13;
Particularly important to the&#13;
nominations, the committee said,&#13;
are the rationales behind the nomination.&#13;
These will be weighed with&#13;
the divisional chair's nomination&#13;
rationales.&#13;
Past winners of this award include:&#13;
Don Kummings (1977), Teresa&#13;
Peck (1978), Chong-maw Chen&#13;
(1978), Tim Bell (1979), Robert&#13;
Esser (1980), Oliver Hayward&#13;
(1981), Wayne Johnson (1982),&#13;
Keith Ward (1982), William Rieber&#13;
(1983), Douglas DeVinny (1984) and&#13;
Ken Hoover (1984).&#13;
Call ext. 2312 for more details.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Tuesday, April 2&#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 event is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Advertising in a&#13;
Small Business," starts at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
in Union 106. Call ext. 2047 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
OPEN HOUSE: for prospective&#13;
students and their families at 7&#13;
p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Wednesday, April 3&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE: Featuring an&#13;
open stage from 12 noon to 3 p.m.&#13;
and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Bazaar Area. Applications are available&#13;
at the Union Information Center.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Physics talk&#13;
scheduled&#13;
On Wednesday, April 3, Dr.&#13;
James Jorgensen of the Argonne&#13;
National Laboratory will talk on&#13;
the use of neutrons in studying the&#13;
structure of matter.&#13;
As is well known, atoms consist&#13;
of protons, neutrons and electrons.&#13;
The protons and neutrons together&#13;
form the atomic nucleus which is in&#13;
turn surrounded by a swarm of&#13;
electrons.&#13;
Dr. Jorgensen, a pioneer in the&#13;
field of neutron scattering, will give&#13;
a general talk surveying the current&#13;
application of this technique in&#13;
solid state physics.&#13;
The talk is scheduled for Wednesday,&#13;
April 3, from 1 to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Room 230 of Greenquist Hall. All&#13;
are welcome.&#13;
Editor's note: This week the&#13;
Ranger encountered an unfortunate&#13;
mishap — all of the notices of club&#13;
events turned in. this week were&#13;
stolen by unknown individuals. We&#13;
attempted to reach as many clubs&#13;
as possible to get the information&#13;
they originally wanted printed this&#13;
week, but unfortunately we were&#13;
unable to reach all of them. Wre sincerely&#13;
apologize for any problems&#13;
this may have caused any clubs.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
Same time, same place, Monday&#13;
April 1, at 1 p.m. in CA D141. All&#13;
you missing members please attend.&#13;
We need you for our elections&#13;
and we need volunteers to accept&#13;
work for our student art show. If&#13;
you can not attend, see the sign up&#13;
sheet on the bulletin board in the&#13;
Art Addicts Hall Way. See you&#13;
there!!!&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The next Pi Sigma Epsilon meeting&#13;
is Monday, April 1 in Moln 109&#13;
at 1 p.m. Things to be discussed include&#13;
the Easter Egg Hunt, April 3,&#13;
Initiation on April 13 and Loop 500&#13;
on April 24. Group pictures will be&#13;
taken for the PSE scrap book.&#13;
Please wear your sweatshirts.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
On Wednesday, April 3, Inter-&#13;
Varsity Christian Fellowship will&#13;
have a social in place of the usual&#13;
topical meeting. Join us for some&#13;
singing, worship, games and an uplifting&#13;
experience. This will take&#13;
place at 1 p.m. in Moln 107.&#13;
Geology Colloquium&#13;
Internationally recognized geologist&#13;
Richard W. Ojakangas, professor&#13;
at the University of Minnesota-&#13;
Duluth, will give a free public slideillustrated&#13;
lecture titled "The&#13;
Faces of Southern India: People,&#13;
Places and Precambrian Rocks," at&#13;
8 p.m. Thursday, March 28 in Moln&#13;
105 and again on Friday, March 29&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Grnqst 113. All are welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Hispanic Club&#13;
The next Hispanic club meeting&#13;
will be on Wednesday, April 3, at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 104. The club is presently&#13;
working on increasing student&#13;
participation, membership and activities&#13;
to celebrate the upcoming&#13;
Cinco de Mayo (May 5) holiday.&#13;
Your input to both groups is&#13;
needed if the activities are to be&#13;
successful. Last year's committee&#13;
had a panel discussion of topics related&#13;
to Hispanic Americans and a&#13;
dance with a band playing both&#13;
American and Latin Music. Elections&#13;
for next year's officers will be&#13;
held sometime during this semester&#13;
so begin thinking about them.&#13;
La proxima reuion del Club Miecoles,&#13;
el 3 de abril, a la una de la&#13;
tarde, en el cuarta 104 de la Union.&#13;
Presentemente, el Club esta trabajando&#13;
para aumentar participacion&#13;
y miembros en el Club. Ademas, estamos&#13;
planiando actividades par&#13;
celebrar la fiesta del Cinco de&#13;
Mayo. Un comite uriiversitario, separado&#13;
del Club, esta encargada del&#13;
planiar actividades para el Cinco de&#13;
Mayo. El ano pasado hubo una discusion&#13;
de temas de interes para hispanoamericanos&#13;
y un baile con&#13;
musica Americana y latina. El Club&#13;
y el comite niversitario necesan su&#13;
contibucion de ideas para que el&#13;
prorama tenga exsito este ano.&#13;
Open house scheduled&#13;
An open house for prospective&#13;
Parkside students and their families&#13;
will be held beginning at 7 p.m.&#13;
on Tuesday, April 2 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre.&#13;
The program, which lasts until&#13;
Post Nasal Strip by Paul Berge&#13;
MY GUEST TONIGHT IS&#13;
JOHN HINCKLEY JR., WHO&#13;
STANDS TO TAKE 25%&#13;
OF THE PROFITS FROM&#13;
THE FORTHCOMING BOOK:&#13;
? THE DAY I SHOT THE&#13;
PRESIDENT: THE JOHN&#13;
NOW, JOHN, 1 THOUGHT V&#13;
FEDERAL LAW PROHIBITED&#13;
CONVICTED CRIMINALS&#13;
FROM PROFITING FROM&#13;
THEIR CRIMES.&#13;
J WELL, YOU SEE, 1~--&#13;
VAUGHN, I WAS NEVER&#13;
CONVICTED: I WAS FOUND&#13;
NOT GUILTY BY REASON&#13;
FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
Of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN WAIN&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
ALTO BANK&#13;
24-HOlR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOWERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER FDIC&#13;
AND I'D BE CRAZY&#13;
NOT TO TAKE ADVANTAGE&#13;
OF THAT.&#13;
about 9 a.m., will include facultyled&#13;
informational sessions on academic&#13;
programs at Parkside, a financial&#13;
aids session, information on&#13;
housing and student services and a&#13;
tour of the campus.&#13;
Participants will have a chance&#13;
to meet informally with faculty,&#13;
staff and students and will be given&#13;
general information on admissions&#13;
and academic placement.&#13;
A number of faculty and students&#13;
will set up displays to illustrate various&#13;
academic majors.&#13;
Representatives of Peer Support,&#13;
a student organization that assists&#13;
the university's older students (age&#13;
23 and over) will be available to answer&#13;
questions.&#13;
Open House parking will be&#13;
available in both the Communication&#13;
Arts and Union lots on the&#13;
campus Outer Loop Road. For&#13;
more information, call the Student&#13;
Services Office at 553-2000.&#13;
NOTICE!&#13;
STUDENT JOB OPENING&#13;
IN THE PA RKSIDE U NION&#13;
BUILDING SUPERVISOR&#13;
Responsible for evening and weekend building operation and internal&#13;
security: involves coordination of special events, cash receipt handling and&#13;
student payroll audit; must be personable and have the ability to work with&#13;
others.&#13;
Applications accepted in Union Room 209 through Wednesday, April 10.&#13;
mtip And hey,&#13;
be careful out there.&#13;
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Poster artist Dane-VanDvke an&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
I'm sure you've noticed the wonderful&#13;
posters that announce upcoming&#13;
theater productions at&#13;
Parkside. The woman behind these&#13;
posters is freelance artist Laurel&#13;
Dane-VanDyke.&#13;
Dane-VanDyke has been designing&#13;
graphics for the theater department&#13;
since her husband, Dramatic&#13;
Arts Professor Leon VanDyke,&#13;
began teaching here. "It seems like&#13;
I've done the graphics for every&#13;
show he's done since I met him.&#13;
When he taught at Northwestern, it&#13;
got so that I was doing graphics for&#13;
all the shows. When we came here,&#13;
there was no one doing that job.&#13;
The graphics people at Parkside&#13;
wouldn't handle the theater department,&#13;
for some reason. So I decided&#13;
to do it."&#13;
Dane-VanDyke said the ideas for&#13;
her graphics come from many sources.&#13;
"I think it's really essential&#13;
that, if you're doing a job for someone,&#13;
make sure your design fits the&#13;
weekend designing this thing with&#13;
heavy rock music on the radio,&#13;
which is something I normally&#13;
don't work to. It got me in the&#13;
mood, and the designs worked out&#13;
quite well."&#13;
Dane-VanDyke's main concentration&#13;
is as a sculptor. She attended&#13;
Albion College in Michigan, where&#13;
she concentrated more on painting.&#13;
"I was doing these very large, serious&#13;
paintings. Then, in my senior&#13;
year, I began making these little&#13;
paper sculptures. I made them&#13;
small so I could hide them in a&#13;
drawer in my studio. Meanwhile, I&#13;
was still doing these big, serious,&#13;
ten or twenty foot paintings.&#13;
"I heard, years later, a wonderful&#13;
term by the art critic Lucy Lippard,&#13;
who referred to things like I&#13;
was doing as 'closet art.' And, in&#13;
many cases, that is, in fact, real art.&#13;
You're in transition at that point;&#13;
you won't admit it to yourself, you&#13;
hide it in a drawer, but you still&#13;
want to make that stuff. So I began&#13;
to jettison the paintings pretty&#13;
quickly and started making sculptures.&#13;
Then I went to Rhode Island&#13;
School of Design for two years as a&#13;
.graduate student and that was terrific."&#13;
At the moment Dane-VanDyke is&#13;
working on two Parkside related&#13;
projects. One is creating a smaller&#13;
version of the display for the Wellness&#13;
Program. "The women who&#13;
run the program want a small version&#13;
of the display that will fit in a&#13;
briefcase so they can take it to&#13;
other schools and show them how&#13;
the program looks and how the display&#13;
looks." The other project is&#13;
designing a cover for a new socioiyKSKYW&#13;
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But that's no problem.&#13;
They're the worst police force&#13;
- - -in the* Jlnirrcrco&#13;
THE FUN BEGINS MARCH 29th AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU!&#13;
RANGER&#13;
7 Thursday, March 28,1985&#13;
Intern sought&#13;
for position&#13;
Applications for Student Life&#13;
Post Bachelorette Internship will&#13;
be available beginning April 1 in&#13;
the Career Planning and Placement&#13;
Office and at the Union Information&#13;
Desk. This will be a one-year&#13;
working and learning experience in&#13;
the campus' student life. The position&#13;
will begin July 1 and run for&#13;
one year for a Parkside Graduate.&#13;
asset&#13;
logical periodical. "I'm doing that&#13;
for Michael Bassis. It's a new national&#13;
magazine, so we want to kick&#13;
it off with a dynamite cover design."&#13;
Dane-VanDyke feels her life in&#13;
art is very satisfying. "I never&#13;
thought to get rich quick. I decided&#13;
somewhere that I wasn't going to&#13;
do that in my life. So what? It beats&#13;
being a stockbroker. They make&#13;
money, but I'd be bored to death.&#13;
You can't thwart people's natural&#13;
urges. You can try, but you get real&#13;
unhappiness."&#13;
Theater&#13;
specifics of the job. The first thing&#13;
in the theater is: read the play.&#13;
That gives you your own impression&#13;
of i t. Sometimes the period the&#13;
play is set in, the plot or the title&#13;
will give you an idea. I also talk to&#13;
the director and scene designer.&#13;
"Sometimes," she continued,&#13;
"even music can help. I once had a&#13;
job doing a series of posters for a&#13;
health department in Evanston&#13;
geared toward teenagers. They&#13;
were starting a clinic for teens,&#13;
mostly girls. I had to gear the&#13;
graphics around where the teenagers&#13;
were at. I spent the entire&#13;
Book review&#13;
Maltin discusses "The Disney Films 99&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Leonard Maltin's book "The Disney&#13;
Films," published by Crown, is&#13;
a very accurate, affectionate and&#13;
sincere look at the work of one of&#13;
film's greatest and most innovative&#13;
filmmakers. The book has complete&#13;
credit listings and critical evaluations&#13;
of the Disney feature films, as&#13;
well as several other chapters listing&#13;
Disney's achievements with cartoons,&#13;
nature films and television,&#13;
as well as productions released by&#13;
the studio after Disney's death in&#13;
1966.&#13;
"A lot of Walt Disney's live action&#13;
work was overlooked and&#13;
underappreciated," said Maltin&#13;
during a recent interview. " 'Darby&#13;
O'Gill and the Little People' is to&#13;
me one of the great fantasy and&#13;
special effects films of all time, and&#13;
it bothers me that more people&#13;
don't know that. Another of his&#13;
best pictures, 'So Dear To My&#13;
Heart,' is a flim that just never&#13;
found an audience and probably&#13;
never will."&#13;
Maltin originally wrote "The Disney&#13;
Films" for publication by&#13;
Crown in 1973. This new version,&#13;
released in January of this year,&#13;
adds information on subsequent&#13;
film releases (up to and including&#13;
the recent "Splash") as well as information&#13;
on cable TV's Disney&#13;
Channel and the release of Disney&#13;
films on video tape.&#13;
"I originally decided to do a&#13;
book on Disney because nobody&#13;
had ever done a book on all the&#13;
films. I was interested in them, I&#13;
Leonard Maltin&#13;
had grown up watching them, so I&#13;
thought it would make an interesting&#13;
book," said Maltin.&#13;
With Walt Disney's career responsible&#13;
for such a vast amount of&#13;
work, Maltin had to come to a decision&#13;
regarding just what aspect he&#13;
was to elaborate on. "Well, I&#13;
started with the feature films," said&#13;
Maltin, "and saw that it was going Carmen releases new LP&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
During the early and middle&#13;
seventies, Eric Carmen's group The&#13;
Raspberries turned out first-rate&#13;
adolescent pop rock. Picking up a&#13;
copy of their greatest hits is still a&#13;
decent idea, as the songs have withstood&#13;
the test of time rather well.&#13;
Since then Carmen has done solo&#13;
work with "Never Gonna Fall in&#13;
Love Again" and "All By Myself"&#13;
being among the most notorious&#13;
hits. Carmen traded rock for second&#13;
generation schlock as far back&#13;
as 1977, so his latest self-styled LP&#13;
on Geffen isn't too surprising.&#13;
The only astonishment this record&#13;
offers is that Carmen is&#13;
searching so hard for a musical&#13;
niche, he has reworked not only&#13;
Eric Carmen&#13;
formulas, but others of his songs.&#13;
"I Wanna Hear It From Your Lips"&#13;
has too many uncomfortable similarities&#13;
to Springsteen's "Fire."&#13;
"I'm Through With Love" is even&#13;
more similar to Carmen's own "All&#13;
By Myself," while "You Took Me&#13;
All th e Way" is a blatant remake of&#13;
the old Raspberries' hit "Go All the&#13;
Way," the original remaining the&#13;
quintessential bubblegum statement&#13;
of teenage sexual angst.&#13;
"American as Apple Pie" has&#13;
him attempting to be Springsteen&#13;
without the Boss' anger or passion,&#13;
while "The Way We Used to Be" is&#13;
just mewly crap in the tradition of&#13;
Barry Manilow or Lionel Richie.&#13;
In his search for his musical&#13;
"self," it is unfortunate that Carmen&#13;
didn't discover that The Raspberries&#13;
WAS that necessary poprock&#13;
niche. When he passionately&#13;
sang "Want a hit record, yeah..."&#13;
with that group, I don't know that&#13;
any of us realised his want was so&#13;
desperate he'd sell out his creativity&#13;
completely to banal mush acceptable&#13;
only to adult contemporary&#13;
radio.&#13;
*********************************************&#13;
*5&#13;
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to be such a big project on its own&#13;
it wouldn't leave me much room to&#13;
do other things, so it was as simple&#13;
as that."&#13;
In regard to the recent cable and&#13;
video releases of Disney's work,&#13;
Maltin stated, "I think it's great. I&#13;
think it has acquainted and re-acquainted&#13;
people with the many&#13;
really good films that he did, some&#13;
of the nice work that was done on&#13;
the TV show, and other things that&#13;
had been sitting on the shelf or only&#13;
available in 16mm for school presentations&#13;
and such."&#13;
As far as recent Disney releases&#13;
are concerned, Maltin stated, "I&#13;
think the talented people there can&#13;
do something new that is quite&#13;
wonderful. There is no longer a&#13;
Walt Disney to inspire and prod the&#13;
Disney Studios team to greater&#13;
heights, but I think it's a mistake to&#13;
compare what today's people do to&#13;
what was done at that studio in the&#13;
past. They're new people and these&#13;
are different times."&#13;
Walt Disney is definitely one of&#13;
the most innovative and talented&#13;
individuals in the history of motion&#13;
pictures, feels Maltin.&#13;
Terminator&#13;
Walt Disney&#13;
"Walt Disney is really a unique&#13;
figure in the history of entertainment,"&#13;
said Maltin. "I can think of&#13;
no one who wasn't a performer&#13;
who left such an indelible stamp on&#13;
everything he did. He had a belief&#13;
about what entertainment should&#13;
be and a vision about taking this&#13;
medium forward that really set him&#13;
apart from everyone else."&#13;
Awful PAB presentation&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
In my review of "The Terminator"&#13;
at the time of its initial release,&#13;
I stated in The Ranger that it&#13;
was the worst film of 1984. Watching&#13;
"The Terminator" is tantamount&#13;
to watching the Vietnam&#13;
war: a lot of blood and guts with no&#13;
point or reason.&#13;
Arnold Schwarzenegger is cast as&#13;
a machine (oh irony!) that travels&#13;
back in time to kill the mother of&#13;
his enemy so his enemy will never&#13;
exist. Another of his enemies goes&#13;
back to the same time to prevent&#13;
Schwarzenegger from killing the&#13;
mother of his future comrade. But&#13;
this guy screws the mother, so he&#13;
turns out to be his future comrade's&#13;
father. Confused? Me, too!&#13;
Schwarzenegger has almost no&#13;
dialogue at all, which is a blessing&#13;
of sorts, and his performance is&#13;
every bit as stilted as ever. There&#13;
apparently were no plans to give&#13;
any depth to the character (or&#13;
thing) that Schwarzenegger portrays&#13;
in "The Terminator," so he is&#13;
once again just a lumbering slab of&#13;
dumb, destructive strength.&#13;
The violence is very graphic,&#13;
with the camera lingering long and&#13;
lovingly on dying, bleeding victims&#13;
crawling away in slow motion.&#13;
Linda Hamilton, who plays the future&#13;
mother, is utilized for her&#13;
beauty (her bed scene with co-star&#13;
Michael Biehn is the picture's attempt&#13;
at eroticism for patrons who&#13;
enter the show with rolled-up newspapers)&#13;
and is given little to do in&#13;
the acting department other than to&#13;
look terrified.&#13;
The plot is hopelessly far-fetched&#13;
and silly, the gunplay unmotivated&#13;
and especially grisly. While there is&#13;
a great deal of action (sometimes a&#13;
nice word for violence), "The Terminator"&#13;
is no more than a bluntly&#13;
visceral experience in the same&#13;
league as the monster "Dirty&#13;
Harry." There is literally nothing&#13;
here that will please anyone with&#13;
the ability to read.&#13;
Camp for artists set&#13;
********************************************&#13;
A one-week "Great North Woods&#13;
Art Camp" for persons interested&#13;
in studying nature from a first-hand&#13;
aesthetic perspective will be offered&#13;
by Parkside's Continuing&#13;
Education Office from Sunday,&#13;
June 2 through Saturday, June 8 at&#13;
beautiful Red Cedar Lake, near&#13;
Rice Lake in Barron County.&#13;
Cost of the camp is $160 per participant.&#13;
The fee covers food, instruction&#13;
and lodging in the Knollwood&#13;
Lodge overlooking the lake.&#13;
To register and obtain more information,&#13;
call 533-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Monday, April 15.&#13;
There are openings for 22 participants.&#13;
Car-pooling will be arranged&#13;
for the six-hour drive.&#13;
The camp will be led by Parkside&#13;
art professors David Holmes and&#13;
Doug DeVinny, both of whom have&#13;
exhibited their work regionally and&#13;
nationally.&#13;
"Drawing, watercolor, acrylic&#13;
painting and maybe a little whittling&#13;
are among the activities&#13;
planned," said Holmes.&#13;
A preliminary meeting to discuss&#13;
logistics and principles of the art&#13;
camp will be held at 7 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, May 18 in C.A. Room 111.&#13;
Persons interested in the camp are&#13;
urged to attend.&#13;
RANGER 9 Thursday, March 28, 1985&#13;
A pause in&#13;
the disaster&#13;
Behind the Sun&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Every year around Oscar time,&#13;
newspapers, magazines and television&#13;
are filled with interviews with&#13;
Oscar nominees. I didn't feel that I&#13;
had to stoop to that to get readers,&#13;
so I decided not to interview these&#13;
so-called "stars." (Besides, none of&#13;
them would return my calls.) I decided&#13;
instead that I would talk to&#13;
one of the leading figures in the&#13;
field of low budget films, Mr. Leon&#13;
"One Take" Lipschitz.&#13;
Q: Mr. Lipschitz, you claim that&#13;
your movies have the lowest&#13;
budgets in history. Could you clarify&#13;
this?&#13;
A: Well, the last film I made had&#13;
a budget of $19.38.&#13;
Q: How can you make films&#13;
these days for so little money?&#13;
A: Theft.&#13;
Q: Theft?&#13;
A: Yep. I steal damned near&#13;
everything. Cameras, film, lights.&#13;
You name it, we steal it.&#13;
Q: Should you be admitting this?&#13;
A: Oh, hey. Everybody knows it.&#13;
Q: I'm surprised you haven't&#13;
been arrested.&#13;
A: Well, you see, no one has&#13;
charged me with anything.&#13;
Q: But you just said...&#13;
A: I know. But what I didn't&#13;
mention is that some of my best&#13;
films have been shot through motel&#13;
windows, in the back seats of cars,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Q: In other words, your whole&#13;
operation is based on...&#13;
A: Blackmail.&#13;
Q: All right. Now, is it true you&#13;
invented the so-called "slasher"&#13;
film?&#13;
A: Yes, that's very true. It was&#13;
back in 1953. I made a film called&#13;
"Kiss the Blood Off My Sister." It&#13;
was the tender story of a girl, her&#13;
somewhat enfeebled brother and&#13;
the family dog.&#13;
Q: A dog?&#13;
A: Yes. I always like to put&#13;
Workshop&#13;
A "Dream Workshop" will be offered&#13;
by Parkside through the Office&#13;
of Continuing Education beginning&#13;
Monday, April 15, 7-9 p.m. in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
This two-session workshop will&#13;
include basic instruction, discussion&#13;
and the sharing of dreams as well&#13;
as practical methods to remember,&#13;
record and interpret dreams and&#13;
the symbols within them. A handout&#13;
containing theories of dreaming,&#13;
interpretation techniques and a&#13;
reading list will be given each participant.&#13;
Instructor John Andreozzi, of the&#13;
Resource Center for Ethnic Studies&#13;
and Neighborhood Organizing, has&#13;
been instructed in the Jungian&#13;
method of dream interpretation&#13;
and has been teaching dream workshops&#13;
in the Milwaukee area.&#13;
The fee for this class is $10. For&#13;
registration or additional information,&#13;
caU 553-2312.&#13;
Clapton LP hits the mark&#13;
something in my films that appeals&#13;
to families. In this case it was a&#13;
cute, cuddly doggy.&#13;
Q: And I suppose that in the end,&#13;
the dog saves the heroine's life.&#13;
A: No, not quite. Actually, he&#13;
turns out to be a ruthless axe murderer&#13;
and he chops her into little&#13;
bits. This, of course, led to the sequel&#13;
"A Hatful of Shirley," in&#13;
which all of her pieces come to life&#13;
and kill the cuddly little doggy in&#13;
slow motion. It was a charming little&#13;
film.&#13;
Q: Sounds lovely. I recently saw&#13;
one of your films "The Easter&#13;
Bunny Massacre," and I was amazed&#13;
at how good the special effects&#13;
were, considering the low budget.&#13;
A: What special effects are&#13;
those?&#13;
Q: The special make up in the&#13;
death scenes.&#13;
A: Oh, we don't use make up.&#13;
Q: Then how do you achieve&#13;
such realism?&#13;
A: How else? We offed the actors.&#13;
At the budgets we work with,&#13;
I can't afford a make-up guy. Of&#13;
course, we are running out of actors.&#13;
Say, do you act?&#13;
Q: Well I, I mean, I've done a little...&#13;
A: How'd you like to be in my&#13;
next film? I can see it now. You'd&#13;
have a great death scene. We tie&#13;
-you up and push you down a flight&#13;
of stairs. Just like in "Kiss of&#13;
Death." Ony in this one we'd put&#13;
some sharp spikes and alligators at&#13;
the bottom and...&#13;
by J im Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Some of the greatest guitar work&#13;
on any rock and roll record has&#13;
been performed by Eric Clapton.&#13;
Clapton has shown capabilities in&#13;
rock (Cream, Derek and the Dominoes),&#13;
straight blues ("Nobody&#13;
Knows You" on the Dominoes' LP&#13;
"Layla"), even reggae (his cover of&#13;
Bob Marley's "I Shot the Sheriff").&#13;
He is perhaps best known as the&#13;
master of a quintessential bluesrock&#13;
fusion, emerging at a time&#13;
when this musical combination was&#13;
the rage among British rockers&#13;
(The Rolling Stones and The Who&#13;
in particular).&#13;
Somehow Clapton manages to do&#13;
effortlessly what others are struggling&#13;
to accomplish. He has been&#13;
capable of consistent high quality,&#13;
"Behind the Sun," his latest on&#13;
Warner's, yet another excellent&#13;
showcase for his still impressive&#13;
guitar riffs and gutsy blues-rock vo-&#13;
Diamond Lif e&#13;
Eric Clapton&#13;
cals.&#13;
"Forever Man," a danceable&#13;
rocker, is the one chosen for top 40&#13;
radio, but perhaps the best cut on&#13;
the album is "Something's Happening,"&#13;
a sixties-esque protest tune&#13;
that makes a much stronger statement&#13;
than any recent attempts by&#13;
wimply new-wavers. The heartfelt&#13;
camaraderie of the sixties experience&#13;
(both musical and personal) is&#13;
recalled perfectly by Clapton and,&#13;
unlike recent attempts by John Fogerty&#13;
or Mick Jagger, is successful&#13;
in presenting itself during the eighties&#13;
not sounding dated or out of&#13;
place.&#13;
Clapton's guitar work is especially&#13;
impressive on the obligatory&#13;
blues cut "Same Old Blues," while&#13;
his performance of Eddie Floyd's&#13;
R&amp;B classic "Knock on Wood"&#13;
puts the recent discofied Amii&#13;
Stewart creeper to deserved shame.&#13;
Production by Phil Collins comes&#13;
to the forefront especially on the&#13;
very meaningful and passionate&#13;
title cut.&#13;
Eric Clapton is one of the greatest&#13;
rock musicians of all time.&#13;
While others from his era (at a time&#13;
when music really mattered) have&#13;
either mellowed severely or thrown&#13;
up their hands in frustration at&#13;
their inability to adapt to musical&#13;
and cultural changes, Clapton has&#13;
maintained a firm handle on styles,&#13;
statements and how to present&#13;
them for maximum effect. "Behind&#13;
the Sun" is definitely an LP that&#13;
journeys deeper than the disc's surface&#13;
grooves.&#13;
Sade debuts with style&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"Diamond Life" is the new LP&#13;
by Sade (pronounced SHAR-day),&#13;
featuring the passionate and intimate&#13;
vocals and songwriting of Nigerian-&#13;
bom Sade Adu.&#13;
Jazz and blues stem from African&#13;
rhythms, Sade exemplifying the&#13;
early development of this sound&#13;
into its present day status as an art&#13;
form. Her singing quality ranges&#13;
from Billie Holliday to Rickie Lee&#13;
Jones: moody, eloquent and powerful.&#13;
The jazz-influenced tracks are&#13;
similar to last year's LP by Everything&#13;
But The Girl, another impressive&#13;
group to emerge from England's&#13;
new musical renaissance.&#13;
"Diamond Life" is presently among&#13;
the top selling LP's in Great Britain.&#13;
Sade's vocals are backed by the&#13;
Sade Adu&#13;
saxophone and guitar of co-songwriter&#13;
Stuart Matthewman, who exhibits&#13;
a strong understanding for&#13;
this musical style with expressive&#13;
playing. The mood of the tracks is&#13;
further set by pianist Andrew Hale&#13;
and bassist Paul Denman.&#13;
Often music becomes very standardized&#13;
and thus less appealing,&#13;
due to its lack of depth and substance.&#13;
"Diamond Life" is a very&#13;
offbeat, unusual record that displays&#13;
great feeling and quiet passion&#13;
utilizing its jazz and blues influences,&#13;
combining them with contemporary&#13;
production (sans the&#13;
limitations of studio electronics),&#13;
making a strong and effective statement.&#13;
Mellow, but not dull; sophisticated,&#13;
but not pretentious; "Diamond&#13;
Life" is a very effective record&#13;
that is well worth seeking out.&#13;
It calls attention to a new musical&#13;
talent that will bear some listening&#13;
with ensuing projects.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
GRILL&#13;
DAILY SPECIALS AFTER 4:30 P.M.&#13;
HOURS: 11 am-2 pm 4:30 pm-7:00 pm&#13;
MON. Turkey Nuggets w/sauce&#13;
(BBQ, sweet-sour, hot mustard or horseradish)&#13;
TUES. Pizza-By-The-Slice&#13;
(Cheese &amp; Sausage, Pepperoni or Veggies)&#13;
WED. Stuffed Potato Skins&#13;
(Mexican, Greek, Italian or Chili)&#13;
THURS. Hot Subs&#13;
6 for 51.25&#13;
9 for 51.85&#13;
12 for 52.35&#13;
.50&#13;
2 for 1.79&#13;
1.49&#13;
f 10 Thursday, March 28, 1985&#13;
Men's basketball&#13;
RANGER&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
"There were only about 30 teams&#13;
in the country that had a better record&#13;
than we did."&#13;
This, in the words of men's head&#13;
basketball coach Rees Johnson,&#13;
sums up Parkside's past season.&#13;
The team had the best regular season&#13;
record in school history with a&#13;
22-6 mark.&#13;
Despite the record, however,&#13;
Johnson had his share of difficulties&#13;
with this team. "I didn't enjoy&#13;
coaching this team as much as I've&#13;
enjoyed coaching some of the other&#13;
teams I've had," said Johnson.&#13;
"The type of team we had was a&#13;
group of individuals either searching&#13;
for identity, for their position&#13;
on the team or worth as a player.&#13;
"At times in the year, I was really&#13;
frustrated with the team because&#13;
they weren't easy to coach. There&#13;
were a lot of different egos, a lot of&#13;
people going in different directions.&#13;
It wasn't a team effort."&#13;
Mark Zukley, a sophomore forward,&#13;
said in regard to Johnson's&#13;
comments, "I think he didn't like&#13;
the attitudes on the team. There&#13;
were many different and conflicting&#13;
attitudes. People didn't always&#13;
agree. Everybody had their own&#13;
personality and it was hard to relate.&#13;
"Everybody was trying to make&#13;
a good impression early, because&#13;
most of the people were new, and&#13;
everybody was looking out for&#13;
themselves instead of the team."&#13;
Robert Jones, a center, didn't&#13;
feel there was a problem, however.&#13;
"The coach felt there was one so&#13;
there had to be changes," said&#13;
Jones.&#13;
Junior forward Arthur "Jay"&#13;
Rundles agreed with Jones and&#13;
added, "Everybody got along pretty&#13;
good."&#13;
Jones said, "Coach's comments&#13;
brought us together as a team and&#13;
Two Great Places&#13;
All Rolled Into&#13;
One Package&#13;
A look back at a winning team made us do things more efficiently.&#13;
"When coach came down on us,&#13;
it gave us an incentive to play harder,"&#13;
added junior forward Cornell&#13;
Saddler.&#13;
In spite of the team attitude,&#13;
Johnson said, "The biggest disappointment&#13;
was how long it took the&#13;
team to get together.&#13;
"At Christmas time, we were&#13;
really close, then we got set back&#13;
by the southern trip and then coming&#13;
home and getting beat by Stevens&#13;
Point."&#13;
Another disappointment was the&#13;
lack of a team goal during the&#13;
middle months of the season.&#13;
"Not being in a conference race,&#13;
you really don't have a hell of a lot&#13;
to shoot for. All you can do is wait&#13;
for tournament time," said Johnson.&#13;
There were two turning points&#13;
last season, according to Johnson.&#13;
One was the Dec. 22 game against&#13;
Green Bay.&#13;
"We beat a team that's (NCAA)&#13;
Division I — even though they're&#13;
not a great one — by eig ht points at&#13;
their place. That was a heck of a&#13;
victory for us. It was our biggest&#13;
test of the season at that point. It&#13;
let our guys know they really were&#13;
a good team."&#13;
The other turning point was a&#13;
three-game winning streak when&#13;
the Rangers beat Oshkosh, Purdue-&#13;
Calumet and Northeastern Illinois.&#13;
"That stretch was important for us,&#13;
to get our momentum going again,"&#13;
said Johnson.&#13;
For the most part, however,&#13;
Johnson praised his team's play&#13;
and steady improvement throughout&#13;
the season.&#13;
"By the end of the year, culminating&#13;
with the Eau Claire game, I&#13;
was really quite pleased and proud&#13;
of how much progress was made as&#13;
far as team play was concerned. I&#13;
think they made a lot of progress.&#13;
t vo&#13;
\Cen°s&#13;
2°d st"&#13;
INSIDE MM&#13;
MID-TOWN LOUNGE SPT» W*G5&#13;
Snacks, Pizza &amp; Sandwiches&#13;
Monday - All You Can Eat&#13;
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For Carry Outs Call 658-8788&#13;
The teams we had before, with&#13;
(Erik) Womeldorf and Rundles&#13;
were pretty solid, but they were&#13;
.500 teams. Now, all of a sudden&#13;
they know they are a 22-7 team.&#13;
They learned that they can really&#13;
win."&#13;
The Rangers' play late in the season&#13;
has left Johnson with great anticipation&#13;
for next season. "I wish&#13;
the season started tomorrow.&#13;
"We're going to be a very good&#13;
team next year. Not only do we&#13;
have talent and maturity, we have&#13;
that experience. Now, they know&#13;
what they have to do, what kind of&#13;
togetherness they have to have.&#13;
"They (team members) know the&#13;
demands that are put on them and&#13;
what's expected of them. They will&#13;
be much more willing to do them&#13;
next year, because they've been on&#13;
the firing line this year."&#13;
The players also are looking forward&#13;
to next season. "We've got all&#13;
the players coming back (except for&#13;
seniors Womeldorf, Stan Cameron&#13;
and Dave Sergeant), and I know&#13;
we're going to win this district&#13;
(NAIA District 14)," said Zukley.&#13;
"Next year we'll be more united. I&#13;
think we'll be killing teams instead&#13;
of just beating them."&#13;
Jones added, "I feel pretty confident&#13;
about this team. We have a&#13;
great chance of making it to the national&#13;
tournament, because of returnees&#13;
like Dennis Davis, Rundles,&#13;
Vince Hall and Saddler. I'm sure&#13;
they will be hungry enough to go&#13;
after the title."&#13;
Johnson feels the team's nucleus&#13;
will be intact, though it'll lose three&#13;
members. "This will be Rundles'&#13;
fourth year, and Davis will be a&#13;
senior. Saddler has matured extremely&#13;
well. We have other young&#13;
men, like Zukley, Jones and Mike&#13;
Henderson, who have an awful lot&#13;
of potential.&#13;
"How much they mature in six&#13;
months from now we'll know when&#13;
we open up our season. We also&#13;
have a couple of guys who have&#13;
been delayed, like Dan Carrera and&#13;
Jeff Rhodes.&#13;
"When I was at the National&#13;
tournament in Kansas City, people&#13;
were asking the Stevens Point&#13;
people who was going to be tough&#13;
in their district. They said Parkside.&#13;
That's a pretty good compliment,&#13;
coming from Point,"&#13;
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"Reknown." 450 watts, excellent condition!&#13;
$600/best offer. Call 0004)000.&#13;
MOVING SALE: 4-piece bedroom set. Full&#13;
size bed, excellent condition, $150/best offer.&#13;
Refrig and dryer, prices negotiable. Call 694-&#13;
8955.&#13;
COMPLETE SONY component Stereo, 50&#13;
watts, $500. 634-5864.&#13;
Personals&#13;
THERE ONCE was a man named JEFF&#13;
SLATER&#13;
Who owed me ten bucks, that cheapskater.&#13;
But he has paid off this debt&#13;
And I sadly regret&#13;
That a retraction will follow soon.&#13;
Later.&#13;
THE JEFF Slater smear campaign ends.&#13;
Chapter 3: "The things I could have said&#13;
about JEFF SLATER but didn't:" JEFF&#13;
SLATER'S so cheap he can't afford to pay attention;&#13;
JEFF SLATER may wear the pants&#13;
in his relationship but Dawn buys them;&#13;
Debit-Allowance for Bad Debts, Credit-JEFF&#13;
SLATER; What do you get when you cross&#13;
JEFF SLATER and a pair of roller skates?&#13;
Answer: a cheap skate. JEFF SLATER wears&#13;
a dress on ladies nite so he can drink for free.&#13;
I retract. THE WOZ.&#13;
WHO IS the NPSGA? Pass information to&#13;
PLO (Parkside Liberation Organization.)&#13;
ARE COMMUNICATIONSSSSSSS Majors&#13;
really that picky?&#13;
MIKE F: If you don't start making a tear&#13;
sheet list for me, it may be the end for you.&#13;
A.B.M.&#13;
TO PLO: NPSGA are $%•*$. that's what!&#13;
NPLO&#13;
CHURCH OF Fun meeting Friday night. BE&#13;
there or be neg fun.&#13;
ISN'T KEITH Harmann a devoted Communicationsssss&#13;
Major? Bus. Mgr.&#13;
HAVE YOU joined the Church of Fun yet?&#13;
SEH: YOU are so terrific in so many ways!&#13;
Lov, Lor.&#13;
DO YOU like to have fun? Join the Church of&#13;
Fun. Friday night, Union. Be there.&#13;
FUNSHINE: LOOKING forward to dancing&#13;
WITH YOU Saturday night. LOVE-A-LOT.&#13;
PAM WOODBURY broke her arm fighting in&#13;
the Union again.&#13;
HEY DEBBY Scherrer, guess what? You're&#13;
FAT!&#13;
DEBBIE GRIFFITHS, SORRY for all the&#13;
R.M.S.! PHGMI&#13;
KEITH HARMANN, having toga problems?&#13;
JIM KREUSER, change your name so I can&#13;
spell it! Signed, a poor speller.&#13;
JIM KRETSER, How do you spell your last&#13;
name again??&#13;
SGT. CAN I lean on you just a little longer?&#13;
Freddie&#13;
SERGEANT: YOU'LL be sorry you ever&#13;
asked for a classified!&#13;
SARGE: FLASH those dimples! Freddie&#13;
SARGE: WHO said anything about anyone&#13;
being cute?&#13;
SGT.-THANKS for giving me and my rug a&#13;
place to hang out. Max.&#13;
DEBBIE GRIFFITHS: Sorry for all the&#13;
R.M.'s PHGMI&#13;
TO TOM, the Hamburglar: We saw that and&#13;
atching&#13;
SPECIAL THANKS to all members of the&#13;
we're going to be watching you. J&amp;T&#13;
church of f un, under the direction of Rev. JK,&#13;
for a great job of brightening up the TOGA&#13;
bash! The prez (an assoc. member)&#13;
WHO DO you know wants to buy a TOGA?&#13;
Slightly used. Call 553-2211 for more info.&#13;
WANTED: INFO leading to the capture of&#13;
the masked toga person who feels underwear&#13;
is not a necessary part of social behavior.&#13;
DAN L.: Sorry about the stupid things I said&#13;
Tuesday. I didn't mean them-Tami.&#13;
COACH PISSBALL: How's Hofen Ruefer,&#13;
Lobo Ladies, Permanent Spring Break?&#13;
T.A. SWEETPIE: You are my strength when&#13;
I'm lost. Love, Linda.&#13;
MORT: DO you want to get lucky tonight?&#13;
Every night? Looper wants your body!&#13;
TILY!!!!! Thank you infinitely much for all&#13;
your support and love over break and always!&#13;
You are truly an inspiration! Love, JR&#13;
RYDELL, OSHGOSH will never be the same.&#13;
The Orida Dragon.&#13;
BUFFY:-19 weeks (I'm overwhelmed). Biff.&#13;
U* (SMlie&#13;
l^ureet&#13;
Puzzler&#13;
Answer&#13;
% » 20 OFF&#13;
All Nuts Week of April 1&#13;
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P |A S S A G E s E A R S&#13;
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We have a full&#13;
selection of&#13;
Candy &amp; Nuts&#13;
i&#13;
Located in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the Info. Ctr.&#13;
ANDERSON TRANSCRIPTION&#13;
&amp; TYPING&#13;
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RANGER&#13;
11 Thursday, March 28, 1985&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Team is stronger&#13;
than last year's&#13;
by Kimberlie Kranich&#13;
"This team has a competitive attitude.&#13;
They love to play for a&#13;
point. They play that point out. I&#13;
like that," said Dick Frecka, coach&#13;
of this year's men's tennis team.&#13;
After over three weeks of practice,&#13;
Frecka has a good idea of&#13;
what his team looks like. "I would&#13;
say that ability-wise, we should be&#13;
stronger than we were last year.&#13;
This year we've got good balance.&#13;
The top six players are going to be&#13;
pretty close. Number one probably&#13;
won't beat number six more than 6-&#13;
2 or 6-3."&#13;
The top six players are third-year&#13;
man Art Shannon, first-year men&#13;
Chris Schuleit, Tom Hermes, Dan&#13;
Hyatt, Dave Hyatt and Tom Pacetti,&#13;
and second-year man Frank&#13;
Mejia.&#13;
Second-year men Alan Elsmo,&#13;
Brian Langenbach and Mike Roszkowski&#13;
and first-year men Dan Kitzmann&#13;
and Keith Strand complete&#13;
the twelve-man squad.&#13;
With the exception of a few&#13;
warm days, the majority of practices&#13;
have been indoors, squeezing&#13;
twelve players onto three courts.&#13;
Securing gym time is a problem because&#13;
tennis has to share the gym&#13;
with baseball, softball and track.&#13;
"It's hard sometimes to get the&#13;
players to come at the times the&#13;
gym is available. We're not alone;&#13;
the other sports have had the same&#13;
problem," said Frecka.&#13;
Practicing inside can also present&#13;
adjustment problems. Frecka said&#13;
the biggest adjustment problem is&#13;
lighting. "Outdoors you see the ball&#13;
so much better. The disadvantages&#13;
of outside courts are temperature,&#13;
wind and surface factor. The outdoor&#13;
courts are also much slower&#13;
than the indoor courts."&#13;
Whether inside or out, the men&#13;
will be tough. "This year we have&#13;
experience. If everybody stays&#13;
healthy, we'll be all right."&#13;
Meet famous athletes•&#13;
and more — join the&#13;
Ranger Staff.&#13;
WLLC-D139A.&#13;
Although the team is twelve players&#13;
strong and only six can play at&#13;
any given time, Frecka said he likes&#13;
big teams. "I don't like to cut. I've&#13;
had players who didn't make the&#13;
top six in their freshman year and&#13;
in their senior year they were playing&#13;
one, two and three. They had&#13;
the ability; they just didn't have&#13;
the experience."&#13;
In addition to the team's ability,&#13;
their attitude will affect their success.&#13;
"The attitude of the team&#13;
seems to be pretty positive. Everybody's&#13;
pumped up about the drills&#13;
and there is no negative chatter.&#13;
Mejia and Shannon decided not to&#13;
take full-time jobs, and their presence&#13;
on the team will add some&#13;
depth," said Hermes.&#13;
Frecka looks for a positive team&#13;
attitude, also. "My main concern is&#13;
not whether we win each match,&#13;
but that individuals become a team&#13;
and show consideration for one another."&#13;
A tennis player himself, Frecka&#13;
knows what it takes to become a&#13;
winner and gives advice and encouragement&#13;
to his players. "I tell&#13;
them, win if you can, get beat if&#13;
you must, but don't lose.&#13;
"There's a difference. If you go&#13;
out there and you're hitting good&#13;
shots and your opponent is hitting&#13;
better shots and winning points,&#13;
you're not losing to him. But, if you&#13;
go out there and the person on the&#13;
other side of the net isn't as good&#13;
as you are, and you're hitting the&#13;
ball into the net, then you're losing&#13;
to your opponent — h e's not beating&#13;
you."&#13;
The men have their first meet&#13;
Tuesday, April 2 against Carroll&#13;
College at 3 p.m. on the Parkside&#13;
courts.&#13;
Wrestlers are&#13;
disappointed in NAIA&#13;
National Tournament&#13;
The wrestling team, seeded seventh&#13;
in the nation, placed 24th in&#13;
the NAIA National Tournament&#13;
held in Jamestown, North Dakota&#13;
March 7-9.&#13;
Six wrestlers competed in the&#13;
tournament, but only two left with&#13;
Ail-American honors.&#13;
"I thought we wrestled much&#13;
poorer than what we were capable&#13;
of," said Coach Jim Koch. "If these&#13;
boys would have wrestled close to&#13;
their seeds, probably we would&#13;
have placed seventh."&#13;
Individual seedings were Jack&#13;
Danner-134 lbs.-ninth; Mark Dubey-&#13;
142 lbs.-ninth; Mike Muckerheide-&#13;
158 lbs.-fourth; Todd Yde-167 lbs.-&#13;
fourth. Ted Keyes, 177 lbs., and&#13;
Craig Patz, 190 lbs., were seeded&#13;
third in their weight classes.&#13;
Yde wrestled all the way to the&#13;
semi-finals before losing to Howard&#13;
Seay from Central State University,&#13;
Oklahoma, 2-1. Seay went on to win&#13;
second place honors in his weight&#13;
class. Yde wrestled to fifth place in&#13;
his weight class, which earned him&#13;
Ail-American honors.&#13;
Muckerheide, who also won All-&#13;
American honors, wrestled to the&#13;
quarter-finals and lost to Eric&#13;
Lujan from the University of Southern&#13;
Colorado, 16-6. In this match,&#13;
Muckerheide hurt his shoulder,&#13;
prompting Koch to default him out&#13;
of the tournament. Muckerheide&#13;
also won Academic All-American&#13;
with a 3.6 GPA.&#13;
"He could possibly have wrestled&#13;
back for as high as third place. That&#13;
hurt us, but his health is obviously&#13;
more important than our placement,"&#13;
said Koch.&#13;
Keyes, who missed All-American&#13;
status, also won Academic All-&#13;
American, with a 3.0 GPA.&#13;
Koch said the team's finish was a&#13;
personal disappointment because&#13;
his team has in the past finished&#13;
among the top ten.&#13;
UW-P player Tennis schedule Tuesday, April 2 vs. Carroll,&#13;
at home, 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, April 13, vs. Moraine&#13;
Valley, at home,&#13;
noon.&#13;
Monday, April 22, at Carthage,&#13;
3 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, April 3 vs.&#13;
Lake County, at home, 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Monday, April 15, vs. Concordia,&#13;
at home, 3 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, April 24, at&#13;
Carroll, 2 p.m.&#13;
Friday, April 5, vs. Beloit,&#13;
at home, 3 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, April 17, vs.&#13;
UWM, at home, 3 p.m.&#13;
Friday, April 26, at Lake&#13;
County, 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, April 6, vs.&#13;
Green Bay, at home, 1 p.m.&#13;
Friday, April 19, at Beloit,&#13;
2 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, April 27, at&#13;
Concordia, 1 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, April 10, vs.&#13;
Carthage, at home, 3 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, April 20, at Moraine&#13;
Valley, 1 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, May 4, vs.&#13;
Alumni, at home, 1 p.m.&#13;
NOTICE!&#13;
STUDENT JOB OPENING&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
CASH-HANDLING&#13;
ATTENDANT&#13;
All positions available Fall semester. Applications&#13;
now being accepted in Room 209 of the Parkside&#13;
Union through Monday, April 15.&#13;
CASHIERS/BARTENDERS&#13;
UNION SQUARE BAR&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
• CINEMA THEATER&#13;
• SWEET SHOPPE&#13;
All positions are available 2nd semester. Applications now being accepted in Room 209 of&#13;
the Parkside Union through Friday, Dec. 14.&#13;
-S -&#13;
12 Thursday, March 28, 1985 HANGER&#13;
Wayne Dannehl&#13;
The man behind the Phy-Ed administrator&#13;
Athletic Director Wayne Dannehl&#13;
came to Parkside in September,&#13;
1972, ready for home-town sports.&#13;
After coaching and teaching for&#13;
five years at a Big 10 School (University&#13;
of Illinois), Dannehl wanted&#13;
to move away from "things associated&#13;
with big time athletics."&#13;
Dannehl said, of "big time"&#13;
schools: "They (student athletes)&#13;
get a false sense of how important&#13;
they are and I don't like that.&#13;
That's part of our culture.&#13;
"When kids get to think they're&#13;
more important than the program,&#13;
they're missing the whole point.&#13;
That's why I never get too concerned&#13;
about spectators."&#13;
Dannehl settled into the small&#13;
school atmosphere the same day&#13;
the physical education building&#13;
opened its doors. With this move&#13;
came some changes.&#13;
"The first year we spent a lot of&#13;
time just getting the heat and water&#13;
on."&#13;
But another major change which&#13;
occurred under Dannehl's direction&#13;
was the inclusion of women's athletics&#13;
on the college level.&#13;
"We felt fairly proud that we&#13;
were one of the first schools in the&#13;
state, as well as in the nation, to&#13;
have those opportunities for&#13;
women."&#13;
The only obstacle faced, said&#13;
Dannehl, dealt with money. "That's&#13;
by Steve Kratochvil&#13;
Ken "Red" Oberbruner, the&#13;
head coach of the Parkside baseball&#13;
team, has done it all, from getting&#13;
inducted into the NAIA Hall of&#13;
Fame to playing professional basketball&#13;
and baseball.&#13;
Oberbruner was born in Ashland,&#13;
Wisconsin, where he excelled in&#13;
several sports at DePadua High&#13;
School. But baseball was his specialty.&#13;
Toward the end of his high&#13;
school career, Oberbruner had to&#13;
choose between playing pro baseball&#13;
and going to college; he opted&#13;
for the latter.&#13;
Oberbruner graduated from&#13;
Notre Dame in 1940. "While I was&#13;
at Notre Dame, I played professional&#13;
basketball for the Pistons. You&#13;
could do that back in those days."&#13;
After graduation, Oberbruner&#13;
played pro baseball for Fort&#13;
Wayne, a team affiliated with the&#13;
Cleveland Indians. He went on to&#13;
play with the Boston Braves as&#13;
shortstop and center fielder.&#13;
His basketball career ended after&#13;
the attack on Pearl Harbor, when&#13;
he was drafted into the army.&#13;
"I was really coming into my&#13;
own at that point," said Oberbrunner.&#13;
"When I got back I realized&#13;
that I didn't have it any more." Unable&#13;
to play competitively, Oberbruner&#13;
got into the coaching field.&#13;
He returned to Wisconsin in 1946&#13;
to help manage the Beloit team of&#13;
the Central Wisconsin League. A&#13;
"In addition to&#13;
being the chief administrator&#13;
of this&#13;
unit. I put up with&#13;
what they call the&#13;
human side of the&#13;
enterprise. All the&#13;
nitty gritty problems&#13;
that occur between&#13;
persons end&#13;
up here. "&#13;
-Wayne Dannehl&#13;
not to say we haven't had money&#13;
for the programs, but when you&#13;
add eight or nine women's sports, it&#13;
involves a lot of money.&#13;
"We really operate on a terribly&#13;
low budget. If I had to do it over&#13;
again, I would probably go for a lot&#13;
more money to support the programs."&#13;
Besides creating new programs,&#13;
however, Dannehl is involved with&#13;
administration.'&#13;
"I'm responsible for the operation&#13;
of the building, the phy ed, inyear&#13;
later he was hired at Milton&#13;
College, where he would spend the&#13;
next 23 years in charge of the&#13;
coaching duties for football, basketball&#13;
and baseball.&#13;
Oberbruner became the baseball&#13;
coach at Parkside in 1970. " I came&#13;
here primarily due to A1 Dearborn.&#13;
He was dean of students at Milton&#13;
before he took a similar position&#13;
here. It was his influence that caused&#13;
me to consider Parkside."&#13;
Oberbruner signed 21 players to&#13;
professional baseball contracts. His&#13;
son, Jamey, a former Ranger, is&#13;
one of them. "Speaking as a coach&#13;
and not as a father, Jamey was&#13;
probably the best player I ever&#13;
coached," he said.&#13;
"Jamey had all the tools to be in&#13;
the big leagues. But he got caught&#13;
in a numbers game and was released&#13;
by Pittsburgh. It's really a&#13;
shame he never got a good shot at&#13;
it.&#13;
"If Jamey had made it, I would&#13;
have been the happiest guy in the&#13;
world. That would have made&#13;
everything complete, darn it."&#13;
Oberbruner was recently elected&#13;
into the Wisconsin High School&#13;
Coaches Hall of Fame though he&#13;
never coached a high school team.&#13;
"Making the Hall of Fame is really&#13;
something special to me. When I&#13;
look back on all that has happened,&#13;
it makes reaching the Hall of Fame&#13;
something very special.&#13;
"I'm directly connected with&#13;
high schools. I recruit the boys for&#13;
tramural and athletic programs,&#13;
fund raising and making sure people&#13;
stay within their budgets." The&#13;
budgets have been met in all of&#13;
Dannehl's 13 years.&#13;
Included in the regular administrative&#13;
affairs is Dannehl's duty to&#13;
the community. He is presently involved&#13;
in the Rotary Club and Kenosha&#13;
Night at the Brewers.&#13;
"As a member of Parkside's&#13;
community, I also work in the local&#13;
communities. That's kind of an&#13;
obligation of the job, although I&#13;
Ken "Red" Oberbruner&#13;
college and help them get their degrees.&#13;
Then I try to develop their&#13;
skills for a professional contract.&#13;
"I'm here at Parkside because I&#13;
like people, college students in particular.&#13;
I like to watch them grow&#13;
academically and athletically. They&#13;
should realize, however, that getting&#13;
their degree is the most important&#13;
thing."&#13;
Oberbruner's name is in the&#13;
Hank Aaron display at Milwaukee&#13;
County Stadium, he has played&#13;
against the Globetrotters and the&#13;
list just goes on for Oberbruner,&#13;
now 67 a nd a semi-retired teacher&#13;
and coach.&#13;
"I guess you could say I'm kind&#13;
of a bird dog for the Pittsburgh Pirates,&#13;
too," he said, referring to his&#13;
casual scouting duties for the major&#13;
league club.&#13;
"I got a call the other day. The&#13;
Brewers are looking for a pitching&#13;
coach. Jamey would make a heck&#13;
of a coach."&#13;
don't mind doing it.&#13;
"It also helps us, because when&#13;
we need help, people are willing to&#13;
come to us and help because we've&#13;
been helping the community."&#13;
Though Dannehl spends part of&#13;
his time dealing with outside&#13;
groups, most of his hours are spent&#13;
dealing with inside problems.&#13;
Just a few of the difficulties encountered&#13;
range from recruiting&#13;
new athletes to finding funding for&#13;
post-season play.&#13;
"Recruiting is a 'great chore' as&#13;
a commuter campus. It's much&#13;
more difficult from an administrative&#13;
point of view than it is on a&#13;
resident campus."&#13;
Despite the difficulties, Parkside&#13;
manages to produce athletes good&#13;
enough to go to Nationals. Traveling&#13;
and playing at Nationals, however,&#13;
costs money, money which is&#13;
not funded. Through the years,&#13;
Dannehl has had to find ways to&#13;
raise that money.&#13;
"Our kids do quite well athletically,&#13;
considering everything. It's a&#13;
tribute to our kids and to the coaching.&#13;
I got to figure out how the&#13;
heck we're going to pay for all this&#13;
stuff."&#13;
"In addition to being the chief&#13;
administrator of this unit, I put up&#13;
with what they call the human side&#13;
of the enterprise. All t he nitty gritty&#13;
problems that occur between&#13;
The seventh annual Whitewater&#13;
Half-Marathon and simultaneous&#13;
Four Mile Run will be held Sunday,&#13;
May 5.&#13;
Sponsored by Whitewater's Army&#13;
ROTC Detachment and supported&#13;
by Company 'E,' 2nd Battalion&#13;
(TLAT), Wisconsin Army National&#13;
Guard, the races will begin at 10&#13;
a.m. at the intersection of Prairie&#13;
Street and Starin Road on Whitewater's&#13;
campus.&#13;
For the certified 13.1 mile Half-&#13;
Marathon, trophies will go to the&#13;
male and female winners. Medals&#13;
will be awarded to the first three&#13;
persons end up here."&#13;
Dannehl welcomes each day with&#13;
the knowledge it will be filled with&#13;
challenge. He accepts the challenge&#13;
thrown at him daily. One goal he&#13;
has for the future of Parkside is an&#13;
aerobic program with weight training.&#13;
With this program. Dannehl&#13;
hopes to bring more people out to&#13;
the physical education building to&#13;
use it.&#13;
"We're (Dannehl and coach.&#13;
Steve Stephens) chasing around trying&#13;
to convince the people who&#13;
have the money that we should expend&#13;
this kind of money trying to&#13;
involve more people in the program."&#13;
All this effort coincides with&#13;
Dannehl's hope to open the facilities&#13;
to more people (students and&#13;
faculty, as well as student-athletes).&#13;
Dannehl is also working on making&#13;
the gym a "street shoe" gymnasium,&#13;
in which students have easy&#13;
access to the gym.&#13;
"Intramurals don't fly in a commuter&#13;
school," said Dannehl. Instead,&#13;
Dannehl sees the "street&#13;
shoe" gymnasium replacing or supplmenting&#13;
intramurals for those&#13;
students who come and go.&#13;
Dannehl is content with his position,&#13;
saying he's in an ideal place.&#13;
Dannehl can see through the murkiness&#13;
of the daily dilemmas with a&#13;
positive outlook.&#13;
finishers in each of the following&#13;
classes: male age 18 and under, 19-&#13;
24, 25-34, 35-39, 40-49 and age 50&#13;
and over; female, same as male,&#13;
except the last class is 40 and over.&#13;
Advance registration fee is $5, $6&#13;
on the day of the race. Registration&#13;
must be completed between 7:30&#13;
and 9:30 a.m. Entry forms can be&#13;
obtained by phoning the ROTC Detachment&#13;
at (414) 472-1563, extensions&#13;
1747 or 1541, or by writing&#13;
Army ROTC Detachment (RUN),&#13;
UW-Whitewater, Whitewater WI&#13;
53190-1790.&#13;
MILLER HIGH LIFE&#13;
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK&#13;
Jackie Rittmer&#13;
On the Florida softball trip, Jackie saved the first&#13;
win over I.U.P.U.I. with a defensive play. She first&#13;
caught a sinking fly ball to center field, and then&#13;
picked the runner off th ird base, who thought the&#13;
ball was going through.&#13;
Jackie is a junior elementary education major.&#13;
She is also a two-time NAIA All-American.&#13;
Oberbruner inducted into&#13;
High School Coaches&#13;
Hall of Fame&#13;
Whitewater Half-Marathon Set</text>
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              <text>&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
 University of Wisconsin - Parkside anger Wednesday November 28, 1979 Vol. 8 No. 13 Parkside celebrates ten years Master plan held plenty of promise by Steve Dankert The "master plan" called for the opening of Parkside by fall of 1969, or 1970 at the latest. Originally Parkside was to be only an upp«?r division campus, something which has obviously been changed. After a two year battle over the location and funding of Parkside. the majority of allocation monies for construction were   finally passed ih December 1968. The 23.8 million dollar package included funding for the Library Learning Center, Physical Plant Building, Communications Arts. Classroom Building. Physical Education Building, and addition­al equipment and space con­version. Later it was planned that there should be a $3.5 million Student Union, and a $3.1 million School of Modern Industry Building. Later estimates for the Modern Industry building were revised to 4-4.25 million dollars. Parkside Village was to be built at a projected "cost of slightly-more than one million dollars by Abendroth and Associates, Inc. Original plans had called for a 750 bed dorm facility at a cost of $4.1 million, however these plans ran into trouble in 1971 because the Madison campus had to close some of its dorms due to a lack of applications for student use. Ground breaking for the campus occured on November 21. 1967. and the campus was subsequently dedicated on May 4. 1970. The master plan for UW Parkside included phased con­struction mindful of varying student enrollment levels; from a level of about 700 to about 25.000 or more. The foregoing information can be found in more depth in the Parkside Archives located on level D2 in the Library Learning Center. For any information you may need help with concerning research or history and the like please stop in and visit Luella Vines, the Archives' secretary, or Sue Yugo. the Archivist Assistant. • Interview with Chancellor Guskin • Athletics—Ten years of tradition • Review—'The Onion Field' • 1969: the year of UW-Parkside's birth • Healthfully yours—Sexuality: the ironic truths photo by Mark Anderson Ranger looks into Parkside's past history Due to the celebration of Parkside's tenth birthday this year an historical series of articles will be initiated. Did you know? There was streaking at Parkside. There were sleep-ins and rallies here. Parkside brought Ralph Nad r, Gloria Steinem, Edmund Muskie, Stewart Udall. F. Lee Bailey, Ex-Governor Pat Lucey, Odetta, Jose Greco, John Denver, and many more celebrities to the Kenosha-Racine area. Would you like to find o ut about Itvin Wyllie, Rita Tallent, or George Molinaro?; know what past students are doing now?; or find out how Parkside began and its opposition? With all of this Parkside history will be national and world history at its parallel. The series will start next week. &#13;
2 Wednesday November 28, 1979 Ranger Editorial AASCU Argentina abuser of basic human rights by Steve M. Dankert Opinion Writer You may recall, a few issues back, an editorial in the RANGER about the United States allowing some peoples or governments to just abuse their authority and power. There is another example, clpser to home, in Argentina. The New York Times Magazine reported in its 21 October 1979 issue that Argentina is also another large abuser of basic human values. The current strongman is Jorge Rafael Videla. He took power in a bloodless coup in March of 1976, after two years of a condition of a state of siege which was declared by the nominal head of Argentina, Eva Peron. The Argentina military was battling the Leftist Peronist Montenaro guerrillas and the Marxist Peoples Revolutionary Army (E.R.P.). Due to raids on military units by these guerilla groups there had been harsh crackdowns by the Junta on civil disturbances. Now, however, the army has announced that the guerrilla groups had been effectively smashed; but, the terror goes on. The Times' magazine goes on to say that both the U.S. government and the Argintine government agree in private with the Amnesty International estimate of 15,000 disappearances of people in Argentina. These may be attributed to both the guerrilla groups and the military regime which has controlled state power since 1974. One of the reasons for continued disappearances appears to be an intra-military struggle between ,hard liners and moderates, with Argentine civilians and government officials used as pawns. It is believed that more detained persons will be executed by the military in preparation for an investigation by the Organization of American States' Inter-American Committee on Human rights. Why all the attention to foreign affairs? It's in our own best interest as human beings. All people must be concerned about what happens to others around Jhe world. The attitude that those countries are sovereign states and therefore we shouldn't interfere is baloney. That is an attitude of self-centeredness; indifference. Just because those other governments are termed "sovereign" powers does not mean that they are a power unto themselves. The organization and structure of a government is for direction and control of mass economic and social actions. They are granted authority not only by men, but by the God which created the universe; but they are not to abuse the power granted. Everyone else in the world should be — «* We are our brothers' keeper; like it or not. Sitting back and doing nothing, waiting-for the Other"guysto do it all, will accomplish little. Taken to its extreme, this type of action is probably what has lead throughout history to all manner of tyrants. They all hold out the shining apple of security and people grab  hold, not realizing until they have already eaten of the fruit that it has a worm within. I would urge our readers to write their representatives in Congress expressing their concern that these things are allowed to happen in the world community. Finally, in all fairness it should be pointed out that it has been brought to my attention that the hostage situation in Iran is alleged to be a result of such things  as have just been discussed; more on that in a later article. Guskin elected to National Board r ganger Sue Stevens Editor Brian Felland Business Manager Doug Edenhauser .Sports Editor Ken Meyer Feature Editor leff Stevens News Editor Kevin Padula Photo Editor Tom Cooper. Chairman of the Board Reporters Charles Clifton, Dave Cramer, Pete Cramer, Ginger Helgeson, Renee Jones, Mira Lochanski, Reed McMillan, Walt Remondini, Don Scherrer, Denise Sobieski Photographers PCJIO' C olston, Curtis Moldenauer, Brian Passino Mary Arnold Layout Graphic Artists Bill Stougaard, Michael Williams Ad Representatives Linda Andersen, Dan Galbraith RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and content. Published every Wednesday during the academic year except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by the Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois. Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D139, Kenosha, WI 53141. Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard size paper with one-inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone number included for verification. Names will be withheld for valid reasons. Maximum length accepted is 500 words. Deadline for letters is Friday at 10 a.m. for publication the following Wednesday. The RANGER reserves all editorial priviliges in refusing to orint letters which contain false or defamatory content. Chancellor Alan E. Guskin of the University of Wisconsin-parkside has been elected to the national board of directors of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU), it was announced Tuesday (Nov. 20) at the organization's annual meeting in San Antonio. Guskin is one of 10 directors elected to the AASCU board, which represents the interests of 333 four-year  public colleges and universities. The UW-P chancellor was one of three directors elected to thrge-year terms; the others received terms of one or two years. Roland Dille, president of Moor-head State University (Minn.), was voted president-elect of AASCU and Clark Ahlberg, president of Wichita State University, treasurer. Earlier this year, Guskin was elected chairman of AASCU's national advisory committee for its Resource Center for Planned Change. In that capacity, he conducted a workshop on leader-Reminder The Ranger appreciates hearing from you! If you'd like to write a letter to the Editor, just follow these guidelines: All letters must be in the Ranger office by 10 am on the Friday before publication.   The Ranger office is located at WLLC D139 (next to the Coffee Shoppe). The maximum length for letters accepted is 500 words. They must be typewritten, double-spaced with one-inch margins on standard typing paper. All letters must be signed. Names will be withheld for valid reasons. Include a phone number for verification. All letters will be printed without editing. Remember to check for typing errors, mis­spellings, and grammatical errors. The Ranger has editorial priviliges and may refuse to publish letters    found to be defamatory in content. ship styles in higher education for the Center's summer institute in August in Vail, Colo. He also conducted a workshop in universi­ty leadership in September at California State University at Chico. Guskin is the author of a chapter on university decision­making in a book on administra­tion in education to be published soon by Jossey-Bass of San Francisco. Guskin also has published and spoken nationally in recent months on UW-Parkside's Editorial Comment achievements in the areas of "the teaching library" and student competency in college-level aca­demic skills. UW-P has become one of the country's collegiate pacesetters in requiring students to demonstrate competency in English, mathematics and library use in order to remain in school, and its skill programs have been the subject of features on NBC's "Today" show, National Public Radio and through New York Times syndicated articles. Parkside tradition change by Sue Stevens Editor Is a period of ten years long enough to establish a tradition? (It's hard to say, but that question can be answered by looking at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.) When this university first opened its doors in September of 1969, it was only the beginning of the realization of a dream. That dream was the establishment of a community-based four year campus in Southeastern Wisconsin. It wasn't to be considered a small university extension as many people believed. Kenosha already had an extension campus (now the site of the new Bradford High School in  Kenosha). It has taken ten years of hard work for Parkside to be recognized as an educational leader. Programs have been initiated here that have stood, and still stand, as models for universities across the nation. Our basic skills program here, which has received national attention during the past year is just one example. The students have   also established themselves on the Parkside campus. Going to a commuter campus for a college education is not as easy as some think. The students here are of a different breed from those you'll find on other university campuses. One third of our students are classified as "non-traditional," meaning that they are 25 years old or older. These older students have sacrificed much to either return to or begin school. They have contributed to the education of others by helping younger students realize that there's a whole other world outside a college campus. The traditional students have worked hard to make the most of the education offered here. Changes are continually being made in the campus atmosphere. This year alone has seen more student activity than any other. Some students have finally realized that coming here for classes and then going home is not the only way to learn. Yes, Parkside has established a tradition. That tradition is one of changing with the times. By the time Parkside's twentieth anniversary rolls around, there will be many more changes — in the administration, in the school's reputation (even better), in the buildings, in the student body, and even in the student newspaper. Energy seminar held Dec. 4 Tuesday the and A seminar on "Energy: Prob­lems and Prospects" will feature an energy expert from the U.S. Department of Commerce and two University of Wisconsin econo­mists as speakers on Tuesday, Dec. 4, from 1 to 5 p.m. at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Campus Union. Joseph Gustaferro, senior energy policy analyst at Department of Commerce former director of its energy analysis division, will discuss the torecast for energy fuels including oil, natural gas, coal, nuclear, solar, geothermal and biomass through the year 2000, linking production with resourcs available and consumption rates. He also will discuss specific impacts of the forecasts for Wisconsin. His talk is at 1 p.m. Dunkin Harkin, professor of agricultural economics at UW-Madison and Extension specialist in natural resource economics and a member of several State Division of Energy committees, will present alternatives for national eneigy policy and discuss state impacts of each option on Wisconsin at 3:30. Richard Rosenberg, associate professor of economics at UW-Parkside and a specialist in energy economics, will discuss effects of price control on the petroleum and natural gas markets, economic consequences of decontrol and other policies and impacts of environmental regulations on energy supplies at 4:15. The speakers' presentations will be followed by informal discus­sion. Registration can be made by calling Prof. Richard Keehn, director of UW-Parkside's Economic Education and Re­search Institute at 553-2259. The fee per individual attending is $10 for corporations and $5 for small business (under 50 employees), non-profit organizations and individuals. The seminar is sponsored by the UW-P institute and the University Extension Department of Economics. &#13;
MORE INFORMATION&#13;
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              <text>University of Wisconsin -Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Wednesday November 7, 1979 Vol. 8 No. 10&#13;
Parkside to celebrate Einstein&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
is joining a score of other&#13;
institutions throughout the United&#13;
States and the world to celebrate&#13;
the centenary of Einstein's birth. A&#13;
major exhibit will be on display&#13;
during the week of November&#13;
12 - 17, 1979, in the Parkside&#13;
Library, and several public&#13;
lectures and films are planned&#13;
concurrently. (See schedul of&#13;
events.)&#13;
The Exhibit, describing the life&#13;
of Albert Enistein, is a freestanding&#13;
framework nearly seven&#13;
feet high, holding eighteen panels.&#13;
The growth of Einstein's scientific&#13;
work, presented in layman's terms,&#13;
is a main feature, but the oxhibit&#13;
devotes even more spa.-e to&#13;
explaining his extensive public and&#13;
political work, his role in world&#13;
culture, his philosophy, and his&#13;
human qualities. Each panel is&#13;
accompanied by an authoritative&#13;
text prepared in consultation with&#13;
leading historians, and there is a&#13;
rich selection of quotations of&#13;
Einstein's own words. Illustrations&#13;
including photographs, drawings,&#13;
and reproductions of manuscripts,&#13;
drawn from a wide variety of&#13;
sources are included. This exhibit&#13;
was prepared by the American&#13;
institute of Physics and the&#13;
Institute for Advanced Study at&#13;
Princeton, where Einstein worked&#13;
during his stay in the United&#13;
States.&#13;
Four public lectures and two&#13;
special films are also featured. The&#13;
speakers, two physicists, one&#13;
astronomer, and one philosopher,&#13;
all well known, will share some of&#13;
Einstein's thoughts and discoveries&#13;
with the general public.&#13;
These talks are not technical and&#13;
are addressed to the layman.&#13;
Two films, especially prepared&#13;
for showing during the centennial,&#13;
will be featured. One, "Albert&#13;
Einstein: Education of a Genius",&#13;
was specially prepared by the&#13;
American Institute of Physics to&#13;
complement the contents of the&#13;
exhibit; the other, "Einstein's&#13;
Universe", is created by BBC/&#13;
&gt; WGBH Television based on Nigel&#13;
Calder's book of the same title and&#13;
is narrated by Peter Ustinov. Both&#13;
films have received excellent&#13;
reviews.&#13;
The Einstein Centennial Week&#13;
at Parkside is sponsored by the&#13;
Science Division, Social Science&#13;
Division, and the UniversityExtension&#13;
under a grant from the&#13;
Wisconsin Humanities Committee.&#13;
The exhibit, lectures, and film&#13;
shows are free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
The week's schedule&#13;
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 12&#13;
3:00 P.M.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin opens the&#13;
exhibit. A reception follows the&#13;
formal opening.&#13;
3:30 -4:30 P.M.&#13;
Film, "Albert Einstein: Education&#13;
of a Genius", Greenquist' 103.&#13;
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13&#13;
3:30 -4:30 P.M.&#13;
Lecture: "A New Look at the&#13;
Sky", Professor Robert Greenler,&#13;
Physics Department, University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Greenquist&#13;
103.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14&#13;
3:30-4:30 P.M.&#13;
Lecture: "The Big Bang, Einstein's&#13;
Legacy", Professor Michael&#13;
Turner, Department of Astronomy&#13;
cont. on pg. 2&#13;
Albert Einstein&#13;
Task Force reports deficiencies&#13;
"The issue is not national test&#13;
score averages and how well&#13;
Wisconsin places. It is the&#13;
capability of college students to do&#13;
college level work."&#13;
That statement by keynote&#13;
speaker Alan E. Guskin, chancellor&#13;
of UW-Parkside, set the tone&#13;
for the two-day statewide conference&#13;
on basic skills Thursday&#13;
and Friday attended by 125&#13;
educators, primarily from colleges&#13;
and universities, at UW-P.&#13;
Participants attended 24 different&#13;
workshops and heard a&#13;
report from the 11-member Basic&#13;
Skills Task Force established by&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System in 1977 and which issued&#13;
its findings earlier this year.&#13;
Guskin, whose university is the&#13;
only one in the UW System to&#13;
require students to pass competency&#13;
tests in writing, reading,&#13;
mathematics, library use and&#13;
research papers before they can&#13;
begin their junior years, said:&#13;
"There is a difference in what&#13;
are appropriate basic skill levels&#13;
for students who do not go on to&#13;
college and those who do. We're&#13;
talking about students having the&#13;
minimum skills to do C or C-plus&#13;
work in college.&#13;
"If colleges can't stand up for&#13;
C-Ievel work, I ask you what we&#13;
can stand up for," Guskin saia.&#13;
"We also have an etnical&#13;
obligation to protect students from&#13;
getting caught in a revolving door.&#13;
By that I mean that since we&#13;
permit most high school graduates&#13;
to enter our colleges, we have a&#13;
responsibility to do all we can to&#13;
help those who have the&#13;
motivation and potential to&#13;
acquire the academic skills needed&#13;
for success."&#13;
New manager for sweet shop&#13;
by Denise Sobieski&#13;
People at UW-Parkside with a&#13;
definite sweet tooth should surely&#13;
be acquainted with the "Ye Oldc&#13;
Barb Lukawski&#13;
Photo by M. Anderson&#13;
Sweet Shoppe" in the Union right&#13;
across from the information desk.&#13;
Just a look inside will make your&#13;
mouth water as your eyes gaze&#13;
across the jars and jars of candies,&#13;
nuts, and other delectables. The&#13;
Sweet Shoppe has a variety of&#13;
goodies ranging from imported&#13;
French candies to old fashioned&#13;
candy sticks, plus a few aliment&#13;
remedies, like cough drops (they&#13;
come in handy at this time of&#13;
year).&#13;
As of this month, there have&#13;
been additions to the Sweet&#13;
Shoppe. One of those is the new&#13;
supervisor Barb Lukawski. She's&#13;
the one who does the purchasing&#13;
and manages the operations of the&#13;
shop.&#13;
There have been thoughts of&#13;
other 'changes., too. Ice creamlovers&#13;
rejoice! In the future the&#13;
Sweet Shoppe may expand the&#13;
present counter area and sell ice&#13;
cream. The possible purchase of a&#13;
fudge-apple maker machine will&#13;
delight chocolate and apple&#13;
lovers. Such improvements will&#13;
make "Ye Oldc Sweet Shoppe"&#13;
even more worthy of its name.&#13;
"Ye Oldc Sweet Shoppe" in the&#13;
Union is an old fashioned candy&#13;
store loaded with all kinds of&#13;
goodies — chocolates, hard&#13;
candies, licorice, nuts, etc. If you&#13;
can't find what you're looking&#13;
for, mention it to the cashier.&#13;
They'll sec what they can do to&#13;
satisfy your sweet tooth.&#13;
Stop by "Ye Olde Sweet&#13;
Shoppe" — take a look inside&#13;
Your cravings for sweets will be&#13;
s a t i s f i e d . ...&#13;
Members of the Task Force and&#13;
participants agreed that simply&#13;
raising entrance standards was not&#13;
the answer. The Task Force report&#13;
states raising admission requirements&#13;
"offers the temptation of&#13;
simplicity," but would "exclude&#13;
students with potential success in&#13;
college. . .who are disadvantaged&#13;
by basic skills deficiencies." It was&#13;
pointed out that even many public&#13;
universities with rigorous admission&#13;
standards, such as many&#13;
in California, including Berkeley,&#13;
and the University of Michigan,&#13;
have decided they need intensive&#13;
basic skill programs for their&#13;
students.&#13;
1 he Task Force also reported&#13;
that their most conservative&#13;
estimate is that 25 percent of&#13;
freshmen entering UW campuses&#13;
are deficient in "basic skill&#13;
competencies needed for success in&#13;
traditional entry-level courses." It&#13;
urged that all freshmen complete&#13;
placement tests in writing, reading&#13;
and mathematics prior to enrollment.&#13;
a procedure that only&#13;
UW-Parkside currently practices,&#13;
and that those who need help be&#13;
required to take appropriate&#13;
courses.&#13;
The Task Force said that a&#13;
major hurdle in implementing&#13;
skills programs is the cost. "In&#13;
many (UW) System units the&#13;
extent of such opportunity is&#13;
determined less by identified levels&#13;
of student need than by&#13;
institutional ability to divert funds&#13;
from other activities during a&#13;
period of fixed budgets."&#13;
The Task Force concluded its&#13;
recommendations with the statement:&#13;
&#13;
"Today's call to return to the&#13;
basics could die away without an&#13;
echo. And indeed yesterday's&#13;
basics — the rigid application ot&#13;
three R's to a select clientele — are&#13;
insufficient for future needs. But&#13;
the call carries an ideal to build&#13;
upon — the ideal that public&#13;
education provides fundamental&#13;
preparation for an educated&#13;
citizenry.&#13;
INSIDE. • •&#13;
* Ott says almanac inaccurate&#13;
• From the Parking Lot: Drug Etiquette&#13;
• 'Fefu' very well done&#13;
* Volleyball team places second in state &#13;
2 Wednesday November 7, 1^79 Ranger&#13;
Violin virtuoso at UWP&#13;
Pinchas Zukerman, a classical&#13;
triple threat who has won&#13;
international fame as a violin&#13;
virtuoso, an equally distinguished&#13;
violist and a brilliant conductor,&#13;
will present the next Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Program at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Zukerman will perform in&#13;
concert with pianist Marc Neikrug&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 15, in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The program will include works&#13;
for violin by Beethoven and Bartok&#13;
and a Brahms sonata for viola.&#13;
A limited number of tickets is&#13;
available through the Parkside&#13;
Union Information (553 - 2345).&#13;
Admission is $8.50.&#13;
Although he is only 31, he is&#13;
already ranked with the world's&#13;
greatest classical artists.&#13;
Praised by the London Times as&#13;
"absolutely without peer among&#13;
violinists" and by the British&#13;
journal Gramophone as "probably&#13;
the best living viola player,"&#13;
Zukerman regularly appears with&#13;
major international and American&#13;
orchestras as well as in recital. He&#13;
often shares recitals with Issac&#13;
Stern, Itzhak Perlman, Leonard&#13;
Rose, the Chamber Music Society&#13;
of Lincoln Center and his wife,&#13;
flutist Eugenia Zukerman.&#13;
In addition to his post as music&#13;
director of London's South Bank&#13;
Festival, he is in his first season as&#13;
musical director of the Saint Paul&#13;
Chamber Orchestra, succeeding&#13;
Dennis Russell Davies. The Saint&#13;
Paul Chamber Orchestra performed&#13;
in an AOE concert at&#13;
UW-P last season.&#13;
Other orchestras he has conducted&#13;
include the New York&#13;
Philharmonic, the Philadelphia&#13;
Orchestra, the Boston Symphony,&#13;
the Los Angeles Philharmonic and&#13;
the English Chamber Orchestra.&#13;
Born in Tel Aviv in 1948,&#13;
Zukerman began his musical&#13;
studies with his father and, at the&#13;
age of 8, entered the Israel&#13;
Conservatory in Tel Aviv, where he&#13;
studied with Ilona Feher. In 1961&#13;
What the hell is that?&#13;
f&#13;
ganger&#13;
Sue Stevens&#13;
Brian Felland&#13;
DOUR Kdenhauser&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Jeff Stevens&#13;
Kevin Padula&#13;
Mike Murphy&#13;
Kditor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Sports Kditor&#13;
Feature Kditor&#13;
News Kditor&#13;
Photo F^dilor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
om ( ooper Chairman of the Board&#13;
Vv&#13;
Repor'ers&#13;
Charles Clifton. Dave Cramer, Pete Cramer, Ginger Helgeson. Renee Jones. Mira&#13;
I nchanski. t ori Merten. Reed McMillan. Terry Peterson. Walt Remondini. Don&#13;
Scherrer, Denise Sobieski, Becky Waller, Karen Walters&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Mark Anderson, Curtis Moldenauer, Brian Passino&#13;
Layout&#13;
Mary Arnold. Nancy Hernandez, Nancy Mikaelian&#13;
Graphic Artists&#13;
Bill Stougaard. Michael Williams&#13;
Ad Representatives&#13;
I &lt;nda \ndcrsen. Dan Galbraith. Margarita Schonenberg&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content. Published every Wednesday during the&#13;
-sadcnuc year except during breaks and holidays. RANGER is printed by the Zion&#13;
Publishing Company, Zion. Illinois.&#13;
,^.luis.ion is Required for reprint of any portion of RANGER content. All&#13;
- rr.",p&gt; ndence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside WLLC&#13;
! , W! r"U 1!&#13;
l e tt ers to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard size&#13;
!&gt;"Pu a Mi r. inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone number&#13;
included for verification. Names will be withheld for valid reasons. Maximum length&#13;
accepted is btiu words. Deadline for letters is Friday at 10 a.m. for publication the&#13;
following Wednesday. The RANGER reserves all editorial priviliges in refusing to&#13;
print letters which contain false or defamatory content.&#13;
— with the encouragement of&#13;
Isaac Stern and Pablo Casals, the&#13;
support of the ^merica-Israel&#13;
Cultural Foundation and scholarships&#13;
from the Juilliard and&#13;
Helena Rubinstein Foundation —&#13;
he came to the U.S. to study with&#13;
Ivan Galamian at The Juilliard&#13;
School.&#13;
In 1967, he won first prize in the&#13;
25th Leventritt Foundation International&#13;
Competition and received&#13;
instant world-wide acclaim.&#13;
His exuberant music-making&#13;
has been captured in a series of&#13;
four television specials titled&#13;
"Here to Make Music" currently&#13;
being shown on PBS. The series&#13;
documents Zukerman's life and&#13;
musical collaborations with Daniel&#13;
Barenboim, Jacqueline DuPre,&#13;
Zubin Mehta and Perlman. He has&#13;
been seen on numerous other TV&#13;
specials, including the recently&#13;
broadcast "Alexander's Bachtime&#13;
Band", where he performed with&#13;
Stern and Alexander Schneider.&#13;
continued from pa. 1&#13;
Einstein week&#13;
and (he Enrico Fermi Institute,&#13;
University of Chicago. Greenquist&#13;
103.&#13;
THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 15&#13;
3:30-4:30 P.M.&#13;
Lecture: "Einstein - He Walked a&#13;
Lonely Mile", Professor Robert&#13;
March, Department of Physics,&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Madison.&#13;
Greenquist 103.&#13;
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16&#13;
3:30-4:30 P.M.&#13;
Lecture: "Einstein's Dissent: The&#13;
Troublesome Quanta", Professor&#13;
Arthur Fine, Department of&#13;
Philosophy, University of Illinois,&#13;
Chicago Circle. Greenquist 103.&#13;
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17&#13;
Einstein Film Festival, Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Physics Club.&#13;
9:00- 10:00 A.M.&#13;
"Albert Einstein: Education of a&#13;
Genius" Greenquist 103.&#13;
10:15- 12:15 A.M.&#13;
"Einstein's Universe." Greenquist&#13;
103. ,&#13;
Two films, especially prepared&#13;
for showing during The Einstein&#13;
Centennial are featured. The first,&#13;
"Albert Einstein: Education of a&#13;
Genius", is prepared by the&#13;
American Institute of Physics to&#13;
complement the contents of the&#13;
Exhibit. The second, "Einstein's&#13;
Universe", is a very successful&#13;
attempt by BBC/WGBH Television&#13;
to make Einstein's contributions&#13;
intelligible to the layman.&#13;
"Einstein's Universe" is based on&#13;
a book of the same title by Nigel&#13;
Calder and is narrated by Peter&#13;
Ustinov. The film festival is&#13;
sponsored byjhe Parkside Physics&#13;
Club.&#13;
'Skinny Skiers' organizing now&#13;
Parkside Nordic Ski Club&#13;
(PNSC) will be holding their first&#13;
meeting of the year on&#13;
Wednesday, November 7th at 7:45&#13;
p.m. in Molinaro 105. At this&#13;
meeting members will be&#13;
discussing upcoming events&#13;
planned for this year. All of the&#13;
events are open to the beginner as&#13;
well as the advanced skier.&#13;
The people currently involved&#13;
in the club are willing and capable&#13;
of helping anyone interested in&#13;
improving their cross-country&#13;
skiing techniques and to give&#13;
advice on some of the alternatives&#13;
to the beginner as to how to take&#13;
the first step toward cross-country&#13;
skiing.&#13;
There will be a movie shown&#13;
which depicts most of the&#13;
different types and styles of crosscountry&#13;
skiing called "skinny&#13;
skiing".&#13;
This year Parkside's Union will&#13;
be starting a rental program here&#13;
on campus. Mike Menzhuber, the&#13;
new Rec Center Manager will be&#13;
at the meeting to give an idea of&#13;
cost and hours which this service&#13;
will be available.&#13;
After all general business in&#13;
concluded, the meeting will&#13;
adjourn to Union 207 for a swap&#13;
and sell. Everyone is invited to&#13;
bring any used equipment to&#13;
Union 207 and barter away their&#13;
equipment over a couple of beers&#13;
provided free by the club.&#13;
This year the club is also going&#13;
to be charging two dollars for a&#13;
membership. This membership&#13;
will get you into all PNSC&#13;
activities at reduced rates, will&#13;
provide for more free beer at&#13;
meetings, and will be good for&#13;
reduced rates on rentals and more.&#13;
PNSC has been at Parkside now&#13;
for five seasons. Some of the&#13;
members have been skiing for&#13;
seven years.&#13;
The Farmers' Almanac is&#13;
predicting 200 inches of snow.&#13;
What better time to take that first&#13;
step toward cross-country skiing&#13;
and come to the meeting to find&#13;
out how to do it!&#13;
How do you feel about the 19 year&#13;
old drinking age in Wisconsin?&#13;
Scott Vankerkvoorde—Freshman&#13;
I think it's a good idea. 1 don't&#13;
think kids in high school should&#13;
drink.&#13;
Vince Anevicius—Freshman&#13;
I think it should be raised&#13;
higher. Personally I don't drink.&#13;
Chelle Phelps—Junior&#13;
I think it's a good idea. A lot of&#13;
kids in high school are still 18. But&#13;
if I was 18, I'd disagree.&#13;
Jim Wynstra—Sophomore&#13;
I don't think it would make any&#13;
difference. Kids'!! drink whether&#13;
they are 18. !Q, or 21.&#13;
Cindy lurco—Freshman&#13;
I think it's unfair in a way. If&#13;
you re considered an adult ai IS&#13;
there-will alwavs be someone who&#13;
wants io raise it higher and&#13;
Pam Carey — Freshman&#13;
v fi doesn't affect me one wav &lt;&#13;
the other. I don't think ii won&#13;
"'on m&lt;* if I wanted drink &#13;
Ranger Wednesday November 7, 1979 3&#13;
Macki speaks&#13;
on math theory&#13;
Prof. Jack Macki of the&#13;
University of Alberta (Edmonton.&#13;
Alberta, Canada) will present a&#13;
tree public lecture at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
on The Utility and Elegance of&#13;
Optimal Control Theory" at 2:30&#13;
p.m. on Friday. Nov. 9. His talk, at&#13;
the undergraduate level, deals with&#13;
the mathematics of self-corrective&#13;
systems such as animal muscle&#13;
control, movements of robots,&#13;
aircraft landing and missile&#13;
guidance systems.&#13;
UAW topic&#13;
for roundtable&#13;
"The UAW and the Auto&#13;
Industry Negotiations' will be the&#13;
topic of a talk in the Social&#13;
Science Roundtable series at UWParkside&#13;
by Jack Rice, international&#13;
representative of UAW&#13;
Region 10, at noon on Monday,&#13;
November 12, in the Campus&#13;
Union, room 106.. Roundtable&#13;
talks are free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
History students&#13;
meet on Tuesday&#13;
History students will meet&#13;
Tuesday, November 13 at 12:30&#13;
p.m. in Molinaro 111 to prepare a&#13;
petition for a Parkside chapter of&#13;
Phi Alpha Theta (the international&#13;
honor society in history)&#13;
and to discuss the presentation of&#13;
"The Informer," a film about&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Irish history to be shown Monday.&#13;
November 19 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro 103. A discussion in&#13;
Molinaro 111 will follow the film.&#13;
Officers of Phi Alpha Thcta are&#13;
Maureen Funk, president; Gus&#13;
Sorenson, vice president; Kim&#13;
Campbell, secretary; Gary Lea,&#13;
treasurer; and Ray Fay, historian.&#13;
Anyone interested in history is&#13;
encouraged to attend the meeting&#13;
and the film as a history club is&#13;
also being formed. If unable to&#13;
attend or if additional information&#13;
concerning the history&#13;
club or the honorary is requested,&#13;
contact advisors Dr. Oliver&#13;
Hayward, Dr. John Buenker or&#13;
Dr. Angela Howard Zophy in the&#13;
Social Science office, ext. 2316.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
sponsors dinner&#13;
The Parkside Accounting Club&#13;
and the Division of Business and&#13;
Administrative Science are cosponsoring&#13;
the Annual Management&#13;
Accounting Dinner on&#13;
Ihursdav. November 15. at&#13;
Kilbourn Gardens.&#13;
Approximately 15 of Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin's major corporations&#13;
will be represented by their&#13;
presidents, vice-presidents, or&#13;
controllers. All attending students&#13;
will have an excellent opportunity&#13;
to meet and talk with industry&#13;
leaders in an informal setting.&#13;
Following cocktails at 6:00 p.m..&#13;
the agenda includes dinner, a&#13;
welcome by Jim Kettinger. Club&#13;
President, and also bv Chancellor&#13;
Guskin. Division Chairman Art&#13;
Dudycha will conclude with a brief&#13;
presentation on the current&#13;
developments in the business&#13;
program at U.W. Parkside.&#13;
Attendance will be limited to&#13;
business majors specializing in&#13;
accounting or finance and their&#13;
dates. Students may sign up in&#13;
MOLN 380. or with Jim Kettinger.&#13;
Darryl Heyden, Susie Crockett, or&#13;
Dr. Pryor. The $5 fee covering the&#13;
buffet dinner must be submitted to&#13;
any of the above mentioned Club&#13;
officers or Dr. Pryor by Nov. 10.&#13;
Attire appropriate tor a business&#13;
meeting is required at the dinner.&#13;
Child&#13;
Care Center&#13;
sponsors lectures&#13;
In observance of the International&#13;
Year of the Child, the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center is&#13;
sponsoring a series of Guest&#13;
Lecturers. The first in the series is&#13;
Dr. Gregory Young, a Kenosha&#13;
pediatrician who will be speaking&#13;
to interested parents on Children's&#13;
Health. The lecture will be held on&#13;
Tuesday. November 6 from 7:00 -&#13;
8:00 pm in Tallent Hall, room 181..&#13;
There is no charge, but seating is&#13;
limited. Reservations may be made&#13;
by phone (553 - 2 227) or mail to&#13;
the Parkside Child Care Center.&#13;
Campus/Community Film Series&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America.&#13;
EIL E M AN S&#13;
rm On Tap&#13;
at&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
C MEIliMAN BREWING CO INC IA CROSSE WISCONSIN&#13;
The ShooTisT ANd STAqecoAch&#13;
Union Square Theater&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 11 7 pm&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 12 1:30 pm&#13;
Si .50 Single Admission&#13;
WISCONSIN CHFFSFS&#13;
FRFSH NUTS &amp; PRODUCE&#13;
DRICD FRUIT GRAINS&#13;
THF FOOD&#13;
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pib&gt;!-r&#13;
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U U H H ,&#13;
IS THC&#13;
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;ifr J:M;&#13;
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*!:. " ! • i&#13;
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Tis th e seoson to buy a membership in C.S.C. The&#13;
food co-op has great quality and excellent prices&#13;
on many ^ of the foods you'll need for the&#13;
upcoming holidays. And if ydur looking for ways&#13;
to cut your food bill and still provide your family&#13;
with nutritional meals, you can't beat the co-op&#13;
for it s selection of natural and organic foods. Stop&#13;
in and give a look around. We're located on the„&#13;
East side of Wood Rood between Tallent Hall and&#13;
Parkside Village.&#13;
One year student Hours: Mon 10 -6&#13;
memberships — S3.00 Tue., Wed., Thur. 10-10&#13;
Fri., Sat. 9-6 Sun. 12-5 &#13;
4 Wednesday November 7, 1979 Ranger&#13;
Off sa vs&#13;
Almanac inaccurate&#13;
by Mira Lochanski&#13;
Rumors have it that southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin is supposed to&#13;
receive 200 inches of snowfall this&#13;
winter. But how accurate is this&#13;
prediction? Armin J. Ott (Jim Ott),&#13;
full-time instructor at UW-Parkside&#13;
and part-time weatherman for&#13;
Channel 4, responded negatively.&#13;
"It is similar to me predicting a&#13;
sunny 102 degree day in&#13;
south-eastern Wisconsin in the&#13;
dead of winter," said Ott. "If you&#13;
take a look at the monthly weather&#13;
predictions such as in the Farmer's&#13;
Almanac, it is not always accurate.&#13;
Some of their answers are not&#13;
definite^ and fit only broad&#13;
categories."&#13;
Ott has been the week-end&#13;
weatherman for Channel 4 for four&#13;
years after schooling at UWMilwaukee&#13;
and a similar job at&#13;
Channel 18.&#13;
Most of Ott's weather predictions&#13;
are dependent on whether&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
Jim Ott shows class just how much&#13;
snow we'll get this winter.&#13;
Photo by M. Anderson&#13;
such predictions are short or longterm.&#13;
When Ott makes a&#13;
short-term prediction (up to 24&#13;
hours), he mainly uses surface&#13;
maps and prior knowledge of&#13;
weather conditions. If a long-term&#13;
prediction is made, Ott relies on&#13;
the use of the computer. But Ott&#13;
did mention that computers do not&#13;
necessarily make correct predictions&#13;
either. "The monthly&#13;
computer outlook predicted above&#13;
normal precipitation in Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, but in fact, we&#13;
had a dry September on record."&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seeking a degree&#13;
at UW-Parkside) should consult their academic adviser prior to&#13;
registration for Spring Semester. A Certification of Advising form,&#13;
signed by the adviser, is required for registration.&#13;
Spring Semester Course Schedules will be available on November 9.&#13;
November 12-21 has been designated as an academic advising&#13;
period, and advisers will make every effort to meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER&#13;
FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions,&#13;
contact the Office of the Dean of Faculty,&#13;
348 Wyllie Library-Learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non-matriculant students (students not seeking a degree at UW-Parkside)&#13;
are exempt from this requirement.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, November 7&#13;
MOVIE "Womanhouse" will be shown at 12 noon in MOLN 103 and at 7:30&#13;
pm in MOLN 144. Carol Lee Saffioti is the discussion moderator. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 1 p m in Union 104-106 featuring the lively music of George&#13;
Russell. Admission is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
SEMINAR '-'Post Partum Depression" by L. Kruckman, J. Craig, S. Svendsen&#13;
at 7:30 pm in Union 106. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
MEETING The Parkside Nordic Ski Club will meet at 7:45 pm in MOLN 105&#13;
to discuss upcoming events, show a movie, and info on Parkside's ski rental&#13;
program. A sell and swap session in Union 207 will immediately follow the&#13;
meeting. Free beer.&#13;
Thursday, November 8&#13;
PRACTICE The Volleyball Club will hold practice from 6 to 8 pm in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Building. Ext. 5359.&#13;
LECTURE The Inter-Varsity Fellowship will hold a lecture lunch at noon in&#13;
Union 207. Speaker Paul Herbert will talk on "Faith Tested by Fire."&#13;
Friday, November 9&#13;
MUSIC at 2 pm in Union Square featuring "Xanadu". Admission is free.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
MOVIE "The Gauntlet" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, November 10&#13;
MEXIFEST starts at 6 pm in the Union Bazaar area. All seats have been sold.&#13;
MOVIES "Stagecoach" and "The Shootist" will be shown at 7 pm in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.50. The program is open to the public.&#13;
Sponsored by the Kinesis Film Series.&#13;
Sunday, November 11&#13;
MOVIES "Stagecoach" and "The Shootist" will be repeated at 1:30 pm in the&#13;
Union Cinema. The program is open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT at 3:30 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre featuring New&#13;
Music at Parkside with Harry Sturm and August Wegner. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Monday, November 12&#13;
ROUNDTABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Jack Rice, International Representative&#13;
of U.A.W. Region 10, will talk on "The UAW and the Auto&#13;
Industry Negotiations". The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
EXHIBIT on Einstein starts today through Saturday. The hours are 3:30 pm&#13;
until 5 pm in GR 103. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, November 13&#13;
SEMINAR "Surviving Divorce" at 7 pm in MOLN 107. Please call ext. 2312&#13;
for more information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Rape aftermath&#13;
attack is to remain calm.&#13;
Memorize as much as possible&#13;
about the rapist—hair and eye&#13;
color, height, weight, facial&#13;
features, speech patterns,&#13;
clothes—and the surroundings,&#13;
time of day, an address, a car's&#13;
year, model, color, etc. As soon&#13;
as the rapist leaves, summon&#13;
help. Call the police. If at all&#13;
possible, jot down details about&#13;
the rapist and the attack or tell&#13;
someone else to make notes. Do&#13;
not alter the scene or your&#13;
person; don't straighten things,&#13;
change clothes, bath, douche, or&#13;
clean up at all. Doing so can&#13;
destroy valuable evidence. Get&#13;
to a hospital, either by yourself&#13;
or with a friend or the police.&#13;
Take a complete change of&#13;
clothes along. Clothes worn at&#13;
the time of the rape will be kept&#13;
as evidence.&#13;
Call Kenoshans Against Sexual&#13;
Assault, Inc., (658-1717) or&#13;
have a friend, the hospital, or&#13;
cont. on pg. 6&#13;
by Linda Marcussen&#13;
Note: The guest writer this&#13;
week is Linda Marcussen, cofounder&#13;
and Secretary of the&#13;
Board of Directors of KASA.&#13;
Any woman can be raped,&#13;
anytime, anywhere. She can&#13;
make herself less vulnerable by&#13;
taking precautions, but even&#13;
the best safety tactics can be&#13;
too little or too late.&#13;
The best way to survive an&#13;
NEED CREDIT?&#13;
Too young to borrow?&#13;
New in town/no references?&#13;
Erase bad debt records&#13;
Skip bills without ruining credit&#13;
Receive loans within weeks of beginning this program&#13;
Information on updated credit laws and legislation&#13;
Your rights under the Federal Credit Acts&#13;
SEND FOR&#13;
SOLVE ALL&#13;
THESE&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
PROBLEMS&#13;
with&#13;
THE CREDIT GAME&#13;
Send Check or&#13;
Money Order to WALL STREET PUBLISHING CO&#13;
THE CREDIT GAME&#13;
Tired of being without credit, or up to your neck in&#13;
minimum payments'? With this book you will learn how&#13;
to make the $300 billion credit industry jump at your&#13;
command."&#13;
6^LY"$5795&#13;
303 5TH AVE.&#13;
SUITE 1306&#13;
NEW YORK, NY 10016&#13;
Enclosed is $_&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
City ______&#13;
(N Y. residents add 8% Sales Tax)&#13;
for _ Books&#13;
State _ _ _ Zip&#13;
Allow 3 weeks for delivery. &#13;
MOOui&#13;
&amp;la6(ujudinJrtt(uxwAtt IS44&#13;
Blue Ribbon&#13;
LUNCH&#13;
Mon-Sat&#13;
11-2&#13;
BRUNCH&#13;
10:20 - 2&#13;
DINNER&#13;
Thurs-Sat&#13;
5-9&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Drug Etiquette&#13;
Ranger Wednesday November 7, . .1979 5&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Ivegot Pabst Blue Ribbon on my mind"&#13;
For every human activity, there&#13;
seems to be a code of conduct.&#13;
People are continuously being&#13;
labelled "acceptable" or "unacceptable,&#13;
based on their most&#13;
recent actions while under the&#13;
influence of drugs.&#13;
For instance, it is usually&#13;
acceptable tO~grind a cigarette out&#13;
in a n ashtray and it is usually unacceptable&#13;
to grind a cigarette out&#13;
in the palm of your host's hand.&#13;
The reason for this almost&#13;
universal policy is obvious.&#13;
There are even some subcultures&#13;
who proclaim abhorrence of&#13;
traditional WASP etiquette, that&#13;
label behavior of peers acceptable&#13;
or un; some of the most antietiquette&#13;
concepts, when conceived&#13;
by the human social mind, develop&#13;
an etiquette all their own.&#13;
Like every other human activity&#13;
that begins with a small congregation&#13;
of followers, and grows&#13;
slowly into an accepted practice,&#13;
the activities of the drug subculture&#13;
have evolved into conventions.&#13;
&#13;
Drug use and abuse is&#13;
supposedly the symbol of the&#13;
liberated 70's. Come on now.&#13;
We re all just as hung up now as&#13;
we ever were. We've just applied&#13;
old rules to a new game. We just&#13;
have to be loaded, high, or&#13;
tripping to exhibit our civilized&#13;
behavior.&#13;
The conventions of drug abuse&#13;
are simple enough, once you are&#13;
acquainted with them. It's not&#13;
some complicated Dear Miss&#13;
Manners: I have been cordially&#13;
invited to a Charity Ball for the&#13;
nephews of the grandfathers of the&#13;
veterans of the War. Can I wear&#13;
my leisure suit with my toupee?&#13;
No, the rules are much simpler.&#13;
First, never suggest usage of&#13;
certain substances unless you are&#13;
willing and prepared to offer&#13;
contribution of the substancefs) or&#13;
you are absolutely sure your&#13;
charismatic personality will carry&#13;
you through the rest of the&#13;
evening. Nobody likes a leech.&#13;
Certain substances cannot be&#13;
mixed politely, so don't do it. Most&#13;
druggies overlook the obvious&#13;
health hazards, so etiquette does&#13;
too. When you mix anisette and&#13;
angel dust, you will become a real&#13;
menace to polite society. You will&#13;
become what is known to liqueur&#13;
lovers as a Devil Diluter, and what&#13;
is known to dust lovers as a&#13;
Liqueur Licker. Either of these two&#13;
labels, once you've got them&#13;
hanging around your neck like a&#13;
price tag on a Christmas gift, can&#13;
sure make it tough to be&#13;
acceptable by anyone's standards.&#13;
It you want to do any unpopular&#13;
— i.e. unacceptable — drug, keep&#13;
it quiet. Don't blab that you've just&#13;
done a whole bottle of cellulite diet&#13;
pills, or that you know where you&#13;
can get together with a crate of&#13;
Sinu-Tab. You will b e laughed at.&#13;
It you a re male, it is acceptable&#13;
while under the influence, to talk a&#13;
lot, become philosophical, get&#13;
depressed, smile continuously, or&#13;
attempt seductions with classic&#13;
lines like "Did you ever listen to&#13;
Barry Manilow on a waterbed?"&#13;
If you are female, you may&#13;
giggle a lot, discuss personal&#13;
matters with strangers, become&#13;
enlightened religiously or get&#13;
horny enough to talk to men who&#13;
listen to Barry Manilow anywhere.&#13;
So, don't feel as if you've fallen&#13;
into a time warp that dropped you&#13;
right into the middle of a 1950's&#13;
cocktail party the next time you&#13;
share a joint with a few friends. It's&#13;
nothing to be ashamed of. After&#13;
all, you're only human.&#13;
'Fefu' very well done&#13;
by Steve M. Dankert&#13;
This 1977 winner of the&#13;
OBIE for distinguished&#13;
playwriting and direction&#13;
appeared at the Parkside&#13;
Theatre October 25th through&#13;
29th. On the whole the audience&#13;
seemed to enjoy the production.&#13;
The play, set in the 1930's,&#13;
evolves around the character&#13;
Fefu (played by Donna&#13;
Dutchings) and various friends&#13;
of hers. Their coming together&#13;
is a result of organizing for a&#13;
fund drive.&#13;
As the play progresses one&#13;
comes to see more of each of&#13;
Fefu's friends' background and&#13;
personality. Each of her friends&#13;
may be a portrayal of one of&#13;
eight facets of personality&#13;
contained within every woman,&#13;
any one of which may surface at&#13;
some time. (This could certainly&#13;
account for the stereotypical&#13;
unpredictability of women by&#13;
men or by themselves). Two&#13;
aspects of the character Fefu's&#13;
actions in the play is her&#13;
intelligence and her wish to&#13;
avoid being molded into a life&#13;
portrayed by her friend&#13;
Christina (played by Mary-Beth&#13;
Kelleher). Christina, a&#13;
conventional, low-keyed,&#13;
matronly type, is an apparent&#13;
antithesis of Fefu.&#13;
The whole thrust of the play&#13;
seems to be this fight against&#13;
the conventional social molds&#13;
put on women, and the&#13;
consequences of going against&#13;
the flow are brought out in the&#13;
character Julia (played by&#13;
Sarah Spencer). Julia, who is&#13;
now confined to a wheelchair as&#13;
a result of a strange hunting&#13;
accident, was found to be,&#13;
before the accident, of the same&#13;
personality and outlook as&#13;
Fefu. Julia maintains that she&#13;
would have died, ekcept that&#13;
she recanted her wish to go&#13;
against the grain of society. She&#13;
was therefore allowed by the&#13;
"Judges" to live, though in&#13;
other than perfect health. These&#13;
Judges keep very strict control&#13;
over her thoughts and&#13;
attitudes, and threaten death if&#13;
Julia ever strays from the&#13;
beaten path again. These&#13;
Judges represent the whole&#13;
social environment : rules,&#13;
customs, and norms by which&#13;
society is supposed to reward&#13;
and punish women.&#13;
Julia helps Fefu a little in&#13;
finally realizes that she too is&#13;
travelling the same rough road.&#13;
Fefu's cognizance of the&#13;
Judges' identity is fatal. The&#13;
Judges impute this knowledge&#13;
to Julia and, as a result of&#13;
breaking the "rules" Julia is&#13;
fatally wounded by another&#13;
accident of the same bizarre&#13;
nature, as the first one.&#13;
A very well done play. Mood&#13;
was set well, and facial&#13;
expression and poise fit the&#13;
sense of the various situations.&#13;
The other actors deserve to be&#13;
acknowledged for the fine job of&#13;
acting. These are: Mary Ann&#13;
Lulewicz, who played Cindy;&#13;
Patricia B. Casciaro, who&#13;
played Emma; Mary Stankus,&#13;
who portrayed Paula; Gail G.&#13;
Ross, who portrayed Sue; and&#13;
Rita R. Bislew, who played&#13;
unde Cecilia. rstanding this, and Fefu ^ecina.&#13;
I;*******************************^^&#13;
PARKSIDE PREPARE YOURSELVES.&#13;
THE NCSA SKI WEEK&#13;
Jan. 1-9, 1980 to&#13;
Big Sky Montana&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
* (only 11 spaces left]&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
$50&#13;
due date:&#13;
Nov. 9&#13;
$250 includes:&#13;
bus transportation&#13;
lodging&#13;
lift tickets&#13;
parties &amp;. races&#13;
f\ sig " &gt; yn n up y in HI Union c20u 9 u&#13;
***************************^^^,1^ &#13;
6 Wednesday November 7, 1979 Ranger&#13;
classifieds&#13;
policy&#13;
1. All paid classifieds must be initialed by a staff member.&#13;
2. All classifieds must include social security number and signature of advertiser.&#13;
3. Limit three free classifieds per person.&#13;
for sale&#13;
Diamond Ring: 1/3 ct. Marquise;&#13;
$950 appraisal, sell for $400/best&#13;
offer. Phone 637-1598.&#13;
Ampeg V-2 amplifier. Excellent&#13;
condition. Best offer. Call Jim at&#13;
632-7853.&#13;
Ford Rims 15". NewCall&#13;
657-9435.&#13;
-$10 each.&#13;
Car: 1971 Ambassador Wagon.&#13;
Power, sharp, NO RUST. Must&#13;
sell. Phone 694-6693.&#13;
personals&#13;
Denise Sobieski—Happy 20th&#13;
Birthday! Your favorite fan.&#13;
CORRECTION. Son ot tne&#13;
| Welder — Rebel! Protect your&#13;
home!&#13;
Jani Kreh — What's this Gary&#13;
got that I don't? Little John.&#13;
Steve K., I think you're cute!&#13;
Introduce yourself. Jani.&#13;
Hope Halloween was a big bang&#13;
-signed the Parkside Bomber.&#13;
Jani Kre, Super Destroyer needs&#13;
to be blown away. Ax.&#13;
Roger, Your Miller's gone. Now&#13;
you owe me a dance.&#13;
Borchard T Speed, would like to&#13;
race with you. Doctor Dodge.&#13;
Animal Lover: Sat., 11-10-79,&#13;
7:30 p.m. J.O.C.&#13;
Bunny Love is actually KRATACHI-CHI-VIL,&#13;
in drag.&#13;
I PHELTA THI challenges the&#13;
Animals.&#13;
Jerry B. listens to Shaun Cassidy&#13;
„ ._reoords incoqnito&#13;
Truck and Sad Jack-O-Lantern;&#13;
Mark Pleads — Totally Wasted!&#13;
OUR BOOKSTORE — Not unlike&#13;
tourist trap with bankers hours&#13;
USELESS.&#13;
Reed, let's do it (Mad City) again&#13;
sometime. Mary.&#13;
Who and what are the Animals?&#13;
I PHELTA THI.&#13;
Jani K., the animals are trying to&#13;
frame us — Steve Krat.&#13;
The Animals don't know what&#13;
partying is. I PHELTA THI.&#13;
Joe, it's time for animal sandwich,&#13;
be the meat! Oleo.&#13;
Ryan, sometimes I hate your&#13;
guts. Phantom from above.&#13;
snaron Hopkins, you can dance&#13;
at my house anytime. Classifiedcreeper.&#13;
&#13;
Hey Armin, How's the weather?&#13;
It OTT be snowing now!&#13;
Goldie—I wish you an early&#13;
transmission failure about 3:30&#13;
p.m. on tne 894 Interchange from&#13;
I-94 to Madison — Moldy.&#13;
Yes it was. Hot Pammy.&#13;
THE ROUND TABLE-May a&#13;
'62 Rambler roll oyer and desert&#13;
you Mike! C.J., J.S., J.S., AT &amp;&#13;
M.K.&#13;
Ron H., go for it, you'll only lose&#13;
your virginity.&#13;
J- Lev — Surprise! In 9 months&#13;
you'll be a...!!? Pub &amp; Grub.&#13;
Ron, everyone knows Dodge? will&#13;
DIE. Your car's a DREAM. r'FC.&#13;
Thanks Army — in three months&#13;
I'll be scrubbing toilets —&#13;
guaranteed!&#13;
miscellaneous&#13;
Part-time assistant to attorney&#13;
in general practice. Long term.&#13;
Must be intelligent, aggressive,&#13;
eneryetic, and independent.&#13;
Hours flexible, 8 to 16 per week.&#13;
°refer person with law office,&#13;
business background or college&#13;
degree. Typing skills not&#13;
necessary, but preferred. Submit&#13;
resume to Robert Michelson, 834&#13;
Main, Racine, Wl 53403.&#13;
Typing wanted in home bysecretary.&#13;
Reports, term papers,&#13;
etc. Reasonable rates. Phone&#13;
654-1688.&#13;
Female wanted to share apartment.&#13;
South Kenosha. Rent $130&#13;
each. 1 utility. Occupancy Nov. 1.&#13;
Call 694-3219 after 2:30.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads&#13;
to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
deadline: every thursday at 10 am&#13;
STUDENT-STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
name,&#13;
ssno.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
LP Review&#13;
'Restless Nights'&#13;
by Charles Clifton&#13;
Karla Bonoff — RESTLESS&#13;
NIGHTS, produced by Kenny&#13;
Edwards.&#13;
This being only her second&#13;
recording to date, Karla Bonoff&#13;
has developed into a sensitive&#13;
writer and singer. She allows her&#13;
voice to gently blend in with the&#13;
lyrics — not over power them. On&#13;
many of the songs she sounds like&#13;
a younger Carly Simon.&#13;
"Restless Nights," the title track&#13;
on side one, contains words&#13;
conveying feelings many of us have&#13;
felt before. She sings of a woman&#13;
who has tried to be faithful to an&#13;
old love, but to her new lover she&#13;
confesses:&#13;
Those restless nights&#13;
So warm and wild&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIO N&#13;
10:00 a.m. -4:00 p.m.&#13;
BUTTERSCOTCH DISCS&#13;
STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
ROOT BEER BARRELS&#13;
CINNAMON DISCS&#13;
COFFEE CANDY&#13;
SOUR BALLS&#13;
JELLY BEANS&#13;
CANDY CORN&#13;
GUM DROPS&#13;
SALTED CASHEWS&#13;
SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
NATURAL PISTACHIOS&#13;
CHOC. COVERED PEANUTS&#13;
MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
CHOCOLATE STARS&#13;
CHOC. COVERED RAISINS&#13;
CHOC. PEANUT CLUSTERS&#13;
ASSORTED TOFFEE&#13;
BRIDGE MIX&#13;
M &amp; M (type) CANDIES&#13;
SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
ORANGE SLICES&#13;
NATURE NUT MIX&#13;
BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
RED PISTACHIOS&#13;
PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
TOOTSIE POPS&#13;
COCONUT TOASTIES&#13;
VANILLA CARAMELS&#13;
BUTTER RUM DISCS&#13;
COUGH DROPS&#13;
SUGAR FREE GUM&#13;
BREATH MINTS&#13;
JAW BREAKERS&#13;
CHERRY WHIPS&#13;
IMPORTED FRENCH CANDIES&#13;
GIANT LOLLYPOPS&#13;
CARMEL CORN&#13;
And More&#13;
SPECIALS OF&#13;
THE MONTH&#13;
25%&#13;
OFF&#13;
BLANCHED PEANUTS &amp;&#13;
BUTTERSCOTCH DISCS&#13;
Carlo Bonoff&#13;
His touch was ice&#13;
Your love was fire.&#13;
From there she moves into a real&#13;
tear-jerker, in which a woman&#13;
finds out she has lost her love the&#13;
hard way, "The Letter."&#13;
She wrote that you said&#13;
You needed her to face the&#13;
world&#13;
I wish that it could all just be&#13;
. erased&#13;
I can't believe shccould take my&#13;
place.&#13;
The LP doesn't contain any&#13;
blaring arrangements that would&#13;
overshadow Bonoff s magic touch&#13;
with the words — just an extra&#13;
attraction that adds to the beauty&#13;
of this album. Karla Bonoff&#13;
RESTLESS NIGHTS certainly&#13;
won't cause any restless nights.&#13;
Best Cuts: "Restless Nights,"&#13;
"The Letter," "Baby Don't Go,"&#13;
"Loving You," and "The Water Is&#13;
Wide."&#13;
'tyacvu&#13;
Cont. from pg. 4&#13;
the police do so for you.&#13;
Advocates are on duty 24-hours&#13;
a day. The advocate can be with&#13;
you at the hospital to explain&#13;
the various tests and&#13;
procedures involved in the&#13;
exam and, if necessary, defend&#13;
your right to kind and sensitive&#13;
treatment.&#13;
The decision to talk to police&#13;
is entirely the victims'. While&#13;
KASA wants to see every&#13;
attack reported, they do not&#13;
insist nor do they withhold&#13;
their services from someone&#13;
who decides not to report. If&#13;
police are involved, the&#13;
advocate can usually be present&#13;
during the interrogation and&#13;
any subsequent questioning. If&#13;
a rape case goes to court,&#13;
KASA continues to provide&#13;
companionship, moral support,&#13;
and information regarding the&#13;
DA's office and the often confusing&#13;
and intimidating judicial&#13;
process.&#13;
KASA's services arc available&#13;
at no cost. They are&#13;
committed to alleviating the&#13;
suffering of sexual assault&#13;
victims and helping them once&#13;
again gain control of their lives.&#13;
Red's Roller Rink&#13;
7220 67th Stree '"~r&#13;
" *~"r&#13;
ADULTS ONLY&#13;
SKATING SESSION&#13;
SUNDAY EVENINGS&#13;
7:30-10:30 PM&#13;
MtiNi be 18 or older&#13;
Admission $2.00&#13;
Skate Rental .75 &#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Ranger ' Wednesday November 7, 1979 7&#13;
Women second in state&#13;
Photo by D. Edenhauser&#13;
Tess Manzano serves the ball for Parkside during Parkside's victory&#13;
game against Carthage. The UW-Parkside team lost to Carthage later in&#13;
the tournament.&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
The Parkside women's volleyball&#13;
team gave a superb&#13;
performance Saturday, losing the&#13;
final and vital match of the Ranger&#13;
hosted Division II volleyball&#13;
tournament of the Wisconsin&#13;
Women's Intercollegiate Athletic&#13;
Conference (WWIAC) to&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
Parkside, in the first match.&#13;
Cross-country&#13;
took two in a row from Marquette,&#13;
winning 15 - 10 and 17 - 15.&#13;
Northland then fell to Carroll&#13;
College in two out of three&#13;
matches, and next loss two straight&#13;
to Marquette.&#13;
Carthage then defeated Carroll&#13;
in two straight, and while still hot,&#13;
took two away from Parkside,&#13;
15 - 16, 15 - 11.&#13;
Next it was Marquette over&#13;
Carroll in two straight, and&#13;
Parkside over Marquette 15 - 10&#13;
and 15 - 12. Parkside then&#13;
marched over Carthage in three&#13;
straight games. 15 - 10. 15 - 4.&#13;
15 - 13. but lost the final and vital,&#13;
hotly contested match to Carthage&#13;
in five games: 15 - 8. 2 - 15. 6 - 15,&#13;
17 - 15. and 15 - 10..&#13;
Overall. Parkside's women's&#13;
volleyball team put in a strong&#13;
showing in a long and grueling&#13;
day. and most likely lost the final&#13;
match to Carthage because of&#13;
mass fatigue, since Carthage had&#13;
played only three matches before&#13;
this final challenge, whereas&#13;
Parkside played five.&#13;
Carthage now goes to the&#13;
regional competition of the&#13;
Association for Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics for Women (AIAW)&#13;
November 16-17 in Dayton. Ohio.&#13;
Had Parkside won, they would&#13;
now have a place in the&#13;
competition. Currently there arc&#13;
six state champs, one host school,&#13;
and one bid. Coach Linda&#13;
Henderson has put in for that bid&#13;
but will not know the results of her&#13;
request until Sunday.&#13;
I his leaves Parkside with a&#13;
29-22- 1 record for the season.&#13;
Henderson remains optimistic for&#13;
her team s chance of getting the&#13;
bid. and cited the superior&#13;
performance of her athletes and&#13;
the great attendance and support&#13;
of the tans for the team's par&#13;
excellence.&#13;
Team gears up for nationals&#13;
by Walt Remondini&#13;
After a season abounding in&#13;
grueling practices and tough races,&#13;
the Parkside men's cross country&#13;
team is now gearing up for the&#13;
culmination of the years work, the&#13;
NAIA Nationals to be held here at&#13;
Parkside this Saturday. November&#13;
10.&#13;
A good warmup for the Ranger&#13;
team came on Saturday, October&#13;
27th when they participated in the&#13;
NCAA Division II meet at Eastern&#13;
Illinois University. The meet&#13;
carried added importance because&#13;
the top five individuals and top&#13;
four teams in the meet wbuld&#13;
qualify for the Division II National&#13;
meet to be held this year in&#13;
Riverside, California.&#13;
Parkside, however, was able to&#13;
do no better than eleventh, a very&#13;
respectable finish in a competitive&#13;
field that included a total of&#13;
thirty-three teams.&#13;
The top finishers for the&#13;
Rangers,were Bill Werve who was&#13;
31st overall and Dave Mueller,&#13;
who finished 49th.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa's primary&#13;
objective now is for his team to run&#13;
well in their final meet with the&#13;
hopes of improving upon last&#13;
year's 19th place finish.&#13;
It would be a fitting conclusion&#13;
to what, overall, was a verv&#13;
promising year for a young but&#13;
rapidly improving Ranger team.&#13;
~l&#13;
^ fj! : - i *-; &gt; v Jt&#13;
Presents&#13;
OLD STYLE ^&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
Featuring&#13;
Wood Song&#13;
Union Sauare&#13;
November 14, 8pm&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
A&#13;
Photo by B. Possino&#13;
Steve Jacob (Music Dept.) reaches for the pass as Ranger players&#13;
take the chase during Saturday's touch football game between the&#13;
Ranger and the Music Department. Ranger won.. .of course.&#13;
isn't it about&#13;
(nne.&#13;
-i i i l 'l i l i!!&#13;
you got your card?&#13;
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT YOUR&#13;
BANK OR THE UNION INFO CENTER&#13;
V&#13;
ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME&#13;
TO CHECK OUT&#13;
A LIFE INSURANCE SALES CAREER?&#13;
Ami, lon tp siinu'lhifu; while|&#13;
Merest, d,„ ah',, i „su, „ K , s,lhnK ,&#13;
&lt; h „ L mil on , , „ Ht c Ixm. „|,|ii;ali„n&#13;
Make ,,n appointment ( omo S(&gt;(&lt; (js,&#13;
Donald J. Brink, CLU District Agent - Racine 632-2731&#13;
Gene F. Soens, CLU District Agent - Kenosha 654-5316&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
NOK I HWI S 11 K\ \U IP\| HI) MIIWAlIkH \ML&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Puerto&#13;
Vallarta&#13;
Mexico&#13;
* A; * 'V&#13;
PAN AM&#13;
Semester Break January 3-10, 1980&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - SIGN-UP&#13;
DEADLINE NOV. 30&#13;
&lt;150 DEPOSIT R EQUIRED)&#13;
- For application lorms or additio nal intonation&#13;
contact: Parkside Union Office 553-2200 &#13;
8 Wednesday November 7, 1979 Ranger&#13;
W. Burman sets&#13;
new course record&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
With the growing success of&#13;
Parkside's cross-country program&#13;
on the men's side, a tradition of&#13;
good athletes being produced by&#13;
the coaches is on the rise. The&#13;
women are also establishing a&#13;
tradition of their own that started&#13;
with Kim Merritt a few years ago.&#13;
Although the quantity of&#13;
runners on the distaff side is&#13;
lacking, certainly the quality is&#13;
excellent. Freshman sensation&#13;
Wendy Burman is the main reason&#13;
for success this season.&#13;
Last weekend Miss^ Burman,&#13;
along with teammate Barb&#13;
Osborne took part in the&#13;
Schalinske named&#13;
1979-80 golf MVP&#13;
Todd Schalinske, a sophomore&#13;
from Racine (Horlick), has been&#13;
named most valuable player on&#13;
the 1979-80 UW-Parkside golf&#13;
team, Coach Steve Stephens&#13;
announced.&#13;
Schalinske, who was Parkside's&#13;
top golfer in ten rounds this year,&#13;
averaged 79.4 strokes per round in&#13;
leading UW-P to a fifth place&#13;
finish in the NA1A District 14&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
He was also awarded his second&#13;
letter as was Brian Graham, also a&#13;
sophomore from Horlick.&#13;
Graham was picked by his teammates&#13;
as captain of the squad.&#13;
Other letterwinners, all winning&#13;
awards for the first time, are Oak&#13;
Creek freshman Mark Peterson;&#13;
Racine (Green Bay West) junior&#13;
Mike Redfearn; Perrysburg&#13;
(Genoa), Ohio, freshman Tim&#13;
Rudey; and Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
freshman Bob Sobol.&#13;
Without&#13;
adequate&#13;
sportswriters&#13;
our athletes&#13;
don't get the&#13;
recognition&#13;
they greatly&#13;
deserve.&#13;
Contribute to&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
athletic c&lt;&#13;
| tradition&#13;
md join _&#13;
I m r team.&#13;
needs&#13;
_ sportswriters.&#13;
I&#13;
Association for Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics for Women (AIAW)&#13;
midwest regional cross-country&#13;
meet at Michigan State University&#13;
in East Lansing, Michigan. The&#13;
5,000 meter race attracted the top&#13;
runners and teams from Wisconsin,&#13;
Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,&#13;
Ohio and West Virginia.&#13;
Although only 28 girls competed&#13;
in her division, Burman finished&#13;
ahead of some of the best runners&#13;
in the midwest. Each runner had&#13;
to qualify in regional competition&#13;
to enter the race.&#13;
Burman, a freshman from Fon&#13;
du Lac (Goodrich) won the event&#13;
while setting a- new course record&#13;
with a time of 18:19. Coach Bob&#13;
Lawson called this race 'probably&#13;
the best race of her life.'&#13;
Sophomore Barb Osborne from&#13;
Kenosha finished the race in 14th&#13;
place. Both girls qualified for the&#13;
AIAW national meet to be held&#13;
November 17 at Florida State&#13;
University in Tallahassee.&#13;
"Wendy is such a great&#13;
competitor that she is a pleasure to&#13;
coach." added Lawson.&#13;
Coaches rounding&#13;
up tracksters now&#13;
With the coming of winter just&#13;
around the corner, coaches are&#13;
scurring around readying their&#13;
teams for the upcoming men's and&#13;
women's track seasons.&#13;
Official practice begins on the&#13;
26th of November, but all those&#13;
interested should get in touch with&#13;
the coach as soon as possible.&#13;
Barb Lawson is the women's&#13;
track coach and she can be&#13;
reached at 553-2257 or her office&#13;
in room 131 in the P.E. Building.&#13;
Bob Lawson and Lucian Rosa are&#13;
the men's coaches. Lawson can be&#13;
reached at 553-2153 or in P.E.&#13;
139. Rosa's number is 553-2310.&#13;
Wendv Burman&#13;
Photo by B. Passino&#13;
Exceptional&#13;
Opportunity&#13;
for learning experience.&#13;
Humanity student, English&#13;
major preferred, to&#13;
take on walks and read&#13;
to retired college professor.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 694-2251.&#13;
presents&#13;
cfint Eastwood&#13;
in&#13;
GAUNTLET&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
Fri. Nov. 9 8:00 pm&#13;
Sun. Nov. 11 7:30 pm&#13;
Admission $1.50&#13;
Mini&#13;
vacation?&#13;
Weekends&#13;
were made&#13;
forMicheloh&#13;
By A NHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. IOUIS • SINCE 1896&#13;
Distributed by E.F. MAORI GRAND&#13;
1831 -55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
Michelob&#13;
NOW AVAILABLE "ON TAP" AT UNION SQUARE </text>
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              <text>Page&#13;
4----------&#13;
Tommy&#13;
Thompson&#13;
riles&#13;
students' .&#13;
Page 5&#13;
PSGA,PUAB&#13;
face big issues&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Writing Center&#13;
fiction contest&#13;
University of WisconSin-parkSide&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
Vol. "5; NO.9&#13;
We~~ome,&#13;
Sheila/-&#13;
by GarY,L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
"In the words of Will Rog-&#13;
ers," Sheila Kaplan told the&#13;
crowd '.of friends,  relatives&#13;
and  welt-wisher-s,  "even&#13;
if&#13;
you are on the right track,&#13;
you&#13;
will&#13;
get run over&#13;
if&#13;
you&#13;
just sit there.&#13;
"Parkside is clearly on the&#13;
right track,"  she continued.&#13;
"We do not&#13;
intend&#13;
to sit still.&#13;
We will welcome the oppor.tu-&#13;
nity to relate to new issues&#13;
and challenges. "&#13;
Kaplan's  remarks  were the&#13;
culmination of an afternoon's&#13;
celebration honoring 'her&#13;
in-&#13;
uaguration   as  Parkside's&#13;
chancellor  on Monday. Oct.&#13;
27,&#13;
She becomes the untverst-&#13;
ty's third chancellor, succeed-&#13;
ing Irving Wyllle and Alan&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
A&#13;
speciai&#13;
inaugural  lunch-&#13;
eon was held at 1 p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
cafeteria,  attended&#13;
by&#13;
such&#13;
guests as former chancellor&#13;
Guskin, UW System Prest-&#13;
dent  Kenneth  Shaw  and&#13;
Wisconsin gubernatorial  can-&#13;
didate Tommy Thompson. A&#13;
champagne reception in Main&#13;
Place followed the inaugural&#13;
ceremony, which began at 3&#13;
-,&#13;
bea&#13;
i/a&#13;
Kaplan&#13;
(above)&#13;
lie&#13;
DIsafter&#13;
being&#13;
ll.&#13;
ugUra&#13;
ted as&#13;
-:akSide'sthird&#13;
ce~ce/lor.Before the&#13;
lIirt&#13;
DIony,&#13;
faculty&#13;
III&#13;
and&#13;
students&#13;
IChed&#13;
in&#13;
a&#13;
~eSSiona/.&#13;
ae::flet&#13;
e&#13;
with full&#13;
ernieregalia.&#13;
Photosby Dave McEvoy&#13;
p.m.&#13;
All significant  university&#13;
and community groups who&#13;
will be working with Kaplan&#13;
were represented&#13;
by&#13;
platform&#13;
speakers who joined in wel-&#13;
coming the 40-year old native&#13;
of Brooklyn, N.Y. to her new&#13;
post. Each speaker  offered&#13;
greetings  from  the groups&#13;
they represented.&#13;
•'Chancellor Irving Wyllie&#13;
saw that beautiful buildings&#13;
were erected on this splendid&#13;
site and began to assemble a&#13;
faculty  of  teacher/scholars&#13;
any  university  would  be&#13;
proud of," said Vice Chancel-&#13;
-lor Mary Elizabeth  Shutler,&#13;
who spoke on behalf of Park-&#13;
side's administration.&#13;
"Chancellor  Alan  Guskin&#13;
led the faculty and staff to&#13;
maturity and into a. cohesive&#13;
group with a strong sense of&#13;
university  and  community&#13;
mission," Shutler continued.&#13;
"We are proud of the uni-&#13;
versity we entrust to Sheila's&#13;
care, and we look forward to&#13;
~working with her in achieving&#13;
the improvement of education&#13;
at our school and around the&#13;
community. "&#13;
Theresa  Peck,  associate&#13;
professor of education, spoke&#13;
for the .faculty. "These are&#13;
challenging times in higher&#13;
education, and these are es-&#13;
pecially challenging times for&#13;
this campus," Peck began.&#13;
"We have confidence that&#13;
in&#13;
Sheila Kaplan we have a&#13;
leader who will handle these&#13;
challenges successfully," -she&#13;
"concluded,&#13;
•&#13;
Dave Holle, university con-&#13;
troller speaking for Parksi-&#13;
de's staff, thanked Kaplan for&#13;
showing an interest&#13;
in&#13;
work-&#13;
ing closely with staff mem-&#13;
bers.  "We look forward to&#13;
working with you,"he said.&#13;
"And welcome to the Univer-&#13;
sity of Wisconsin-Parkside. "&#13;
Speaking on behalf of the&#13;
student body, Parkside  Stu-&#13;
dent Government Association&#13;
(PSGA)  President   Adrian&#13;
Serrano posed a question to&#13;
the assembled.&#13;
"What does Sheila Kaplan&#13;
mean&#13;
to&#13;
Parkside?"  Serrano&#13;
asked. "She means tnsptra.&#13;
tton. Just the other day, I&#13;
overheard a freshman saying,&#13;
'If&#13;
a  chain-smoker  from&#13;
Brooklyn can make&#13;
it,&#13;
so can&#13;
1.' "&#13;
John Graham, president of&#13;
Parkside's  Alumni Associa-&#13;
tion, commented on behalf of&#13;
Kaplan see&#13;
page&#13;
7&#13;
2  Thursday, OCtober 30, 1986&#13;
.&#13;
FE.Ail-lER    11-lE   SIDES   AND   LEAV£&#13;
"THEM&#13;
JUST   ABOVE  THE   EAR;  E.VEN&#13;
~§=::;:;.__&#13;
-&#13;
-nlE.&#13;
51DEBURNS&#13;
AND&#13;
TAPER&#13;
"THE&#13;
~&#13;
BACK  TO&#13;
ABOU"T&#13;
HALF AN&#13;
INCH&#13;
A&#13;
D&#13;
_n:&#13;
T\-IE&#13;
c.0L1.AR.;&#13;
AND   JUST&#13;
W1l£&#13;
FRON"T SO  IT&#13;
ISN'T&#13;
IN&#13;
fo,\Y&#13;
EYES.&#13;
J&amp;1W:&#13;
Realistic  look  at Wisconsin&#13;
TO th  EdItor:&#13;
r of employ&#13;
rs are&#13;
1&#13;
.o••&#13;
"Old&#13;
po&#13;
t clalms  to pr    nt an&#13;
accurate   picture   of  wtseon-&#13;
a!n&#13;
0&#13;
•&#13;
current   conomtc  aitua·&#13;
lion.&#13;
Ideology  and pollUcs&#13;
are&#13;
In-&#13;
vet v&#13;
ed,&#13;
ince  Tommy   Thomp-&#13;
son&#13;
has&#13;
ndon  d&#13;
Its&#13;
analysis.&#13;
C&lt;&gt;vemor Tony Earl  has said,&#13;
"I&#13;
xpllclUy  reject  the premo&#13;
I   of 'Cholces'  .. that Wlscan·&#13;
In&#13;
hould  cut  Its   rvlce.  so&#13;
It ranks  25th In the naUon  In&#13;
ucaUon.  cl an&#13;
air.&#13;
and weI·&#13;
fare   People  need  to  see&#13;
what&#13;
lhLs cle ... rty  done  \ideotape&#13;
reallya)·s.&#13;
Th&#13;
argument&#13;
Is&#13;
that&#13;
\\ Isconsln's   abUlly   to  pay&#13;
tax&#13;
has&#13;
fallen  off In recent&#13;
years.  while  Its public  expen·&#13;
s have  risen&#13;
(albeit&#13;
at  the&#13;
low  t&#13;
ra&#13;
te In&#13;
30&#13;
years).  The&#13;
recommended   soluUon  Is&#13;
to&#13;
cut  expendltures  on  publlc&#13;
rvlcet.  The&#13;
not  too&#13;
subtle&#13;
m sage&#13;
Is&#13;
that a dollar spent&#13;
Ln&#13;
the pubUc &amp;ector Is a dollar&#13;
subtracted   from&#13;
in....&#13;
estment&#13;
In growth.&#13;
moment·s   thought   sug·&#13;
g&#13;
that  the problem  of the&#13;
I&#13;
p between   Wisconsin's&#13;
In·&#13;
com&#13;
and&#13;
1\.1&#13;
expenses  ought&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
attacked   at  Its source.&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
The baste cause, "Choices"&#13;
allows.&#13;
is&#13;
that&#13;
wtsconstn'a&#13;
manu.facturing&#13;
economy&#13;
haS&#13;
undergone   a   recession.   The&#13;
realistic   choice.   then,  is  to&#13;
help the citizens  of Wisconsin&#13;
adapt  their  economic&#13;
acuvtty&#13;
to&#13;
changing&#13;
circumstances.&#13;
'''''hat&#13;
is&#13;
required&#13;
for revi-&#13;
talization'?  "Choices"  would&#13;
have  us believe&#13;
that&#13;
cutting&#13;
access to education, reducing&#13;
welfare,&#13;
and  curbing  other&#13;
services  ....&#13;
111&#13;
somehow  spur&#13;
growth.  Yet  education  Is the&#13;
progressive force&#13;
in&#13;
economic&#13;
de\'elopment;   access  to&#13;
it&#13;
spells  opportunity   for  those&#13;
displaced&#13;
by    economic&#13;
changes;  research  done  at&#13;
the university is prime source&#13;
of&#13;
innovation&#13;
and&#13;
entrepre·&#13;
neurship;  the unemployment&#13;
rate&#13;
for&#13;
college graduates&#13;
is&#13;
far  iower&#13;
than&#13;
the  general&#13;
rate.&#13;
Cutling  welfare  blames  the&#13;
\iclim.   The  key  problem   Is&#13;
what  to do ",ith slngle·headed&#13;
famUles  where  employment&#13;
is  not&#13;
in&#13;
the  picture.  The&#13;
meat·a.x approach  is&#13;
to&#13;
redu·&#13;
ce&#13;
beneflts&#13;
to&#13;
all&#13;
welfare&#13;
re-&#13;
cipients   Including   displaced&#13;
workers; the sensible alterna-&#13;
tive&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
tailor&#13;
an&#13;
employ-&#13;
ment and counseling  program&#13;
to the needs of&#13;
lhIs&#13;
group.  En·&#13;
Gary l. Schneeberger&#13;
Edilor&#13;
K1mberlle&#13;
Kranlch&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Julie Pendleton&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
Janny Carr&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Heibaur .......••••.•••.•.•.• Entert.inment    Editor&#13;
Robb luehr&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Mlka Rohl..&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Dsve McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bomhuelter&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Andy  Buchan.n   ...•••.............   Business  Manager&#13;
arend.   Buchanan  ...•....&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
Dave  Roback   •..•.••.........•.•&#13;
Advertislng   Manager&#13;
Steve Picazo&#13;
DI.trlbutlon  Manager&#13;
forced poverty doesn't cure&#13;
il-&#13;
legitimacy.   The   "welfare·&#13;
magnet"   problem,  to the  ex-&#13;
tent that it really exists, can&#13;
be  dealt  with  selectively   as&#13;
well.&#13;
Enlightened&#13;
policy    pro-&#13;
ceeds  from   understanding&#13;
that there are public as well&#13;
as private  forms  of invest-&#13;
ment  in  opportunity   and&#13;
growth. Wisconsin's public&#13;
in-&#13;
vestments  have paid off ·for&#13;
years we have been below the&#13;
national  average&#13;
in&#13;
unem-&#13;
ployment.    Arter   a   slump&#13;
caused by the economic dislo·&#13;
cations in the last few years&#13;
(which  temporarily   raised&#13;
our welfare burden), we have&#13;
seen continuing increases&#13;
in&#13;
the employment levels.&#13;
Wisconsin's  university  ex-&#13;
penditures  are  high because&#13;
we have  relatively  few pri-&#13;
vate   Institutions   of  higher&#13;
education, and no junior col-&#13;
lege system, and because our&#13;
citizens go&#13;
to&#13;
school at one of&#13;
the highest  rates  in the na-&#13;
tion. The&#13;
per&#13;
stUdent cost in&#13;
our universities is well below&#13;
that  of  comparable  institu-&#13;
tio.ns..Education is our strong&#13;
SUlt.&#13;
ill&#13;
the fast·moving  eco-&#13;
nomIC  game   that&#13;
Is&#13;
being&#13;
played.&#13;
There  are   some&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Leo Bose. Jason Caspers, Mary&#13;
DeFaziO, Enkk Dingman, Ronda&#13;
Ditter, Gretchen Gayhart, Randy&#13;
LeCount, Rick Leonard, Chris&#13;
LOleskl,R,ck Luehr Vahan&#13;
Mahdasian,  Suzan~e  Mantuano&#13;
KellyMcKissick, Nicole Paclone'&#13;
Michelle  Petersen,  Bill Serpe,  Katie&#13;
Thon:e~   Andy Tschumper,   Jennie&#13;
Tunklelcz,  Tyson  Wilda.&#13;
Ednorial&#13;
~&#13;
Ranger&#13;
endorses&#13;
Earl and&#13;
Garvey&#13;
It&#13;
has been  a policy,  traditionally,    for the Ran&#13;
dorse  those  candidates   seeking  publlc  office tha~ei~&#13;
to&#13;
III&#13;
mbers deem worthy of endor~ement.&#13;
8tatf&#13;
m~lth  a statewide   general  electton  coming up No&#13;
with  educational   concerns   at the  forefront  of&#13;
rna:;&#13;
4,,,,&#13;
dates'  election  agendas,   we feel It Is especially&#13;
lin&#13;
0iIIIl.&#13;
th&#13;
t&#13;
we not only  inform  students   of what  the is&#13;
Potllit&#13;
b~  also help  them  in interpreting   the cadidates'  s~~&#13;
Itt&#13;
those issues.&#13;
"&#13;
.  In&#13;
the governor's  race,. democr~tic  incumbent&#13;
An&#13;
Earl  is  seekipg  reelectlOn  agamt  state&#13;
assernbl~&#13;
Tommy  Thompson,   a republican   from Elroy, Wiseo&#13;
Y01I&amp;&#13;
Mr. Earl is not&#13;
a&#13;
faultless  g?vernor,  especially&#13;
fron:a&#13;
student  perspective.   DurIng.  hIS term,  state COllege"...~&#13;
has  risen,  and  the  legal  drinking   age  has also lnc- ..&#13;
~mdW21.·     .  .&#13;
~&#13;
Mr. Thompson's   record  is  not educationally  SOund.&#13;
er. As a state representatIve,   he has rated less&#13;
than,e&#13;
factorily&#13;
on&#13;
the legi~lati~e. scorecards  of.two stateWI:"&#13;
ganizatio&#13;
ns&#13;
with unIverSIty and student mterests&#13;
at~&#13;
What truly  separates   these  candidates  are&#13;
their&#13;
posals&#13;
for the  future.  Mr.  Earl  has  indicated&#13;
that&#13;
beP!&gt;&#13;
seek another  tuition  hike  only as a last resort and&#13;
that~&#13;
will&#13;
recommend  an increase&#13;
in&#13;
state dollars&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
t&#13;
system.&#13;
HIs  opponent,   MF.  Thompson,   has  indicate&lt;!&#13;
that.&#13;
elected,  he will  require   all  state  agencIes&#13;
to&#13;
submill!llr&#13;
budgets  at  95% of their  present   levels.  Although&#13;
the&#13;
II&#13;
system is included&#13;
in&#13;
this .r~qulrement,&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Thompsonlll&#13;
said  he will  allocate   addItIOnal  funds  to the system&#13;
indicates&#13;
a&#13;
justifiable  need.&#13;
Based  on  this,  the 'Ranger   supports  the candidacr&#13;
Governor Earl.&#13;
We believe&#13;
that Mr. Thompson's&#13;
PflII&#13;
cord on education,   combined   with  his plan for&#13;
ac......&#13;
board  reduction   of state  agencies,   could potenUally&#13;
Parkside  and other smaller  campuses&#13;
in&#13;
dangerof&#13;
exta&#13;
tton.&#13;
In the  other  statewide   race  of interest&#13;
and&#13;
Impod&#13;
Wisconsin college  students,  republican  Robert&#13;
Kaslea&#13;
seeking   reelectlon   to  the  United   States  Senate&#13;
spil&#13;
democrat  Ed Garvey.&#13;
As anyone who owns&#13;
a&#13;
television or reads&#13;
ane~&#13;
knows, the candidates  themselves  have blurred&#13;
the&#13;
by slinging  mud  at one another  in one of the more&#13;
repugnant  campaigns&#13;
in&#13;
recent memory.&#13;
When one scrapes  the mud away, however,&#13;
an&#13;
based  distinction   is  discernIble.   Senator&#13;
Kasten,&#13;
his term,  has supported  controversial  programs&#13;
Star  Wars  and  aid  to the  Contra  rebels,  programs&#13;
this newspaper  does not support.&#13;
Mr. Garvey,  although  as&#13;
a&#13;
private citizenhe&#13;
was&#13;
a position to legislatively  oppose such programs,&#13;
haS&#13;
cated  that  he does  not  support  them.  He has&#13;
also ~&#13;
ed he is in favor of increasing  the availabUityofs!uif&#13;
flnacial  aid.&#13;
Although  we  do not  respect   the undignified&#13;
manJlll&#13;
which  either  candidate   has  managed  his campalgl1,"&#13;
endorse Mr. Garvey&#13;
in&#13;
the senate race. We&#13;
aeknO\l&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Kasten's  years  of public service, but&#13;
we alSO&#13;
feel&#13;
it Is tlme  for a change,   and  we believe  that&#13;
chaDgt&#13;
work positively&#13;
if&#13;
Mr. Garvey serves Wisconsin&#13;
intbt&#13;
ate.&#13;
ctes  help&#13;
to&#13;
bUy&#13;
thr&#13;
low  crime  rate&#13;
and&#13;
social  peace&#13;
thaI,&#13;
Wisconsin dlstlnCUI&lt;&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
see&#13;
pIfIi&#13;
Wisconsin    doesn't&#13;
spend&#13;
much money on compared  to&#13;
other  states:  crime,  for one.&#13;
Isn't&#13;
It&#13;
reasonable   to suggest&#13;
that  a  good  educational    sys·&#13;
tern and humane welfare&#13;
poli-&#13;
Ra~ger is written  and edited. by students   at UW-Parkside  and they  are solely resPOnsible&#13;
f«&#13;
polley  ~nd content.   Ranger  IS published  every  Thursdau  during  the academiCyearexce~&#13;
and holidays.&#13;
1&#13;
N~" i8~hesrndence&#13;
should  be  addressed   to:  Parkside  Ranger.  University of WISCOrISI&#13;
.&#13;
.'.&#13;
enosha  WI  53141.   Telephone   (414)  553-2295   or  (4141 553·2287..&#13;
.&#13;
esd!Y.1&#13;
P&#13;
AUbdVl,ntlSlngrates  are&#13;
$4&#13;
per  column    inch  or  less  in  buik    Advenising   deadlln"&#13;
Tu&#13;
Ica Ion Thursday.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
~etters&#13;
to  the  editor  will  be  accepted&#13;
jf&#13;
typewritten&#13;
double-spaced  on standard&#13;
he paper.  Lett~rs  should  be less than  350  words&#13;
and&#13;
must  be signed. with a tele·&#13;
~u~~:  6~~~r&#13;
I~ciuded  fo~ verification   purp·oses.  Names  will  be withheld uPOn&#13;
re-&#13;
reserVes&#13;
t~&#13;
Ine  or  lett~rs&#13;
IS&#13;
Tuesday  at  10  a.m.  for  publication  Thursday. Ranger&#13;
content.&#13;
e nght  to  edIt  letters  and refuse  lett~rs  containing   false  and defamatory&#13;
Ranger is printed  by the Racine Journal  Times.&#13;
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              <text>Task force calls for quality</text>
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              <text>"'b"rcdn"&#13;
"gntemher!j&#13;
]Y/!O&#13;
"&#13;
Tony&#13;
Randall&#13;
discusses acting&#13;
Page&#13;
7&#13;
Kaestner walks&#13;
to success&#13;
Page 11&#13;
Thursday, September  5, 1985&#13;
Task force calls&#13;
for quality&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
meal basis."&#13;
The committee,  which was&#13;
appointed  by former  Chancel,&#13;
lor Alan Guskin  last  fall, was&#13;
composed  of faculty  members&#13;
John  Buenker,   Robert  Cana,&#13;
ry,  Chong-Maw  Chen,  Arthur&#13;
Dudycha., John  Harbeson,&#13;
Peter Hoff, Alexander Licht.&#13;
man, Eugene Norwood, Ron.&#13;
aId Pavalko and Barbara&#13;
Shade. Administrators  on the&#13;
committee  were Acting Chan .&#13;
celror&#13;
Mary  Elizabeth  Shutler&#13;
and  Assistant  Chancellor  for&#13;
Educational   Services  Michael&#13;
Bassis.  Former  faculty  mem-&#13;
ber  Stella  Gray  was also on&#13;
the task force.&#13;
The task  force interviewed&#13;
about 40 students in focus&#13;
groups last spring break,  as&#13;
well as 100graduating   seniors&#13;
and a number of students in&#13;
different years and majors at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"They  tried  to get a mix of&#13;
traditional   and&#13;
non-tr-adttton,&#13;
al, and they tried  to get a mix&#13;
of programs,"   Canary  said.&#13;
The report  focused  on aca-&#13;
demic    as    well   as    non-&#13;
academic  areas,  Canary  said,&#13;
since  student  life  contributes&#13;
to  a  college  education   even&#13;
though   it  does  not  involve&#13;
going  to classes.  For&#13;
examp-&#13;
Ie,   he   said,   Departmental&#13;
Clubs,  like those in communi-&#13;
cation,   geology  and&#13;
arrthr-o-&#13;
pology  have  helped  get  stu-&#13;
dents  involved in campus  life.&#13;
"It's  not a matter  of pass-&#13;
ing legislation,"   Canary  said,&#13;
"it's  just  a matter  of somebo-&#13;
dy saying  'let's  do&#13;
it.'&#13;
II&#13;
Task force&#13;
see&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
Parkside  needs  to improve&#13;
its  freshman   retention   and&#13;
provide a higher  quality  cam-&#13;
pus life&#13;
if&#13;
it is to grow  in the&#13;
future,  a  report   by  adrnln-&#13;
istrators  and faculty  says.&#13;
The Report  of the  Chancel-&#13;
lor's   Task   Force    on   the&#13;
Freshman-Sophomore&#13;
Years&#13;
brings  together   many  ideas.&#13;
. some  of  which  are  already&#13;
being put  into effect  at Park-&#13;
side,  Robert   Canary,   chair.&#13;
man&#13;
of the task  force  said.&#13;
One  of   Parkside's&#13;
main&#13;
problems,  retention,   is  being&#13;
dealt with  by  the  campus  at&#13;
large as well as in the report,&#13;
which says  that  only&#13;
39&#13;
per-&#13;
cent of the freshmen   who en-&#13;
tered Parkside   in&#13;
1982&#13;
were&#13;
still at school in the Fall&#13;
1984&#13;
semester.  Also,   the   report&#13;
notes that even  though  fresh-&#13;
man enrollment  over  the  pe-&#13;
riod&#13;
1977-83&#13;
had   increased,&#13;
the number  of students  grad-&#13;
uating declined.&#13;
Some of the report's   recom-&#13;
mendations,  like  an  advising&#13;
center,    higher&#13;
admission&#13;
standards  and  a  reorganiza-&#13;
tion of orientation   week,  are&#13;
already  being  implemented,&#13;
Canary said. Other  proposals,&#13;
like freshman  seminars,   still&#13;
need to be planned  if they are&#13;
to be implemented.&#13;
"The task force  is not a col-&#13;
lection of brand  new  ideas,"&#13;
Canary   said.   •'The   report&#13;
puns&#13;
together   a  number   of&#13;
concerns   that   were   being.&#13;
pulled  together   on  a  piece.&#13;
Campus family  planning services get changes&#13;
b&#13;
.  L'&#13;
ht  f eis  that   the&#13;
developing  services  to benefit&#13;
only here are offered regular.&#13;
YLaureen  Wawro&#13;
said,&#13;
ere&#13;
e&#13;
.&#13;
f&#13;
them&#13;
"The   ideal&#13;
II&#13;
says&#13;
lyon  campuses  such as trw-&#13;
t&#13;
·&#13;
ortant   serVIce  0 _.&#13;
.&#13;
mos   Imp&#13;
.&#13;
Leicht   "would  be  for  men    Whitewater.&#13;
fe.red  to  students   th~s&#13;
1::[&#13;
and  w'omen  to  come  in  for&#13;
Edith  Isenberg,  Director  of&#13;
~lll  be  fre\pr~gnanS:rvices&#13;
counseling   and   information&#13;
Student Health Services,  said,&#13;
In~&#13;
r .&#13;
althoug    0&#13;
eJ&#13;
g  refer.&#13;
together."&#13;
"There  are  no specific  guide-&#13;
WIll&#13;
include  couns:&#13;
In,&#13;
tl&#13;
Susan&#13;
Walborn,&#13;
PSGA    lines governing  what must  be&#13;
ral  services   ~nd  Inform: ~~~    Senator   and   Director    for    offered   on  a  campus   this&#13;
on ~ontracephves.   br~aSt.  ns&#13;
Women's  Affairs,  says  these&#13;
small,"  and that  Whitewater-&#13;
testlcular&#13;
self ..exa~na   l~h' '    changes  are steps in the right's&#13;
female  population  is twice&#13;
diet  an~&#13;
exercise.&#13;
ew   n~~   direction.  Walborn  comments&#13;
that  of Parkside's.   The  only&#13;
year   wl~l  be  the  Warne he    that in recent  years.  Parkside&#13;
regulation  governing  student&#13;
Networkmg.   Lun~he~ns,  bt  t    offered  "primitive"   birth con-    health  services  in this respect&#13;
first  of&#13;
WhICh   WIll&#13;
e  a  o.u&#13;
trol and family planning  eerv-    is Title 9. a federal  regulation&#13;
the  disease   of  osteoporosis.&#13;
ices  compared  to other  cam-&#13;
that   says   health   services&#13;
Although  many  of thes~ se::ci    pus~s.  "We're   pretty   Nean-    can't    discriminate&#13;
against&#13;
ices    are&#13;
~eared&#13;
ow he&#13;
derthal   as  a  campus,"   she    women.&#13;
.&#13;
women.&#13;
Leicht    says    S&#13;
said  adding  that  most  ser-v-&#13;
Walborn  mterprets   this&#13;
to&#13;
doesn't  want  men  to feel  ex.,   ices'  which  are  by  referral&#13;
mean  that  gynecological  and&#13;
eluded,'  so she  is' working  on&#13;
'-"--&#13;
~_IIIIIIi· ..··_. .......  __   .....&#13;
1&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Students  and administrators   gathered  Tuesday  in the Gal-  .&#13;
lery for a reception  held as part  of Welcome Week_&#13;
Look&#13;
for more Welcome Week events today and Friday.&#13;
Warm Reception&#13;
PSGA&#13;
two rallies&#13;
announces&#13;
The Parkside  Student  Gov-&#13;
ernment&#13;
Association·    last&#13;
Thursday    announced   plans'&#13;
for  an  anti-apartheid    rally&#13;
Oct.&#13;
11.&#13;
PSGA  is  also  planning   a&#13;
rally to protect  hunger Oct.&#13;
9.&#13;
The  anti-apartheid   rally  is&#13;
part   of  the  National   Anti.&#13;
Apartheid  Protest  Day, ana.&#13;
tionwide protest  that  is being&#13;
organized    by   the   United&#13;
States   Student   Association&#13;
tUSSAl.&#13;
Adrian  Serrano,   chairman&#13;
of the  Segregated  University&#13;
Fees   Allocation  Committee,&#13;
said that even though&#13;
Parkst-&#13;
de may  have  only&#13;
100&#13;
people&#13;
at  the  rally,  in  contrast   to&#13;
campuses   like&#13;
Uw-Madtson&#13;
and UCLA, students  and staff&#13;
at Parkside  will at least know&#13;
the rally is being held.&#13;
"This  will be a big day for&#13;
PSG&#13;
A&#13;
see Page 4&#13;
Collins'  bid begins&#13;
county race&#13;
by&#13;
Kari  Dixon&#13;
gen,&#13;
who  defeated   former&#13;
state  senator  John Maurer  in&#13;
the  first   County  Executive&#13;
race in&#13;
1982.&#13;
Collins,&#13;
39,&#13;
told the Kenosha&#13;
News. "About  a month  ago&#13;
I&#13;
called   my   people   together&#13;
and made a commitment,"   he&#13;
said.&#13;
"I&#13;
can't  tell people I'm&#13;
not  running   when&#13;
I&#13;
am.&#13;
I&#13;
think it's  tlme  that  my cards&#13;
are on the table."&#13;
Collins mailed a letter  sonc.&#13;
iting support  from&#13;
1200&#13;
coun-&#13;
ty residents  on Friday.&#13;
Dosemagen,&#13;
49,&#13;
said  in the&#13;
Kenosha  County Clerk John&#13;
Collins  announced   his  deci-&#13;
sion  to  seek  the  office  of&#13;
County Executive  in the Sun-&#13;
day Kenosha News.&#13;
Collins  is  running  against&#13;
incumbent   Gilbert&#13;
Doserna-&#13;
COllins&#13;
see Page&#13;
4&#13;
birth  control  services  have to&#13;
be  offered   on  campus   for&#13;
women.   She  is  most   con-&#13;
cerned&#13;
with&#13;
condoms   and&#13;
other methods of birth control&#13;
being  available  for sale.  and&#13;
feels that  with the coming of&#13;
dormitories  to this campus,&#13;
it&#13;
will be imperative  for Student&#13;
Health  Services  to expand  its&#13;
offerings  to  include  gyneco-&#13;
logical  services  at  least  one&#13;
afternoon  a week.&#13;
"It's  for  the  school's  own&#13;
good,"  says  Walborn.  "With.&#13;
out  improved  services   (over&#13;
recent  years),  we're  going to&#13;
lose  more  and  more  of  the&#13;
student POPUlation."&#13;
StUdent   Health&#13;
Services&#13;
will&#13;
not be renewing  its  con.&#13;
tract with Family  Planning  of&#13;
Racine this year,  choosing  in- .&#13;
stead to employ  the  services&#13;
o! Registered   Nurse   Sandy&#13;
Leicht.&#13;
Leicht,  who  is   presently&#13;
empioyed as  an  LTE  (Lim-&#13;
ited Term  Employee),    feels&#13;
that the  services   she  offers&#13;
Will&#13;
be more  comprehensive&#13;
(han those offered  by Family&#13;
Planning.&#13;
"They were only on cam pus&#13;
oneOr two days  a week  for a&#13;
COupleof hours  a  day,"   she&#13;
RANGER&#13;
=&#13;
2  Thursday,&#13;
September&#13;
5,1985&#13;
£JJiJJJJ:iDl&#13;
PSGA rally great idea&#13;
Grab a banner, get a megaphone.  college protests are&#13;
back&#13;
in&#13;
vogue and even PSGA has found some socially&#13;
relevant bandwagons&#13;
to&#13;
jump on. Not only Is the student&#13;
government  jumping on, they're  actively  joining&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
new revived movement by&#13;
planning&#13;
rallies.&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
has&#13;
worked hard&#13;
to&#13;
maintain  a reputation  of&#13;
uninvolvement  and isolationism.  The showing of an X·&#13;
rated   fUm,   "Emmanuelle,&#13;
II&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Union&#13;
theater   three&#13;
years ago and a "Save the Library Day" fund-raiser were&#13;
the only significant rallies held during Parkslde's  history.&#13;
Even the Peace Movement of the early 70's passed&#13;
by&#13;
rel-&#13;
atively unnoticed at Parkside.&#13;
There certainly has not been a lack of social issues for&#13;
students&#13;
to&#13;
participate&#13;
in.&#13;
but rather  there  has been a&#13;
lack  of  campus  leadership   and  motivation.&#13;
On  Oct.  11 Parkside&#13;
will&#13;
join   hundreds   of  campuses  in&#13;
an on-campus National Antl·Apartheid  Protest  Day rally.&#13;
Apartheid Is an Issue that all humans need to be educated&#13;
about.&#13;
We are encouraged&#13;
to&#13;
see PSGA planning to motivate&#13;
this campus. We do not. however. support protests for the&#13;
sake of protesting, or merely because it's fashionable.  We&#13;
hope that PSGA&#13;
will&#13;
take a close look at many critical&#13;
social and political  issues this year,&#13;
in&#13;
addition  to apart-&#13;
heid. and continue&#13;
in&#13;
a leadership  and educational  role.&#13;
Remember.&#13;
if&#13;
you  don't  take  a  stand,  you  wUl  fall.&#13;
..•..HOWEVER. SANC.TIONS AGAINST SOUTH AFRICA WOULD ONLY HURT&#13;
THE  BLACKS."&#13;
1YJlbmJy~,...11llL..u.&#13;
Athletic teams&#13;
need Parkside support&#13;
turning, Parkside is ready to&#13;
go for its second consecutive&#13;
20&#13;
win season.&#13;
Basketball   was  the  only&#13;
sport that seemed to attract&#13;
any  student  interest  at all.&#13;
Only one game  drew a full&#13;
house  ~ the  game  against&#13;
Stevens Point in January.  An&#13;
overflow   crowd  of  3300 on&#13;
hand.  Unfortunately,    the  ma-&#13;
jority  of the crowd was there&#13;
to see the likes of All-Amerr-&#13;
can   near-Olympian    Terry&#13;
Porter  and Racine Lutheran&#13;
product  Tim Naegeli. both of&#13;
whom    played    for   the&#13;
Pointers. When the next home&#13;
game  came  around,  the at-&#13;
tendance was so low the num-&#13;
ber&#13;
of players  almost&#13;
out-&#13;
numbered the spectators.&#13;
As you can see,&#13;
Parkalde&#13;
has&#13;
a&#13;
lot to offer for sports&#13;
entertainment.   The best thing&#13;
is  that  all  sports,·  except&#13;
men's&#13;
basketball.&#13;
are&#13;
FREE! !! Just take your body&#13;
over to the Physical  Educa-&#13;
tion&#13;
building.&#13;
or the soccer&#13;
field, or the baseball diamond&#13;
and  enjoy   some   Ranger&#13;
sports.  You won't  be disap-&#13;
pointed.&#13;
of Steve Stephens,  the name&#13;
Parkside   was  synonymous&#13;
with  fine  basketball.   The&#13;
Rangers  made  it to the dis-&#13;
trict final almost  every year.&#13;
and had at least one NAIA AI·&#13;
l-Amertcan  at the same  rre-&#13;
quency. After the 1981·82sea·&#13;
son,  Stephens  resigned  and&#13;
Rees Johnson was chosen to&#13;
guide the basketball  fortunes&#13;
at Parkside.  Johnson's  teams&#13;
played near the&#13;
.500&#13;
mark in&#13;
his first two&#13;
seasons,&#13;
as the&#13;
players and assistant  coaches&#13;
took on Johnson's  coaching&#13;
theories  and adjusted  to his&#13;
methods.&#13;
It&#13;
must have work-&#13;
ed. In the 1984-85season, the&#13;
Rangers  racked&#13;
up&#13;
the first&#13;
20-victory regular  season  in&#13;
Parkside&#13;
history.&#13;
The&#13;
Rangers  once again made it&#13;
to the NAIA District 14finals,&#13;
where they were defeated by&#13;
Stevens Point. There are only&#13;
three  players  who won't  be&#13;
back this  year.  among  them&#13;
Erik  Womeldorf,  who  has&#13;
used&#13;
up&#13;
his eligibility. Filling&#13;
his space on the court won't&#13;
be easy, but there are a&#13;
coup-&#13;
Ie&#13;
of players  waiting in the&#13;
wings ready to give it&#13;
a&#13;
try.&#13;
With all but one starter&#13;
re-&#13;
Oberbrunner  has  had  only&#13;
one losing season in 14 years&#13;
at the helm at Parkside,  and&#13;
it&#13;
appears his team this year&#13;
will keep up the high stand-&#13;
ards of the past.&#13;
The most successful  team&#13;
over the past  five years  is&#13;
also a team that most people&#13;
forget  exists.  The  women's&#13;
softball team -has been in the&#13;
NAIA  national  tournament&#13;
for the last years" yet very&#13;
few people have  ever  seen&#13;
them play. The softball team&#13;
has also produced more all-&#13;
Americans  than  any  other&#13;
team  during that same  five&#13;
year  period. To sum it up,&#13;
Linda  Draft's  team  is  the&#13;
most exciting of the spring, if&#13;
not the whole year.&#13;
The  women's   basketball&#13;
team fell on hard times last&#13;
season, with a&#13;
9-19&#13;
record. In&#13;
the last few weeks of the sea:&#13;
son, first year coach Wendy&#13;
Miller  had  only six players&#13;
left. This year, Miller expects&#13;
to  have  a  full  12-woman&#13;
squad,  which  will  maybe&#13;
bring&#13;
the lady Rangers back&#13;
to a competitive level.&#13;
In the mid&#13;
70's&#13;
through the&#13;
early 80's, under the direction&#13;
had only one losing season.&#13;
When Henderson left for Flor-&#13;
ida in the spring of 1983,some&#13;
people thought the soccer pro-&#13;
gram would go into a tailspin.&#13;
However,  new  coach  Rick&#13;
Kllps kept the level of play&#13;
nearly   equal   to  that   of&#13;
Henderson.  Kilps' first year&#13;
record was a respectable 13-9·&#13;
1.&#13;
After the first year coach-&#13;
ing jitters  were  out of the&#13;
way,  Kilps settled  into his&#13;
role as coach. In 1984, the&#13;
Ranger almost made it to the&#13;
top of the  hill. The  soccer&#13;
team compiled a 14-5-3record&#13;
on its way to Us first- ever ap-&#13;
pearance in the NAIA nation-&#13;
al  tournament,   something&#13;
Henderson's teams never ac-&#13;
complished. This year's team&#13;
has the capability  to repeat&#13;
and even surpass its efforts of&#13;
1984.&#13;
Parkside's  baseball  team&#13;
was 12·9this past spring, and&#13;
it&#13;
advanced  to  the  state&#13;
championships.  The baseball&#13;
team also plays in the fall,&#13;
when the weather  is better.&#13;
The  fall  season  is  shorter&#13;
than the spring season. but&#13;
the intensity is equal&#13;
in&#13;
both&#13;
seasons.  Coach Ken  "Red"&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
1I's a sad fact that although&#13;
Parkslde has many outstand-&#13;
ing athletic teams, very few&#13;
students outside of the athle-&#13;
tes themselves know, or care.&#13;
Certainly.  sports  such  as&#13;
tennis, cross-country and golf&#13;
don't lend themselves  easily&#13;
to spectator  viewing.  How-&#13;
ever, the events that do, such&#13;
as&#13;
volleyball, soccer,&#13;
basket,&#13;
ball,  baseball  and  softball,&#13;
which are intended  to draw&#13;
an&#13;
audience,  don't  get  the&#13;
support they deserve.&#13;
The   women's   volleyball&#13;
team has reached the District&#13;
14&#13;
finals for the last several&#13;
years. Terry Paulson's  team&#13;
has compiled a record of&#13;
84·47&#13;
over the past three years,&#13;
in-&#13;
eluding a&#13;
34-8&#13;
mark in 1983.&#13;
The team lost two of&#13;
its&#13;
top&#13;
players&#13;
to&#13;
graduation  after&#13;
that  season,&#13;
and&#13;
last  year&#13;
slipped to a 22·23record. This&#13;
season promises to be excit-&#13;
ing, however, with six retur-&#13;
nees and six new members.&#13;
Tradttionally.   one  of  the&#13;
highest  calibre  teams  at&#13;
Parkside has been the soccer&#13;
team.  Under  former  coach&#13;
Hal Henderson, the Rangers&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Corby   Anderson,    Dave&#13;
Belottt,  Gretchen  Gayhart.&#13;
Heather  Greening,  Tammy&#13;
Hannah,  Kristy Harrington,&#13;
Kim&#13;
Kranich,&#13;
Carol&#13;
Kortendick,   Rick   Luehr,&#13;
Robb  Luehr,  Ray  Novak.&#13;
Julie  Pendleton,  Bill Serpe,&#13;
Laureen   Wawro,   Missy&#13;
Weaver.&#13;
-PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
Darryl  Hahn, Krfs Odegaard.&#13;
Ranger   is written   an~  edited  by  students&#13;
at&#13;
UW·Parkside&#13;
and&#13;
they  ar~&#13;
soleI)!&#13;
responsible   fOT&#13;
its&#13;
editorial   policy   and&#13;
content.&#13;
Ranger  ~s published   every  Thursday   during  the academic   year&#13;
ex-&#13;
cept&#13;
during&#13;
breaks and holidays.&#13;
~II   c?rrespondence'&#13;
should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed&#13;
to:&#13;
Parkside   Ranger&#13;
Lrntversuy&#13;
of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
Box&#13;
No 2000&#13;
Kenosha   WI&#13;
53141'&#13;
Telephone  (414)&#13;
553-2295&#13;
or&#13;
(414)  553-2287.  ..&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
Letters&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
e.ditor&#13;
will&#13;
be accepted&#13;
if&#13;
typewritten.   double-spac-&#13;
ed&#13;
on standar?   size  pooer.  Letters&#13;
should&#13;
be less  than,350   words&#13;
a.nd must  be&#13;
SIgned.&#13;
With a telephone   number   included  for  verifica-&#13;
tion&#13;
pu~poses.  Names&#13;
will&#13;
be withheld&#13;
upon&#13;
request.   Deadline  for&#13;
letters&#13;
IS TUl!sday&#13;
at 10&#13;
a.m.  for  publication   Thursday   Ranger  re.&#13;
'''dyes   the  right&#13;
to&#13;
edit  letters&#13;
and&#13;
refuse  letters&#13;
containing&#13;
false&#13;
an&#13;
defamatory   content.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
printed  by the Racine  Journal&#13;
Times.&#13;
Jennie  Tunkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
BobKi~ling&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
Kar-l Dixon ..•............................••&#13;
Community&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Ji.m Neibaur&#13;
Feature&#13;
Editor&#13;
RIch Blay&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Gary Schneeberger&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
la.n Jack&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
RIck Schultz&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="71577">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 14, issue 2, September 5, 1985</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
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              <elementText elementTextId="71578">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1985-09-05</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="71583">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="71584">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>Guskin discusses campus' mission</text>
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              <text>&#13;
WiAter Caniival&#13;
llhoto special&#13;
lt411es&#13;
8&#13;
aM&#13;
9&#13;
Victory for&#13;
Women'&#13;
P.e"&#13;
~&#13;
University of Wisconsin.Parkside&#13;
•&#13;
Padlockelected&#13;
PU&#13;
AB&#13;
chair&#13;
IiIlUIis&#13;
Padlock, Student-at-large&#13;
IlpIlS!IIIativeand Union Supervi-&#13;
II....&#13;
electedchair of the Parksi-&#13;
*&#13;
UDiOII&#13;
AdvisoryBoard (PUAB)&#13;
lot&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Prior to the  electiou&#13;
Joi&#13;
Kemper, Student  Organiza-&#13;
l!O&#13;
Council&#13;
(SOC)representative,&#13;
..  acting&#13;
chair for the meeting.&#13;
The&#13;
board&#13;
discussed heer  selec-&#13;
.. at&#13;
events,&#13;
hartender  tipping&#13;
lid&#13;
~e&#13;
possibility of starting  an&#13;
Tm&#13;
Driving"&#13;
club on campus.&#13;
Kei~&#13;
Harmann, Parkside  Activi-&#13;
IWl&#13;
Board&#13;
(PAB) representative,&#13;
J""IIled&#13;
the group with a&#13;
resolu-&#13;
..  prop&lt;JIa1&#13;
slating that alcoholic&#13;
beol!ages&#13;
III&#13;
be&#13;
served at events,&#13;
IIIliI&#13;
as&#13;
dances,&#13;
should-&#13;
be&#13;
chosen&#13;
,1IIe&#13;
IJIOIlIDI'ing&#13;
group or&#13;
fndivtd-&#13;
Committee looks&#13;
to&#13;
restructure UC&#13;
ual(s) who reserve and pay the fa-&#13;
cility&#13;
use fee. The proposal also&#13;
states  that  beverages  for large&#13;
events,  such as the END, should be&#13;
chosen by the sponsoring group in&#13;
conjunction&#13;
with&#13;
the Union Direc-&#13;
tor.&#13;
In the past, the Union has follow-&#13;
ed an unwritten  policy of saying the&#13;
top  selling  brand  at  large  events&#13;
such  as the  END.  At the  closed&#13;
events, such as a private party,&#13;
more than one is served and the&#13;
group may request  the brand to be&#13;
served. At open events, such as&#13;
PAB sponsored  dances, the Union&#13;
serves all the brands that are usu-&#13;
ally on tap, except super premium.&#13;
Harmann  feels  this  proposal&#13;
would aid PAB in securing a&#13;
beer&#13;
distributor for sponsorship for the&#13;
END.&#13;
Bill&#13;
Niebuhr,  Union  Director,&#13;
said he&#13;
feels&#13;
that&#13;
beer&#13;
selection&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
management  decision.  "We want&#13;
the right to sell lbe product  that&#13;
will&#13;
sell the&#13;
best,"&#13;
said&#13;
Niebuhr.&#13;
Niebuhr explained&#13;
that&#13;
this&#13;
proce-&#13;
dure has been followed&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
past&#13;
in&#13;
order to serve the greatest&#13;
num-&#13;
her of students, while keeping poli-&#13;
tics out of the selection process.&#13;
Bruce Preston,  Student-at-large-&#13;
representative,&#13;
said&#13;
he&#13;
feels&#13;
that&#13;
adopting Hannann's  recommenda-&#13;
tion. PUAB would&#13;
be&#13;
"protecting&#13;
the&#13;
rights of&#13;
the&#13;
sponsoring group."&#13;
CoDlinued&#13;
o.&#13;
Poco •&#13;
Guskin discusses&#13;
campus' mission&#13;
will&#13;
continue  to meet  to&#13;
find&#13;
melbods of implementing&#13;
the&#13;
rec-&#13;
ommendations.&#13;
On Feb.&#13;
28,&#13;
UC will&#13;
be&#13;
makmg&#13;
an attempt to&#13;
Raise&#13;
Awareness on&#13;
Issues for Students and Education&#13;
(RAISE). RAISE is a project Dllbe&#13;
United Slates Student  AssociatIOn&#13;
(USSA1, a group&#13;
which&#13;
Paro,de&#13;
has recently&#13;
joined&#13;
RAISE WIll&#13;
seek&#13;
to&#13;
motivate stu-&#13;
dents to lead a&#13;
campus  coabuon&#13;
fighting&#13;
for the  maintenance&#13;
of&#13;
educational  access  and  quality&#13;
RAISE also intends to reach out to&#13;
faculty,  administr.lton,  aod&#13;
corn-&#13;
munity members for&#13;
their&#13;
support.&#13;
The Civil Rights RestoratJon Act&#13;
of&#13;
1985&#13;
was also&#13;
addressed&#13;
by UC.&#13;
The&#13;
act&#13;
will&#13;
attempt&#13;
to restore  Civil&#13;
rights coverage insured by&#13;
TItle IX.&#13;
Title VI, Section&#13;
504&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
Age&#13;
Discrimination  Act.&#13;
TItle  IX&#13;
pro-&#13;
hibits&#13;
Sf][&#13;
discriminatJon&#13;
III&#13;
educa-&#13;
tion Title&#13;
VI&#13;
prohibits&#13;
ducrimatJon&#13;
on the&#13;
basis&#13;
of&#13;
race,&#13;
color&#13;
or&#13;
nat·&#13;
tiona!&#13;
origin.&#13;
section&#13;
504&#13;
bans&#13;
dis·&#13;
crimation on&#13;
the&#13;
basis&#13;
of&#13;
dlsabolity&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
Age&#13;
J)iscrimiDatJon&#13;
Act&#13;
prohibits  discrimiaabon   on&#13;
the&#13;
hasis&#13;
of&#13;
age.&#13;
Early&#13;
in&#13;
1984&#13;
the SupmDe&#13;
Court&#13;
ruled that only&#13;
those&#13;
acth,Ues&#13;
re-&#13;
ceiving  direct  feden!&#13;
usis\aIlCe&#13;
must&#13;
COlIlply witllTIlIe   IX.&#13;
The&#13;
de-&#13;
cision narrowed&#13;
the&#13;
"""erase&#13;
of ...&#13;
isting civil&#13;
rights&#13;
laws.&#13;
The&#13;
cumnt&#13;
Restoration&#13;
Act&#13;
wou1d&#13;
brinC&#13;
bacIr.&#13;
the&#13;
original&#13;
intent&#13;
of&#13;
tile civil&#13;
Ji&amp;bts&#13;
laws.&#13;
making&#13;
enlft&#13;
iJlstilU~&#13;
re-&#13;
sponsible&#13;
for&#13;
elimiDlting -&#13;
nalion,&#13;
not&#13;
just  _&#13;
procrams&#13;
or&#13;
activities.&#13;
~....    .&#13;
PSGA&#13;
will&#13;
meet&#13;
this ..&#13;
_y&#13;
III&#13;
CA 129&#13;
to -&#13;
~,    .....&#13;
many&#13;
other&#13;
knportaal&#13;
topies.&#13;
AU&#13;
lntere-&#13;
ted&#13;
partieS&#13;
are&#13;
encoanced .....&#13;
fti.&#13;
corned·&#13;
we've  started  to find ouselves&#13;
in&#13;
and go back to the loose structure&#13;
DC&#13;
once was. We must not get&#13;
too&#13;
caught up in the bureaucratic  ropes&#13;
lhat  organizations  can get caught&#13;
up in."&#13;
The  committee   also  recom-&#13;
mended  that  experience  and skill&#13;
building, as well as servic~  to stu-&#13;
dents, be better developed&#13;
In&#13;
~erms&#13;
of lobbying and educating students&#13;
about pertainent  issues.&#13;
.&#13;
"For  Parkside  the steps&#13;
UC&#13;
IS&#13;
going through  will&#13;
be&#13;
positive. We&#13;
will  be  directly  involved&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
restructuring,  and that mea~s o~r&#13;
concerns  will&#13;
be&#13;
heard.  Slay,ng&#13;
on&#13;
UC at this point would only&#13;
be&#13;
to&#13;
our advantage because this is really&#13;
a way that we can move our&#13;
0,,:,"&#13;
student  development  forward&#13;
10&#13;
terms&#13;
of&#13;
understanding issues&#13;
~ore&#13;
clearly  and knowing what op~ons&#13;
are out there for this campus.   .t&#13;
The proposals from&#13;
the&#13;
commt&#13;
i&#13;
tee were accepted  by lbe gen~::.&#13;
assembly and the&#13;
revIew&#13;
commt&#13;
by&#13;
Pal Hensiak&#13;
Compos&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The&#13;
Parkside Student  Govern-&#13;
IIIeIIt&#13;
Associationmet  with  other&#13;
Illtems&#13;
schools&#13;
last  weekend  to&#13;
discuss&#13;
the&#13;
restructuring  of 'United&#13;
Council&#13;
roC),&#13;
the&#13;
R-A-I-S-E&#13;
Cam-&#13;
JIIliD&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
Civil Rights&#13;
Restora-&#13;
lion&#13;
Act&#13;
011985.&#13;
The ad-hoc  committee&#13;
on&#13;
I!S1ruct1Iring&#13;
presented  a package&#13;
~~reeommendaUonsto restructure&#13;
"" ,body&#13;
of&#13;
UC to the&#13;
organiza-&#13;
lim&#13;
s&#13;
general&#13;
assembly on Friday,&#13;
~.   IS.&#13;
The committee met earlier&#13;
}'ear&#13;
to&#13;
review its previous&#13;
re-&#13;
&lt;onI&#13;
01&#13;
philosophies, purposes  and&#13;
lOab&#13;
and isolated  four  general&#13;
~leInents&#13;
_ofphilosophy for use in&#13;
.....  deliberations.&#13;
TheCOIIlJllitteeis interested   in&#13;
lee,"!&#13;
the development   of  UC&#13;
:e&#13;
from&#13;
that of a heirarchy  to&#13;
.....,~f&#13;
a&#13;
grassroots assembly. Terry&#13;
~...... PSGA President  said, "We&#13;
IIope&#13;
III&#13;
reverse from the heirarchy&#13;
'"  Pal&#13;
He&#13;
eamp;..&#13;
E4ll«&#13;
AI • receul&#13;
Faculty&#13;
mg.&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Alan&#13;
F.&#13;
G&#13;
presented&#13;
hIS&#13;
anah&#13;
of&#13;
Partslde&#13;
has&#13;
hoeD.&#13;
and&#13;
men!&#13;
01&#13;
.mere&#13;
It&#13;
-.Is&#13;
Gu kin de eribed&#13;
Pu'"&#13;
'd  s&#13;
throe  phase&lt;&#13;
of&#13;
cIt\-dopmoIl_-COO1llpW1bo&#13;
IDI)OC&#13;
tIIrfctiom&#13;
and -,&#13;
ments of&#13;
..,.&#13;
induded&#13;
tile&#13;
development   of lhe  major&#13;
aa·&#13;
denu&lt;  ~&#13;
in&#13;
libml&#13;
aN&#13;
and&#13;
soeeces&#13;
nd&#13;
I1lIted&#13;
prot&#13;
areas ..&#13;
well&#13;
tile&#13;
t&#13;
of&#13;
an&#13;
aceIIoflt&#13;
widelcradDate&#13;
U·&#13;
hrar)&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
IunaC&#13;
of  •&#13;
•&#13;
quality&#13;
r~ullr   We'\e&#13;
do&#13;
aU&#13;
those&#13;
tlunp.&#13;
The&#13;
pb)1I&lt;allacW&#13;
....    pIanlled&#13;
and&#13;
COItSlnIcted .....&#13;
that&#13;
endod&#13;
pbatt ..,. "&#13;
The&#13;
IDI)OC&#13;
cIIr.-&#13;
of&#13;
pbaoe&#13;
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included  •  "cIe:ar  articuIallOn&#13;
of&#13;
lIIl1\.....&#13;
ty ~&#13;
.....&#13;
q\ga.&#13;
de-&#13;
,elopment   of  I  COIIIpreItftlsiTe&#13;
amy&#13;
of  .......&#13;
acaclensi&lt;&#13;
procraIlII&#13;
mp&lt;*I\-e&#13;
to ....   -&#13;
-&#13;
ond&#13;
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-oIutiDa .-&#13;
IIbenI&#13;
arts&#13;
coUece ..&#13;
pabIit ..&#13;
,alit,&#13;
model"&#13;
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espiIined&#13;
lhIl&#13;
be  ....&#13;
Part:sade&#13;
as an&#13;
i.Dstit.1IbOO  •&#13;
hIeDcIs&#13;
quaIibeS&#13;
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tile&#13;
pohIlc: ...&#13;
venIly ..... tile&#13;
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10&lt;_&#13;
tile&#13;
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proteaioaal  .....&#13;
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arts&#13;
pr0-&#13;
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I&#13;
commitmeDl&#13;
to _&#13;
lit-&#13;
\'t!1e&#13;
students&#13;
m a&#13;
mp&lt;*I\~.&#13;
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me&#13;
eavIroaIDml.&#13;
aD&#13;
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IlIPP"rt&#13;
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bdtI&#13;
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ideas sou~ht&#13;
ing&#13;
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The&#13;
architect&#13;
who has been hired&#13;
in gettIng student  ~~~tu.&#13;
!ide&#13;
atudy&#13;
the housing needs of Park·    the destgn of&#13;
f"to"&#13;
offer imput&#13;
are&#13;
da&#13;
Will&#13;
be&#13;
on campus on Wednes'&#13;
dents who&#13;
WlS&#13;
t&#13;
·tII&#13;
the architect.&#13;
. y,&#13;
Feb. 27&#13;
outside of the Cafete.    urged&#13;
to&#13;
mee&#13;
W1&#13;
na&#13;
frorn&#13;
\1-2&#13;
p.m. He&#13;
is&#13;
interested&#13;
Candidate open&#13;
f~~~peti_&#13;
~    Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
sponsoring  a Can·&#13;
. To date, ~&#13;
three&#13;
presidential&#13;
F&#13;
Open Forum  on  Monday,    tion papen   d two&#13;
vice&#13;
presideJl"&#13;
~~&#13;
It&#13;
I&#13;
p.m. in Main Place.    candi~~&#13;
f:&#13;
Presidential   candi·&#13;
1If&#13;
tes&#13;
running for tile offices    tJal   ope u&#13;
i&#13;
Ramsdell,&#13;
BiD&#13;
serpe&#13;
""1&#13;
Sl.udent government  president&#13;
dates are ~  !cOmb v;ee.presiden·&#13;
.  Vice&#13;
Pl'es\dent&#13;
will&#13;
discuss their    and Greg&#13;
0&#13;
are'ErJse5liDe&#13;
WIe-&#13;
~!'&#13;
student&#13;
Issut!S&#13;
and answer    tiaI&#13;
candi:~    Vanderloop.&#13;
, ..... ,.. from&#13;
the&#13;
audience.&#13;
singer an&#13;
•&#13;
r&#13;
&lt;&#13;
2&#13;
Thursda;&#13;
Feb ..&#13;
21,&#13;
198~&#13;
\ Letters to the Editor  \&#13;
Carnival a success&#13;
Campus the meaning of SPIRIT.&#13;
I&#13;
would like to compliment  the enti-&#13;
re membership of the Geology Club&#13;
for competing in all the scheduled&#13;
events  (in spite of&#13;
their&#13;
missing  a&#13;
few classes along the way).&#13;
In&#13;
par-&#13;
ticular,&#13;
I&#13;
would like to acknowledge&#13;
the efforts of the Geology Club Ex-&#13;
ecutive Committee  -  Greg Kitson,&#13;
Dave Framstead,  Tom Siewert,&#13;
Cindy Lange,  and  Jack  Kemper,&#13;
and our lead 'singer' Sean Cranley.&#13;
Without  their  efforts,  ideas,  and&#13;
sacrifices,  Winter  Carnival  would&#13;
not have been the same. To the&#13;
Winter  Carnival   Committee,&#13;
RANGER, PAC, PAB, and all the&#13;
other  clubs  that  competed  in&#13;
SNOWBUSTERS, thank you for a&#13;
SP!RlTED  and  successful  Winter&#13;
CarnivaL&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
f would like to compliment  the&#13;
Winter  Carnival  Committee  on  a&#13;
very  successful  SNOWBUSTING&#13;
event.  In the  four years  that  I've&#13;
been privileged&#13;
to&#13;
observe and&#13;
par-&#13;
ticipate  in Winter  Carnival,  I've&#13;
never seen more spirit shown&#13;
by&#13;
in-&#13;
dividual clubs and the campus as a&#13;
whole. The competition  was fierce&#13;
yet friendly,  and  the  competition&#13;
for the 'best'  club and the SPIRIT&#13;
AWARD went down to the last few&#13;
minutes   of  a  very  successful&#13;
BEACH&#13;
PARTY.&#13;
My heartiest   CONGRATULA-&#13;
TIONS&#13;
to&#13;
the GEOLOGY CLUB for&#13;
their&#13;
FIRST&#13;
PLACE finish.&#13;
As&#13;
the&#13;
Geology Club's advisor, f am pleas-&#13;
ed&#13;
to see their victory in the over-&#13;
aU point standings.  What is more&#13;
important,   however,  is that  the&#13;
Geology  Club,  although  small  in&#13;
numbers,   showed  the  Parkside&#13;
There ought&#13;
to&#13;
be a law&#13;
WE MiSCOUNTED&#13;
ENEMY STRE1'IG''tt,&#13;
\ GUESS.&#13;
Peter  A. Nielsen&#13;
Geology Club Advisor&#13;
but ...&#13;
me,&#13;
other  club members  and most  of&#13;
them would not have voted for him&#13;
in the first place.&#13;
Is&#13;
there not some&#13;
kind of campus bylaws that says the&#13;
president  has to be elected by the&#13;
club&#13;
or is&#13;
this&#13;
common practice to&#13;
have the club president  pick him-&#13;
self.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Last year&#13;
I&#13;
was a member of the&#13;
UW-Parkside  Bowling  Club.  We&#13;
had an election of officers, but this&#13;
year&#13;
at&#13;
the first meeting  the&#13;
cur-&#13;
rent&#13;
president  introduced  himself&#13;
as  the  Bowling  Club  President.&#13;
There was no election of any kind.&#13;
Right then&#13;
I&#13;
was turned  off,&#13;
be-&#13;
cause we had no choice in the mat-&#13;
ter.&#13;
I&#13;
have&#13;
talked&#13;
to most of the&#13;
Yes there  are many critics&#13;
oul&#13;
there  who have never seen&#13;
"Intol·&#13;
erance,"   "Citizen  Kane,"&#13;
"City  \&#13;
Lights,"   "Grand&#13;
Illusion,"&#13;
"The&#13;
Seventh   S.al,"   or many olher\&#13;
cinema  classics,&#13;
thus&#13;
limiting&#13;
their&#13;
range  for  comparison (e.g.&#13;
being&#13;
able to only compare "Smokey&#13;
and&#13;
the Bandit&#13;
II"&#13;
to "Smokey&#13;
and&#13;
llie&#13;
Bandit"),   and  thus&#13;
many&#13;
main·&#13;
stream  films that are&#13;
forgolten&#13;
in&#13;
five years open to critical&#13;
acclaim&#13;
Some&#13;
examples:&#13;
Roger&#13;
Ebert&#13;
gave "Grease"  four&#13;
stars,&#13;
his&#13;
hi~·&#13;
est rating. Sounds sillynow.does'l&#13;
. it?  The  Marx  Brothers'&#13;
"Duck&#13;
Soup" received poor reviewsin&#13;
its&#13;
time, but is now considered&#13;
a clas-&#13;
sic political satire.&#13;
It's really hard to predictthesta·&#13;
tus of a film's worih downIherood&#13;
a few years without comparingilto&#13;
similar   products  and&#13;
boW  weU&#13;
THEY  did over a period of&#13;
lime.&#13;
And yet if the film doeshold~,&#13;
another   later&#13;
film&#13;
could&#13;
come&#13;
along a~d be so much bellerthalil&#13;
renders  the first&#13;
film&#13;
insigruficanl&#13;
It gets pretty crazy after a while&#13;
All in all, my reviewsof&#13;
films on&#13;
campus   or  in  the  theatres&#13;
are&#13;
meant as an example,&#13;
based&#13;
on&#13;
my&#13;
knowledge, Irom on' studentto&#13;
an&#13;
other.  There's  nothing wrong&#13;
Illlli&#13;
checking  them  out 'to comp~e00&#13;
your own ideas of&#13;
the&#13;
film&#13;
OT.l~&#13;
style of fi\mll1aking, but I ce~&#13;
don't expect them&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
cons&#13;
gospel.  I hope&#13;
this&#13;
clears~p'"&#13;
questions.  Thanks for "kin!.&#13;
by Jlm Neibaur&#13;
Feature  Editor&#13;
Comedy is a good example&#13;
be-&#13;
cause virtually nothing,  other  than&#13;
Woody  Allen's  films,  has  come&#13;
along in this genre since the forties&#13;
that  even  smacks  of  innovation.&#13;
Every jest, trick or comic personal-&#13;
ity is a throwback  to some style al-&#13;
ready performed  better  by a past&#13;
comic.  Richard  Pryor  is a funny&#13;
man,  but in no way compares  to&#13;
Charles Chaplin as far as innovation&#13;
in  the  field  is  concerned.   Leon&#13;
Errol  was a funny  man  too,  but&#13;
now,  thirty  odd  years  afler  his&#13;
death, nobody but those who were&#13;
around when he was active remem-&#13;
ber  him.  His  popularity  matched&#13;
Pryor's  in his time,  but he added&#13;
nothing to the genre of screen&#13;
corn-&#13;
edy other than the fact that he was&#13;
lunny.&#13;
Well actually somebody  did ask&#13;
me. In fact a lot of people  have&#13;
been asking me how I go about rat-&#13;
ing&#13;
films&#13;
when doing movie reviews&#13;
in The Ranger.  Allow me  to ex-&#13;
plain, please.&#13;
First  of all, a film  review,  no&#13;
matter&#13;
how&#13;
informed the critic may&#13;
be,&#13;
is still just somebody's opinion.&#13;
In&#13;
order  to  give  impressions  or&#13;
opinions on any subject  the critic&#13;
must have an understanding  of the&#13;
subject  being analyzed.  As far as&#13;
I'm concerned,&#13;
I&#13;
have seen virtually&#13;
every major film made before&#13;
1970&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
good portion  of the  minor&#13;
works as well. After&#13;
1970&#13;
I have&#13;
seen roughly seventy percent of the&#13;
major releases.&#13;
When reviewing  a film,  I&#13;
will&#13;
look at how well it is scripted,  di-&#13;
rected, acted, its production values,&#13;
whether it seems to be the type of&#13;
picture  that  will live on or date&#13;
badly, and how it&#13;
fits&#13;
in comparison&#13;
to other&#13;
films&#13;
of its genre.&#13;
This is the  important  element,&#13;
the element  of comparison.  Some-&#13;
body who&#13;
calls&#13;
"Dirty  Harry"  a&#13;
good detective drama may not have&#13;
seen  "Angels  With Dirty  Faces,"&#13;
"Double Indemnity,"  or "G-Men."&#13;
How does  a film  like  "Grease"&#13;
look? To third graders it might look&#13;
wonderful,  but when compared  to&#13;
every musical  ever made,  if "Sin-&#13;
gin' in the Rain"  is a four or five&#13;
star product, "Grease"  emerges  as&#13;
Ex-Bowling Club Member&#13;
Ed J Walek&#13;
III&#13;
Sno' joking  matter&#13;
there I sat, not a house in sight, in&#13;
the middle of the road with my car&#13;
buried  in&#13;
a&#13;
snow bank because&#13;
I&#13;
needed to get to class. To make a&#13;
long story short,&#13;
I&#13;
did not make it&#13;
to my classes and ended up paying&#13;
$50&#13;
to get&#13;
my&#13;
car home.&#13;
It&#13;
is ridiculous  for the  admin-&#13;
istration  to  make  students  take&#13;
their lives in their hands to make&#13;
class because school is open.&#13;
I&#13;
don't&#13;
know il the Chancellor  is able to&#13;
walk. to school, but&#13;
I&#13;
am not. Like&#13;
many others, I live more than five&#13;
miles  from school and&#13;
I&#13;
have to&#13;
drive because&#13;
I&#13;
do not live near a&#13;
bus route.&#13;
It&#13;
is unfair to us who live&#13;
out in the county to deny us the&#13;
chance to come to class because the&#13;
roads are impassible. I am sure that&#13;
a lot of the city students  did not&#13;
make it to school either. When the&#13;
roads are as bad&#13;
as&#13;
they were last&#13;
Tuesday,  even  Parkside   should&#13;
have been closed. To me it shows&#13;
an  unfeeling  administration   who&#13;
believes that education  comes&#13;
be-&#13;
fore the student's  lives.&#13;
Barbara ADn Johnson&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is hard to believe that Chancel-&#13;
lor Guskin could do this to us. On&#13;
Tuesday of last week I got up as&#13;
usual to come to school.&#13;
I&#13;
listened&#13;
to the weather  report  to check on&#13;
school  closings  because  of  the&#13;
snowing and drifting. When&#13;
I&#13;
heard&#13;
that&#13;
all&#13;
the area schools were&#13;
clos-&#13;
ed except for the Kenosha Unified&#13;
and Parkside I decided that I would&#13;
try to get to classes as usual.&#13;
I&#13;
re-&#13;
ceived a phone call very early in-&#13;
forming&#13;
me that one of my classes&#13;
had been  canceUed, but  that  did&#13;
not deter me.&#13;
I&#13;
felt that if&#13;
I&#13;
waited&#13;
until&#13;
9&#13;
a.m.  the  roads  would  be&#13;
plowed and&#13;
I&#13;
would have no prob-&#13;
lem getting&#13;
to&#13;
my other  classes.&#13;
What a joke. Just because Parkside&#13;
is&#13;
open doesn't mean the roads are&#13;
open.&#13;
f started out for school and I was&#13;
lucky -  I got three miles from my&#13;
house before&#13;
I&#13;
got stuck. in a mon-&#13;
ster of a snow drift.&#13;
I&#13;
found out&#13;
later that many others were not&#13;
SO&#13;
lucky,&#13;
they only made it a block or&#13;
two  before  getting  stuck!  Well,&#13;
A&#13;
critic's  purpose  is' to give&#13;
im-&#13;
pressions&#13;
'and&#13;
opinions based on his&#13;
or her  knowledge  of the  subject.&#13;
When&#13;
I&#13;
review movies&#13;
I&#13;
base it on&#13;
studies conducted  as a hobby since&#13;
childhood which include several ar- .&#13;
ticles&#13;
I&#13;
have  written  for  cinema&#13;
oriented  periodicals  and a book on&#13;
the  evolution  of  screen&#13;
comedy&#13;
"The Complete Guide to Movie Co:&#13;
medians" which&#13;
I&#13;
wrote for McFar·&#13;
land publishers.  110ve movies,&#13;
but&#13;
those  of&#13;
us&#13;
who  are  really  into&#13;
them heavy are a lot less tolerant&#13;
01&#13;
: mainstream   filmmaking  that  just&#13;
. doesn't  compare  well to the realm&#13;
of motion pictures.&#13;
Ra"f/ef;S  w.ntten. and edited  by students&#13;
at&#13;
UW-Psrkside  and they'"   so~ly:&#13;
sponslble&#13;
for&#13;
Its&#13;
editorial&#13;
policy&#13;
and&#13;
content.  Published  every&#13;
ThufSd6Y  dlJflflg&#13;
actH/Bmlc&#13;
year&#13;
eJ«:epr&#13;
during&#13;
brub&#13;
and&#13;
holidays.&#13;
_&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Is&#13;
printed  by  the  Racine  JoumsI   Times.&#13;
rJ&#13;
.AII&#13;
CDmlSpondtmce&#13;
should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed   to'  p"'*side&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
~53-&#13;
WlSCons/n-Parkside.   Box No.&#13;
2000.&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
WI&#13;
53141.&#13;
Te/tIphone&#13;
(",,4) 5&#13;
2295&#13;
or&#13;
(414) 553-2287.   •&#13;
I Letters  to thfl editor  will be BCcflpted&#13;
if&#13;
typewritten.   double-spaced&#13;
(In&#13;
st~&#13;
s&#13;
ze&#13;
paper.&#13;
Letters  should  be less than&#13;
350&#13;
words   and&#13;
must&#13;
be&#13;
s1gtWd.&#13;
with'&#13;
phone   tHJmber  Included&#13;
for&#13;
verif'lCation&#13;
purpOSfJs.&#13;
Names&#13;
win&#13;
be&#13;
wlthhfld&#13;
u';;&#13;
quest.&#13;
OHdNne&#13;
for&#13;
lettttrs  is Tuesday  at&#13;
to&#13;
a m&#13;
for&#13;
publklltion&#13;
ThufSdI'l&lt;&#13;
rDfY&#13;
reSflrvtlS tllft right&#13;
to&#13;
edit&#13;
letters  and refuse&#13;
I.;'e~&#13;
containing&#13;
f.$IIand&#13;
(/#fit'"&#13;
content&#13;
Jennie TunldeiC'l&#13;
····   ····&#13;
Editor&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
Bob&#13;
Kiesling&#13;
Community  News Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature  Editor&#13;
Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature  Editor&#13;
Carol Kortendick&#13;
Sports&#13;
Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
JI11Whitney Nielsen&#13;
-&#13;
·..,&#13;
,.. Copy Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
·&#13;
·················    Business Manager&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Pat Zirkelbach&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
WRITERS·&#13;
:&#13;
Kari&#13;
Dixo~,&#13;
Natalie  Haberman,  Darryl&#13;
Hahn, Kimber&#13;
lie  Kranich   Steve&#13;
Kratochvil.  Jeff Leisgang, Robb Luehr&#13;
r&#13;
Joan&#13;
Mattox,&#13;
Julie  Pendleton&#13;
Kevin&#13;
Zirkelbach.&#13;
'&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS   .&#13;
Jay Crapser,&#13;
Scott&#13;
Curly,&#13;
Darryl&#13;
Habn&#13;
Kristine  Odegaard,&#13;
Ann&#13;
Rupert.&#13;
'-.&#13;
"&#13;
___ ..d&#13;
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          <element elementId="41">
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              <text>UW-System - O'Neil to leave President post for Virginia job</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
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      <tag tagId="963">
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      <tag tagId="1447">
        <name>robert o'neil</name>
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      <tag tagId="1870">
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      <tag tagId="2053">
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              <text>Assistant Chancellor - Stoffle to leave; Bassis named interim</text>
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              <text>Peer Support&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 13, 1984&#13;
Bolero review&#13;
Page 12&#13;
~&#13;
University of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
Australian Rules Football&#13;
Page 13&#13;
Vol. 13, No.2&#13;
Assista,nj Chancellor&#13;
Stoffle to leave; Bassis&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Carla Stoffle&#13;
announced Tuesday that she has accepted&#13;
the position as Associate Director&#13;
of Public Services at the University&#13;
of Michigan in Ann Arbor.&#13;
the nation's largest and most&#13;
prestigious system of libraries.&#13;
Stoffle will assume her new duties&#13;
in mid-January and will serve out&#13;
her term at Parkside until Jan. 15.&#13;
Stoffle, 41. has been at Parkside for&#13;
12 years. From 1972-73 she worked&#13;
as a reference librarian; between&#13;
1973 and 1976 she headed the library&#13;
Public Service division; from&#13;
1976 to 1978 she was Assistant Director&#13;
of the library/learning center&#13;
and head of Public Service; for several&#13;
months in 1978 she served as&#13;
Executive Assistant to the Chancellor;&#13;
and she was named Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Educational Services&#13;
in 1978. where she has served to the&#13;
present time.&#13;
In her new position. Stoff1e will&#13;
be responsible for the development&#13;
and evaluation of public service for&#13;
31 service units with 10 department .&#13;
heads reporting directly. Stolfle&#13;
~U start at a salary of $60.000; she&#13;
., -&#13;
currently makes $44,000 at Parkside.&#13;
The University of Michigan's&#13;
Library currently ranks sixth in its&#13;
size of collections. fifth in its slaff&#13;
size (455 fulltime) and eighth in the&#13;
size of its operating budget among&#13;
the country's Association of Research&#13;
Libraries.&#13;
Stoffle rose quickly to the top of&#13;
her field after being instrumental in&#13;
developing a bibtiographic instruction&#13;
program at Parlrside which became&#13;
a national model for univer-&#13;
. sity libraries. She was elected 1982-&#13;
83 president of the 9.llOO-member&#13;
Association of College Research Lihraries&#13;
(ACRL). a rare honor for a&#13;
librarian from a relatively small,&#13;
public undergraduate university.&#13;
She succeeded the library dfrector&#13;
.of Stanford University as head of&#13;
ACRL.&#13;
"1 accepted the position at the&#13;
University of Michigan' with very&#13;
mixed feelings. 1 feel reluctant to&#13;
leave Parkside. a place where I've&#13;
grown. learned from many people&#13;
and had the opportunity to work&#13;
with students. which is unique for a&#13;
librarian. Professionally 1 am a IiAfter&#13;
a slow summer. and failing with sucb an intelligent and wellto&#13;
make .their meeting quorum re- voiced person. 1 think we can get&#13;
quirements twice. Parkside Student the Senate working again."&#13;
Government Association (PSGA) Tunks. who was unable to attend&#13;
found.it necessary to call an emer- .. the meeting Friday. gave writlen&#13;
gency meeting on Friday, Sept. 7. acceptance of the appoinbnent, and&#13;
The emergency. meeting was ad- said in a later comment. "I'm ezejoumed&#13;
and a quorumed meeting ited. 1am xeaIIy looting forward to&#13;
was reached. fulfilling a successful term_ I beVice-President&#13;
Paul Johnson as- lieve Paul and 1 will he able to&#13;
sumed the chairing role in the work well with the Senate. the Admeeting.&#13;
as well as the role of the ministration and the student body."&#13;
Presidency, .after Scott Peterson's When asked what issues Tunks&#13;
official resignation from the office intends to addreas. she said that&#13;
was received on Friday. Peterson basic issues included rebuilding the&#13;
was found ineligible to hold the of- Senate. making a more intelligently&#13;
lice of President for failing to com- based decision aliout pulling out of&#13;
Ite his coD sklIls . the United Council and dealing&#13;
p e egiate reqwre- .with the issue of lower' enrollment&#13;
meats inthe desigDated amount of affecting the amoimt of Segregated&#13;
time.&#13;
Terry Tunks. secretary-treasurer Fees available.&#13;
of PSGA was appointed to the position&#13;
of vice president.&#13;
Johnson. who was elected last&#13;
spring to the position. of vice-president.&#13;
made the appointment near&#13;
the end of the meeting. statinl that&#13;
he felt Tunks would do a good job&#13;
for the studenti and the senate.&#13;
"I'm' loOking forWard to workinIl&#13;
brarian and it is something 1want&#13;
to do. 1feel 1can contribute there&#13;
because 1 have learned so much&#13;
here. 1leave with a lot of wonderful&#13;
memories and I'm going to miss&#13;
many people." said Stolfle. StoIDe&#13;
has authored and co-authored three&#13;
books. published scores of articles&#13;
and papers and addressed conferences&#13;
and consulted throughout the&#13;
U.s .• Canada and England. She has&#13;
held leadership positions on several&#13;
key UW System library and student&#13;
services committees and has been&#13;
active in university and community&#13;
affairs. Stolfle received her A.A.&#13;
from Southern Colorado State' College&#13;
in 1963; B.A. from UniversIty&#13;
of Colorado in 1965; M.SL.S. from&#13;
University of Kentucky in 1969 and&#13;
is currently a PhD candidate in&#13;
Iligher Education Administration&#13;
at UW-Madison. Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
GuSkin called StoIDe's departure&#13;
"disappointing but not surprising.&#13;
Carla is right at the top of her&#13;
field," he said. "This kind of opportunity&#13;
was just a matter of time for&#13;
her. And she'll achieve even more&#13;
in the years ahead. She has done a&#13;
named interim&#13;
Carla Stoffle&#13;
superb job at Parlrside. We will&#13;
miss her." Guskin said Michael S.&#13;
Bassis. Associate Dean of Faculty&#13;
and associate professor of sociology.&#13;
will serve as interim Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Educational Services&#13;
beginning in January.&#13;
Bassis. 40. joined Partside in&#13;
1981 after 10 years at the University&#13;
of Rhode Island. where he rose to&#13;
associate professor and served as&#13;
acting Assistant Dean of Arts and&#13;
Sciences. He has·M.A. and PhD degrees&#13;
in sociology from the University&#13;
of Chicago and a B.A. from&#13;
Brown University.&#13;
Senate tightens the belt&#13;
by returning money&#13;
The Partsiile Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) approved&#13;
the return of the capital ezpense&#13;
category of, theiz 1984/85 f1SC3l&#13;
bUdge\ to the Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocations Committee&#13;
(SUFAC) Friday. The returned&#13;
amount was $3861.24. and included&#13;
the mM computer the Senate had&#13;
requested in theiz budget submitted&#13;
last year.&#13;
President Paul Johnson ........&#13;
ted returninll several items on the&#13;
capital ezpense line of the budget.&#13;
including a desk, a clock. a refrigerator.&#13;
a tape recorder and tapes. an&#13;
answering machine and two cork·&#13;
boards. The remaining item on the&#13;
budget would then he the IBM&#13;
Computer.&#13;
President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
Senate. Joe Vignleri. was rec0gnized&#13;
by the chair and requested&#13;
illat the Senate not return the tape&#13;
recorder and tapes; however adding&#13;
the IBM Computer to the list of&#13;
returns would he more acceptable.&#13;
Vign\eri stated that he felt the tape&#13;
recorder and tapes would he helpful&#13;
in the meetiDgsj however be mechanism to assure that this oefound&#13;
that personal computers in curs."&#13;
.the library would mate better. use The committee would he reof&#13;
the computers as well as better&#13;
use of the student money.. . sponsible for seven events 011 camVign\eri&#13;
then moved to return all pus. including National HIspanic&#13;
of the Iistl!d items, inchvting the Heritage Week, Hom .... ning. Marcomputer&#13;
and With the em!plion of tin Luther King Jr. Commemonthe&#13;
tape recorder and tapes. The live. BIac:It HIslory Month. WlnlB&#13;
motion was pasaed tbrouch the Sen- Carnival. Women's HIstory Week&#13;
ate on a 4-1~vote. and CIna&gt; de .va",.&#13;
Johnson said this about the vote Homecoming and Winter Carthe&#13;
Senate took: "1 thinIl it was a nival are already hodgeted events&#13;
great decision made at the wrong on campus and would require DO&#13;
time. All the faets have not been further allocation; however. the&#13;
compiled and the rationale isn't other five events will require an esclear.&#13;
The Senate wants that money timated $SOOO. In Its final ll\IIIlIIICl&#13;
10 he given bact. SO that·s what will meeting. SUFAC approved the aIlohappen."&#13;
cation of the $SOOO from n!lII!M!I to&#13;
Other \egisIation pasaed in the support the events. pending Senate&#13;
meeting FrIday included approval approval. With the approval of this&#13;
of an AII-Campus Events CommIt- legislation. these events will he&#13;
tee. The proposal for the commit- sponsored for the coming year.&#13;
tee states that the purpose would&#13;
he "to Identify certain major all Tabled legislation included the&#13;
campus events which are of such approval of the Off-Campus Eveats&#13;
importance that it should he the re- .CommIttee, which VignIeri tabled&#13;
sponsibiIily of the campus 10 spon- for further dIscussioo 011 a wording&#13;
• sor them each year and.llllllJlllella·· dispute ..&#13;
-&#13;
Z ft...","y, Sept. 13, 1114&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Peer Support is&#13;
worth the effort&#13;
Pee&lt; SUpport bas -. Ci- a raw deal and the situation is not&#13;
pUlllc IIIJ better.&#13;
'I1le major orpnization, wbicb was bollsed in an individual office&#13;
lD CGmIIIunity Studenl SeM&lt;eo, WLLC D-179, lost their office this&#13;
........... """" their _ ~ in after being promoted. They&#13;
110ft rdo&lt;altd 10 a desk lD an open area 01 CSS. In their present ...... the _ ..- __ can IIley conducI mucb private&#13;
_. lor lear 01 disrupting CSS office opera\iollS. 1beir lormer&#13;
on"", was suppostdly always eoosidertd "temporary." AI this point&#13;
in Ilmt. I...stops have -. talten 10 reIocale Peer Support to a&#13;
""'"' table borne. Even !DOn! unfortunate, the PSGA senate and&#13;
the admlnlstratioa Ill ... both Iailtd 10 assist and support this group.&#13;
Tl.rM IS an unportanl oIenlenl in this siluatioa. U Peer Support&#13;
eontio to lI&lt;mpl worbnc from "a desk," then il is likely that&#13;
theY will r8IlOlIl \ben! the rat 01 the )'Sf. 1\ is essential thai action&#13;
Ia ......,rt 01 the poup beciD immediately!&#13;
'I1le questloD bas -. posed, does Peer Support really need their&#13;
own o/lIce! 'I1le ......... is unequivocally, ye.&#13;
"- SUpport Is a ......,rt group lor DOIHraditionaJ students (age&#13;
it and ovu). wbicb totals 50~I 01 the studenl population. The&#13;
_ JOneS as an tducatiooal and infonnational launch lor nonrradII&#13;
.etullIillI to -IJ life. 1be :IS immediate activ. m&lt;mbers&#13;
.... aIre8dy booted a student orientation program and IIley have&#13;
bepl to raise IIIDd:IIor studenl scbo\arsbipo. 1bey operal. on a fairly&#13;
Iarce IJud&amp;et wbicb supports their pro«rams. One 01 Peer Supports&#13;
projects &lt;umnlly lD the worb is to man the WLLC lnfonnation&#13;
'I1le nallft 01 Pee&lt; Suppor1S actMties require \bern to be near&#13;
CSS The ........ tion bas m·lalalll"" a sood rapport with CSS and&#13;
lbls reIa\lomblp sbouId be eaeouraged to grow. Tbe&lt;efore, "- Support&#13;
IIllIIt Ilay Ia WLLC.&#13;
AI the PSGA -.1. meetln&amp; last Fnday the senal. failed to pledge&#13;
their ......,rt 10 Pee&lt; Support. TbIs was \arieIY dU&lt;! to the inlimidal·&#13;
IDe nolan 01 the admiDIstratioCL 1\ appears the !eIlilte sbitd away&#13;
I""" taklIII a staDd be&lt;a_ theY Iell the administration migbl nol&#13;
....... The ..... t. must molizIe thalllley will not be cbastistd lor diH-&#13;
..... with the "'""NItration -they are not the know-all, end-all 01&#13;
the _ty 1\ is aIoo distressing to see one major organization,&#13;
PSGA, !all to _ anol!I&lt;!' major orpnizalion, Peer Support, when&#13;
\boy are moot In need. PSGA, wbid&gt; represents the studenl body, ignortd&#13;
50~I 01the studenl population wben IIley failed to tak. a&#13;
IlaDd em Pee&lt; Support.&#13;
The admiDIstralion is dolDc very little to assist Peer Support. Whm&#13;
asked at \be !eIlilte meetln&amp; why "- Support could not be moved&#13;
1010the 10I'1Ilft SOCIPSGA nflice (now a break area for second shift&#13;
eustocIial .taln, Assistant 0JanceIJ0r Carla Stolfle staltd that studenl&#13;
...... ooce Ci- to staff_ coaId not be reverted 10 studenl space.&#13;
The ~ -ud like 10 see the documentation where sucb a rule is&#13;
wrllI .... U lbls statement is true then the lOI'1Ilft Peer Support office&#13;
sbouId be returned 10 the group, a1tbougb SInce il was originally staff&#13;
space. It was student«tuple&lt;! """" it was taken away. Or is what's&#13;
IlOOd for \be goooe not good for th. gander? W. lhinI: il is. fn addition.&#13;
If the lanner PSGAISOC office was bulIl for studenl organizatiolls,&#13;
It suppostdly was, then why weren'l all of the studenlleaden&#13;
caasuIted befon! the oIIice was given ID the staH?&#13;
Pee&lt; Support IS a last 1JOWiDC, viable organizali&lt;lo, wbich needs to&#13;
be ......... uad and taI&lt; ... S&lt;riouIy for its purpose on this campus. 1be _Is bemc ptaced on this group due to a Iact 01 a private space&#13;
w1II dostroy II ow is the Ilmt ID get bebind this organization and&#13;
lIDd lh&lt;m a bame.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
...::::.... =- -&#13;
"WITH EIGHT WEEKS LEFT TO GO TO NOVEMBER 6thA'NWDEAPBRCOJECTNBC&#13;
WILLCALL THE ELECTION AT 1:37 E.S.t; CBS AT 7:42. AT 7:44:"&#13;
,-':.:;'~-.:'t~,;fr.f,"'"&#13;
Nobody asked me, but...&#13;
Kenosha politics&#13;
by Bob Kiesliag&#13;
fn WiscoIISin, wbere the mayor&#13;
of th. stat.'s largesl city runs virlually&#13;
unopposed f!!Veryfour years,&#13;
and where on. of the larger scandals&#13;
of the last several years ellncemed&#13;
the secretary of state's&#13;
pbone bills. politics are practiced In&#13;
Kenosha with a passion unrivaled&#13;
anywhere else.&#13;
AI this writing, there are nine&#13;
candidates for one state assembly&#13;
seal Within several weeks after th.&#13;
vacancy was announced, candidates,&#13;
some of whom bad only th.&#13;
vaguest polilical experience, had&#13;
organizations up and running.&#13;
fn this latest round 01 polilical&#13;
musical chairs, there are also races&#13;
for sberiH, county clerk, clerk of&#13;
the courts and a state senate seal&#13;
Somebow th. eJections there always&#13;
seem more exciting. Consider&#13;
the mayoral .Iection last spring,&#13;
where the incumbeDt won by a relative&#13;
landslide of 31 voles. H. was&#13;
pleased. The Iasl tune, the mayor&#13;
won by a single vol •.&#13;
fn a Iabor-orienled town like K.,.&#13;
nosba, th. only candidales wbo&#13;
really count are Democrats. This&#13;
puts ambitions party workers in a .&#13;
unique position: they must be aggressiv.,&#13;
bul If th.y want to be&#13;
elecred, they can't go against th.&#13;
party.&#13;
Consider a conversation I bad recenUy&#13;
with one young Democrat,&#13;
who, I'm sure, prefers not 10 be&#13;
named.&#13;
"There aren't going ID be any&#13;
openings for a whil., but if Smith&#13;
goes to th. assembly, and If Johnson&#13;
takes his place at the county,&#13;
then maybe I can take his seal.&#13;
Know any really bad aldermen?"&#13;
"Not offhand."&#13;
"Well, If I see any, maybe next&#13;
eJection I'll move Into his district&#13;
and run against bun."&#13;
Th. Democratic machin. In Kecnosha&#13;
bas its factions, rivalries and&#13;
alliaces. Howf!!Ver, il seems as if&#13;
there are really two parties: Them&#13;
and Us. Both are basically 'Democratic,&#13;
but In Kenosha even th.&#13;
RepUblicans sbow a ;trong pl'l&gt;'&#13;
labor influence.&#13;
At fundrais.rs, tbos. parlies&#13;
wh.r. politicans and th. politically&#13;
ambitious to go observe, be seen&#13;
and trade gossip, th. team from the&#13;
other sid. of the tracks is mention·&#13;
ed s.ldom, If at all. And then only&#13;
derisiv.ly.&#13;
or cours., it doesn't burt lhallhe&#13;
area's slat. senator is a close potiti-&#13;
. cal ally of th. governor and thai the&#13;
governor can't stand th. mayof.&#13;
Th\U}l'lYl!l'~d th. senator Iiv. on&#13;
opposite ·sid.s Of tb. politicli!&#13;
tracks. or sud&gt; things are rwnor,&#13;
and Interesting elections, mad •.&#13;
But most of all, Kenosha is per.&#13;
haps th. biggest sma11 town in the&#13;
slate. Many people know al 1easI&#13;
on. of their eJected officials personally,&#13;
and 9&gt;'y may also Imow a rival&#13;
candidate. The media contributes&#13;
by mentioning local officials as if&#13;
they bad just stopped by th. news·&#13;
room for a cup of coffee. Polilies in&#13;
Kenosba are shaped by a ligbUykrilt&#13;
triangl. of politicians, th.&#13;
media and th. public. Everyone&#13;
acts as If they themselves were runni!.'g.&#13;
And that is as It should be.&#13;
Write a letter to the Editor&#13;
..&#13;
'til&#13;
•&#13;
j&#13;
:.:-~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'c;.:;p;;'~'::::.&#13;
_ KieIIIaC · · ·Commully N Editor&#13;
:::- _ F.. tun Editor&#13;
ClnI'::: Am. Featare Editor&#13;
D.ve ~ , Spao1a Edilor&#13;
:.r"tt =;:::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~EE ~,::;a.k AdvertiIbIc __&#13;
'-"t t ;:.;::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ =-=&#13;
STAFF Jay c..pser NalaIle u_~ __ lJ\ Hahn Kimt.erue .~ ...... , DarLuehr&#13;
T' . M Kranlda, Robb&#13;
Qaris Po;'. urny, Julie 1'eDdIeto.,&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
.... CIInI, Rob -.. Todd -.....-.&#13;
~.-...,.. .&#13;
Rengsr is written and edit db: . . . . , . .&#13;
spomibkl for its edit ., ': .Y.students sf UW-Parkside"lInd thBy are solely feeCMfHnic&#13;
"""... OrlB policy and content. PublishetLiJvery. Thursday during the&#13;
~_r eXCfJptduring brtMks nt/"'&#13;
Ranger is printfld by lhtl R . Joull hoNda'($.&#13;
All CorrtIspondence '8C1IJfI mal 11me$.&#13;
WlSCOnsin.ptri:sid 8 S";:/d be addressed to: Parks/de Ranger. University of&#13;
2295 IN (414) 65'i2;;7 •.0. ~~',;KtmOshe. W/53141. Telephone (414) 553-&#13;
(titters to the editor 1lbe .&#13;
size paper. Letters shou:/ b BCcepted if typewritten, doubltl-spacsd on: sf.ndINd&#13;
phone nu"",. included e le~$ then 350 WO(dslind mu.st be signtJd.with lJ Ie.&#13;
tIUtIn. DeedRfrfI for lett for. verif!cetlon purpose$. Names will be withheld upon ra- "'"MIs the right to ed~~ IS TlJesdeyat 10 a.m. for publication Toom8y. Ranger&#13;
content tltters and refuse Iflttflrs contBining fs/sa 8nd deftmlBtOry&#13;
'-, ,.... " ........ ~'." _,. ,ro , , •&#13;
RANGER 3 Thursday, Sept. 13, 1984&#13;
Peterson resigns&#13;
TO: All PSGA Senators&#13;
and Officers&#13;
FROM: Scott Peterson&#13;
Due to my collegiate skills negligence&#13;
and procrastination, I have&#13;
been placed on collegiate skills&#13;
drop for a period of one semester&#13;
and therefore have forfeited my&#13;
student life eligibility lind subsequenUy&#13;
my position as PSGA president.&#13;
1am deeply angered and sorrowed&#13;
at my actions and tbose of&#13;
UW-Parkside and regret tbat I have&#13;
let down tbe PSGA Senate, tbe student&#13;
body, and tbe people who&#13;
have supported my tenure as president.&#13;
I do feel, tbough, tbat we have&#13;
an acellent Senate and by continuing&#13;
to wolll:hard and by wolll:ingtogelber,&#13;
!be PSGA will be stronger&#13;
tban ever.&#13;
And finally, 1hope tbat you will&#13;
remember one tbing: if you have&#13;
ScoU PeleIlIOIl&#13;
sometbing to do, do it today, don't&#13;
wait until tomorrow.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Scott A. Peterson&#13;
Funding to boost&#13;
The first is $8,000 from tbe Council'of&#13;
Great Lakes Governors for a&#13;
study by tbe CSMR into possible&#13;
cooperative tourism programs&#13;
among Wisconsin, Micbigan, 00-&#13;
nois, Minnesota, Indiana, Ohio and&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
The research will include analysis&#13;
of a survey of households in&#13;
Pittsburgh, Sl. Louis, Kansas City&#13;
and Louisville to identifY potential&#13;
tourism and malll:eting opportunities&#13;
targeted to people in !bose regions.&#13;
The CSMR also will conduct&#13;
interviews witb senior management&#13;
people in tbe travel and tourism Industry&#13;
to gei tbeir ideas about regional&#13;
promotion programs.&#13;
""';t As part of tbe project, "a seminar&#13;
*",ong travel and tourism directors&#13;
of tbe seven states was held at&#13;
Palll:side ibis summer.&#13;
Peer Supp.ort&#13;
Group looks for room to grow&#13;
SUFACchair, explained to !be Senate&#13;
tbat tbe issue on tbe floor was&#13;
not whetber or not Peer Support&#13;
should be a major organization:&#13;
"The fact is, tbey have tbat status,&#13;
and Ibis body has already reconigzed&#13;
tbem as a major organization.&#13;
They were ,developed on campus to&#13;
aid new and returning students in&#13;
making a successfu1 re-entry into&#13;
schoo I,"&#13;
Joe Vigniere, President Pro&#13;
Tempore of !be Senate, questioned&#13;
Hensiak as to !be number of students&#13;
Peer Support actnaI\y helps&#13;
and as to how many students were&#13;
active in tbat organization. Hensiat&#13;
continued to explain tbat !be 0rganization&#13;
currenUy has 35 active&#13;
members, and develops educational&#13;
programs for tbe sole purpose of&#13;
making everyone's educational experience&#13;
on Ibis campus better.&#13;
Stome questioned where the&#13;
group could be boused, and presented&#13;
to tbe Senate tbat !be group's&#13;
own advisor was the one who&#13;
needed tbat office space and tbat it&#13;
was a matter of priority decision on&#13;
the part of Community Student&#13;
Services Director and Assoclate Director:&#13;
When asked about using space in&#13;
tbe coffee shop, DOW occupied by&#13;
Physical Plant but origina11y designed&#13;
as student space, StofOe&#13;
found the suggestion unacceptable.&#13;
P~ Support, the newest major&#13;
organization on campus, currenUy&#13;
located at a desk in Community&#13;
Student Services, was removed&#13;
, from its office in CSS shorUy before&#13;
tbe semester started. The office&#13;
had been given to them on a temporary&#13;
basis until a more permanent&#13;
one could be found. The lost&#13;
office space is to be used by the&#13;
new Assoclate Director of Community&#13;
Services, Maureen, Budowle;&#13;
however, new offiCespace for Peer&#13;
Support has not been found yet.&#13;
Paul Johnson, President of&#13;
PSGA; suggested Friday in !be Senate&#13;
meeting tbat the Senate make a&#13;
statement in support of Peer Support's&#13;
efforts and offer full cooperation;&#13;
hwoever, after discussion in&#13;
the meeliqg between senators, students&#13;
and Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Carla Stome, the Senate failed to&#13;
take any action.&#13;
Several senators raised questions&#13;
of Peer Support's "major organization"&#13;
status, when Pat Hensiat,&#13;
tourism&#13;
The second CSMR project involves&#13;
$t,729 from the Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Deve10pment for a&#13;
study to measure tbe economic impact&#13;
of tourisni on a 19-county area&#13;
of southeastern Wisconsin. The&#13;
project, which also has been awarded&#13;
$3,000 from the lJW System&#13;
Urban Corridor Consortium and&#13;
$8,000 from Parkside, involves identifying&#13;
the number and type of&#13;
overnight faclJities including hotels,&#13;
motels and campgrounds and surveying&#13;
those businesses to determine&#13;
rates and occupaoey patterns.&#13;
The project was made possible&#13;
by a specialized computer prngram&#13;
developed at Parkside by Rovelstad&#13;
for a study of Ibis kind.&#13;
Also approved by !be Regents&#13;
was $5,000 from tbe National Science&#13;
Foundation for an extremely&#13;
EI Salvador&#13;
More chance to leave&#13;
low temperature fri!ezer to be used&#13;
by tbe Biomedical Research institute.&#13;
In addition" the Regents accepted&#13;
$1,077,868 from tbe federal&#13;
Department of Education in support&#13;
of student financial aid at&#13;
Parkside. The money will be used&#13;
for loans, grants and wolll:...tudy&#13;
programs.&#13;
Also, the Regents accepted&#13;
$2,574 from the Department of&#13;
Education for veterans' programming.&#13;
In addition, the Regents accepted&#13;
$822 from multiple donors&#13;
for scholarships in business and&#13;
education programs and for repair&#13;
and maintenance of Science Division&#13;
equipment.&#13;
Nicaragua&#13;
"That space was offered to the&#13;
group. Now it's being used as staff&#13;
space. It·can't be returned to !be&#13;
students."&#13;
In a press release sent out by tbe&#13;
group, LaVerne Christensen, president&#13;
of Peer Support, said !be fol- .&#13;
lowing: "The office we occnpied&#13;
last year had a temporary status&#13;
only and Community Student Services&#13;
had a need for more office&#13;
space. Peer Support agreed to try a&#13;
new area tbat _ close to CSS, students&#13;
and our advisor, but lack of&#13;
privaey due to !be activity of !be&#13;
business office has made it very difficult&#13;
to conduct our oWn business.&#13;
SeveraJ areas have been sugested&#13;
but are not appropriate since we&#13;
need to be accessible to students&#13;
and CBS staff as well."&#13;
Christensen added, "Meanwbile,&#13;
Peer Support and CSS have met&#13;
and dectded to cooperate In putting&#13;
togetber a proposal to find our organisation&#13;
a new, permanent home.&#13;
Along witb our united goal of finding&#13;
a permanent home on campus,&#13;
Peer Support and CSS will be _-&#13;
ing together on long range planning&#13;
for student programs and services."&#13;
President Paul Johbson made&#13;
Ibis statement after !be Senate failed&#13;
to take a stand in support of !be&#13;
group: "I think it's one of tbe most&#13;
eo.lIa .... oa _ 4&#13;
A week at the Park&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 13&#13;
DANCE: Starting at 12noon, to the&#13;
rock music of the "Hot Rods" in&#13;
Union Square or tbe Patio (dePending&#13;
on tbe weatber). Admission is&#13;
free. Sponsored by PAR.&#13;
MOVIE: "Zoot Suit" (R) will be&#13;
shown at 3:30 p.m. in tbe Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission at the door is'&#13;
$1.00 for a Parkside student and&#13;
$1.00 for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
PAR.&#13;
Fridsy, Sept. 14&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Resume Preparation"&#13;
at 1 p.m, in WLLC D174.Call&#13;
. est. 2452 for more information.&#13;
MOVIE: "Zoot Suit" will be repeated&#13;
at 1:30 p.m. and at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Labor Market Information" starts&#13;
at 8 a.m. in Union 10H06. Call m.&#13;
2047 for more information.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "How to Increase&#13;
Profits in a Small Business" starts&#13;
at 7 p.m. in Union 'JI.Y1. The speaker&#13;
,is Robert Davidson of UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Call est. 2047 for more details.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Fresh Start" by&#13;
Jane Frederick at 1p.m. in Union&#13;
202. All are welcome. Sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Healtb Office.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Resume Preparation"&#13;
at 5:30 p.m. in WLLC D174.&#13;
Wednadsy. Sept. 1.&#13;
SEMINAR: "Health Insurance"&#13;
starts at It:50 a.m. in Union 104.&#13;
The seminar is free and open to !be&#13;
pubUc. Sponsored by UW-EDensinn.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE: Featurtng David&#13;
Rudolf, from 12 noon to Z p.m. and&#13;
8 p.m. to 10 p.m. in !be Union Bazaar&#13;
Area. All are welcome. Sp0nsored&#13;
by PAR.&#13;
SUPPORT GROUP: For !be&#13;
divorced and separated, at 1 p.m. in&#13;
MOLN D128. The JlIlIIhDl is free&#13;
and open to !be public. Sponsored&#13;
by !be Parkside Healtb Office.&#13;
WORK8llOP: "Handling !be Disci-,&#13;
pUne Problem" at 7 p.m. in Union&#13;
106, by Professor Dennis Laker.&#13;
Call m. 2047 for details. Sponsored&#13;
by !be Small Business De&gt;e1opme11l&#13;
Center.&#13;
(NOCRj-"Nicaragu8 is a more' Since December, when it sent a del- stuffs. Student delegates from tbe&#13;
winnable issue than E1 Salvador," egation of private citizens into Nie- U.S. and Canads were aboard.&#13;
says Bob Bingaman, IieId organizer aragua's troubled border area to. Anotber group, the National Netfor&#13;
tbe United States Student Assn- form a "shield of love" against !be wolll:in SoUdarity witb the People&#13;
elation. "The U.S. is pretty firmly fighting, Ibis church-oriented or- of Nicaragua is, as its name sug_&#13;
entrenched in EI Salvador, but ganizationhas sent over 400 private gests, a referral netwolll: rather&#13;
there's more of a chance to get the observers to the country. The dele- tban a formal organiztion. It conU.S.&#13;
out of Nicaragua," he says. gations, three each month now, pay nects some 60 groups across the&#13;
In tbe last year, said Bingaman, their own way, but sign good faith country. Tbe bult of them are not&#13;
tbere has been a steady increase in "covenants," tbat they will talk' campus-&lt;lriented, but many are&#13;
student protest about Central about what they see in Nicaragua based in college towns. Last year&#13;
America, much of it with a Nicara- when tbey return home. tbe netwolll:he1ped to send five volguan&#13;
focus. Bingaman reports Spokeswoman Betsy Kreitz says unteer brigades l!&gt; Nicaragua -over&#13;
major protests at UC-Berte1ey as there are usually two Or three stu- 650 people, many of them students.&#13;
well as many ~ around the dents in each group who become . They went in response to a cal\ for&#13;
country. Schools In: Oregon and active protest organizers on their help wltb the cotton and coffee barNew&#13;
York, he said, have been !be return to campus. . vest in tbat country. Debbie Rubin,&#13;
most active to dste, a1tbougb pro- interim coordinator of !be group,&#13;
test against U.S. D1Wtary In:terven- In the 1960's few could travel to says !be netwolll: may help send&#13;
tion in Central America is on !be Vietnam, but Nicaragua is closer olber volunteer brigades Ibis year&#13;
rise everywhere. ,and safer. Visiting !be country to as well.&#13;
fro 'caIly wbile students led the see for oneself has become a charg&#13;
m , Observers of tbe student scene eneral population in !be Vietnam acteristic of tbe new generation of&#13;
J say aU of tbese efforts potU' t toward protests, they are fo1lowlng private, foreign policy protests. On une 1 A I"" Student Teaching applications for&#13;
citizens' groups on the Central an organization cal1ed Nicaraguan Nicaraguaastbefocalpointemerg- pp lcatlons theSpringSemester,l8I5,aredue&#13;
American Issue. Peace Fleet sent a ship from St. ing in a growing wave of campus in !be Education Division office, Gr&#13;
Witness for Peace is ~ of !be Augustine, Florida loaded with protest against U.S. D1Wtary inter- being taken 210, by September 15.&#13;
~~.~~~t. ~f.~~ ~~ •. '."~~~~~U~, ~o~i~.~. f~- H .v~~~.n. ~ .~~t.~?~'..,..,," .,~."1',';."1',~'T"!:' ~. !::!:::::!:!:!:~::;;::;;;;:;:;;~;52:55:;;;iiiiiii====iii';ii&#13;
SuDdsy, Sept. II&#13;
MOVIE: "Zoot Suit" will be repeated&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MOIIdsy,Sept. 17&#13;
COURSES: "Watercolor" starts at&#13;
6:30 p.m. in CA lll, "Contemporary&#13;
Art" starts at 6:30 p.m. in CA&#13;
129, and "Intro to Computers .1"&#13;
starts at 7 p.m. in Tallent Hall. Call&#13;
m. 2312 for' more information.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Enens1on.&#13;
·1'1oesdsY. Sept. II&#13;
SEMINAR: "Job Development and&#13;
•&#13;
......... " sept. IS,1*&#13;
Off campus event policy&#13;
under fire from students&#13;
A _ .,-w-,- policy ~ 0II-eampal&#13;
....... ......,..ed by stadeot or-&#13;
.-_ II UIId«"-&#13;
11le policy stale that ·It........ it&#13;
II espectod tbal studslt orpIliDl10lls&#13;
us campus facilities for&#13;
_till· II' .-I ......Is, .t II poosibIo&#13;
to _ a .-- by wrltl&lt;Il "'1--&#13;
U 1M __ II .,.-. 1M orpalDlioo',&#13;
adwt.w m slIP it. stalilll&#13;
tllat be abe will be ...- to accept&#13;
"IESi J eNtity for the eDfortemeat&#13;
01 IIIli¥enIIJ polidos."&#13;
nJa policy .... tabled at !be Fri4a1&#13;
PSGA SoDate -... boca ....&#13;
of &lt;8tala objecUoas by IIDdeal&#13;
leodIn aDd ....a.p;ty ID Ita _&#13;
f&amp;cewat&#13;
0lOI 01 !be '&gt;. to&#13;
1M _ policy II It II DOl made&#13;
_ III 1M policy _ po,. 1M ad-&#13;
_·s _y to !be -.&#13;
Kaitll 1IumallIl. Pili at of&#13;
PA&amp;, ....... "I .-Id11ft _ !be&#13;
policy it 1M a-d.... _ 10&#13;
,., (1M adtIoor" WI\J). 11le ......&#13;
.....,.,bit'-"- lilt ......&#13;
It ...... l.bIa policy ...... oarlllroalI."&#13;
.- aIoo acIdod, •...m&#13;
..., piIoed "'!be ' I I' .. _ It __ paIIds _ aIIect&#13;
_ dIrect1J ...... hawly&#13;
......... pllIIIc IIIpat _ !be ltDdeIlI,"&#13;
.:- ..... lilt policy boa •&#13;
._-'&gt;&lt;- W&#13;
*&#13;
JIaDCOr PIIolD by Daft McEYoy&#13;
C _ ..... _ton ..a1t for , ....... at tile lIlInl&#13;
, • PSGA ___&#13;
t-&gt; oIfldaIIy 1m p1e....... ecI, it boa&#13;
t-&gt; adviIecI tllat stadeot orpIliD- _ /oIIow it.&#13;
8IrmaID stated, "I doo·tlbiDk it&#13;
_ be lair to a dub to baft !be&#13;
0Ydlt, .-II as !be MaDacers' DiD-&#13;
_. ca-tW if in 1M pIaIIaiDc&#13;
__ 01 lilt &lt;ftIIl. tbeY (1M dub) _'t .....,IOOd relalloDs witll&#13;
tbeIr od'riIor."&#13;
l1loft aIao ....... to be some amlIipity&#13;
as to _t ""ip'le lID&#13;
..... t as oII-eampus. sucb as tile&#13;
PAB-sponsored Badger game.&#13;
_ is not a bused event.&#13;
Tbe main objection seems to be&#13;
that tile organiJatinns simply do not&#13;
feel that lID advisor is necessary at&#13;
an oIl-ompus events.&#13;
"11le administration is treating&#13;
us like we're still in high scbool."&#13;
Hannann said.&#13;
AsoisIant Cllanc:eUor Carla Slolfie&#13;
.... unavailable for comment.&#13;
---Club events---&#13;
t1Ieerh , I&#13;
_ ..._ ,.,! To • PaIbide stadeots: Meet _ Do ,... pe0ple'&#13;
VIoIt _ U1i' .-I oat ..&#13;
5 1 Alld porty a -&#13;
... ..... WeD, dleerleIIdlaC It&#13;
_ WIIJ 01 doiIIC jast lbaIJ U ,...&#13;
...,..-IpilaftiDteftltedaDd _ lite to _ DIlft aboat&#13;
-1eadiJlc. come to __ I.011&#13;
W-'y, Sept. 19 at 7 p.m. This -"'1I_1o __ is&#13;
iDIerested In joiaInc !be ,&#13;
~ aIao DOII·t be oby~&#13;
frIeDd or two, tome tee wbat life&#13;
_ to 011.... You may lil&lt;e _t&#13;
,... and Hope ... _ ,...&#13;
tIlore&#13;
Dart TtaJD&#13;
oIcnme -. Dart..-s. 1lOI&gt;-Oarten,&#13;
and ~ mutants.&#13;
11le ParbIde Dart Ism IS olfainC&#13;
free dart -.. Ibis F'ndaJ. Sept.&#13;
14 ID 1M flecftatioD CeDlor at I&#13;
pm..&#13;
TIle ,ames to be tall&amp;ht are&#13;
CrIcbt. :1111.501, AlOUIld !be Oodt lIlld_! WE WELCOME BEGINNERS.&#13;
We .....-te adnDced&#13;
p1a)'en. WE SHOOT RUSTLEAs&#13;
ON SIGHT'!!&#13;
ADlbropoIogy Club&#13;
11le lint meeting 01 !be year wiD&#13;
be beId DeS! W-.,.. Sept. 19 at&#13;
I p.m. In MoIn. SM.&#13;
S.W.KA.&#13;
Student WismIIsin Educ:ation Association&#13;
(~W.E.A.), !be pre-professional&#13;
organization for future&#13;
educators. lUIIOlDCeS its first membaship&#13;
meeting 00 Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 19, at 1 p.m. in Moln D-133.&#13;
An opporluuily to meet and worIr.&#13;
with otber students committed to&#13;
iJtlproYin« education and !be professioo.&#13;
The aperience wiD enbaDa!&#13;
yoor ovenIJ preparation as a&#13;
teacher meeting !be cballenge.&#13;
Inter.Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowsbip&#13;
IDle-Vanity Christian FeUowslop&#13;
. is an International. inlenlellOaunatiooal&#13;
group of Christian&#13;
studsI . We meet ~ in MolD.&#13;
107, Wednesdays !nlm I p.m. to 1:&#13;
50 p.m. This "",*'s topic: is: God&#13;
started it. ..- lwn is it "",,1We&#13;
abo meet for Bible studieI, prayer&#13;
meetings and occasiunal sodaIs. AD&#13;
lacuJty and studslts are weIoome.&#13;
l.tmsted? Questioas! SloP by!&#13;
PSES&#13;
11le first meeting of the Parbide&#13;
Society of Eogineering Scieoce&#13;
(PSES) will be beId on Wedoroday.&#13;
Sept. 19 at 1 p.m. in Moln. D-139.&#13;
This club welcomes an students in&#13;
electrical and mecbanical engineer.&#13;
ing ledmology and applied sciences&#13;
as well as any other interested students.&#13;
Meet some of your fellow&#13;
students and help set the club's fulure.&#13;
Club listings&#13;
on Page 7&#13;
RANGER&#13;
News Briefs 1&#13;
Soap opera stars pop.ular&#13;
. come is down. while programs featur-&#13;
(NOCRl-AmUSement ga;:,~g. reported student union directors in&#13;
. soaP opera stars are&#13;
~ '. Int tinal Dlioois. . tion of College Unions- erna 0 ,the&#13;
According to the ~r~income is droppitlg off but VIdeo enthuDlinois&#13;
group also Sll1'. .&#13;
siasJD continues to ~~" g well the union directors said. but break&#13;
Big concerts are !10&#13;
k&#13;
om as w~ll as talent shows, are finding suedancing&#13;
with disc JOc eys, .&#13;
cess.&#13;
Unwed mother reinstated&#13;
.' A U S district judge reinstated Loretta Henricks&#13;
Spnngflel~. W'ij nal'Honor Society after she had been dropped beWort&#13;
tO&#13;
f&#13;
e a Dey while in high school. the Associated Press recause&#13;
0 pregnan&#13;
ported. Ackerman reinstated Wort "in good slanding"&#13;
JUd~e tad ~:dthat both the society and the school district had&#13;
af~, eed al dis",",-;notion against Wort. because unwed fathers pra~uc sexu ~~u.~~. .&#13;
do not lace the same sanction.&#13;
Freshmen overrate chances&#13;
(NOCRj-A Penn State University study of incoming freshmen shows&#13;
that most overrate .their chances of getling good grades and underratethe&#13;
time they will need to study. .&#13;
Even those who didn·t get "B" averages in high school expected to.&#13;
do lIlat well in college. although they figured to do only twenty hours&#13;
a ""'*&#13;
of studying. '. . ti Ia . The five most popular majOrs-romputer saence. accoun ng. w.&#13;
management and electrical engineering--&lt;lrew over 60 percent of the&#13;
students' interest.&#13;
Political literature -O.K.&#13;
Madison-A Dane County circuiljudge said last week that he was reluctant&#13;
to halt the distribution of politicalllterature at a Madison&#13;
shopping mal\. .&#13;
.fUdge P. Charles Jones said the maII's lawyers had failed. in seek·&#13;
ing an injunction against an anti,nudear group. to demonstrate that&#13;
the distribution of leaflets would cause irreparable harm.&#13;
The case began when another judge ruled that the mall had legally&#13;
barred a polltical dance troupe from perlonning there. and other&#13;
groups began distributing the leaflets in protest.&#13;
Suit filed against bar&#13;
Milwaukee-A suit filed last week contends that a Milwaukee'lavern&#13;
was negllgent in serving alcohol to a customer who later died of alcohol&#13;
poisoning.&#13;
The $100.000 suit. filed by Ruth Luek of Bullernut. Wisconsin, said&#13;
that the owner of Tommy's Good Times Saloon in Milwaukee was&#13;
negligent in serving alcohol to her SOil. Timothy Luek. even though&#13;
he was obviously intoxicated.&#13;
The tavern owner. Tommy Michels. said that Luek's problems&#13;
were complicated by drug use, however.&#13;
Union beer prices increase&#13;
Union patrons may have noticed&#13;
an increase in beer prices and a decrease&#13;
in their waRels.&#13;
In late March, distributors na,&#13;
tionwlde wee suhjected to a price&#13;
increase in !be pUrchase of bulk&#13;
beer. (beer sold by the half barre1).&#13;
Consequently. this increase was&#13;
passed on to !be retailers, PaIltside's&#13;
Union included.&#13;
C· , __ I "Il's !be biggest and most &lt;IraanportaDt&#13;
major ............ on Jobnaou continued. "I lbint !be malic increase that 1 have ever&#13;
campoas lor _. 11ley wee senate laiIed to laIte a stand be- seen." said Union Director Bill Nie- The&#13;
baVIJlI inltnIaI turbuIeD&lt;e at _ ca.... tbeY couId not get !be wboIe bub&lt;. Costs went up three to four' Board aIso approved of an&#13;
ume. but tbeJ aft sliD a _ or- story in the moeling. aDd 1 lbint dollars per half barre1 d mcrease in the »Ounce beers from&#13;
lIlld tIlore • epending 85 cents to $1. When bu,,;n~ a hev- ....... tioD vay _ to that are a lot of vety lut!JaIeDt upon !be particular brands. In one erag th Iarg ,..."&#13;
kind 01 tIuJII. a privaIe feelings on !be issue. 1 do lhint that case. the increase was over 21 per be e. e er size is usually a&#13;
pIoce to -. _ (111M- !be senate wiD go as far as they cent. - ev~e~ deal. econOmically. Howtails.&#13;
meetinp. etc.I, 1 feel we have to. and _ Pea Support one In order to cover the additiooal • ID the case.of. a1cohOllc beveri&#13;
iii-ii...'-ii....... ~iiii;~"iiiiiiib,i' ... iirecliiperiiiceniit.·~·.~~iiiiili.;costs~~.~.the~p=n:·ce~of~beer:=SO:ld~in~!be~:- ~":.the . , . . .. " ..... -,u",lo g~t. a ~e~ P!il'e ~, Board ISm the process of ~u.n~~,.&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Union was raised. However. the&#13;
new prices did not go into effect&#13;
until the first day of' summer&#13;
scltool. A l2-()unce beer now' costs&#13;
65 "':'lts. Compared to last year,&#13;
lIlat ISa mckel increase. A1thoU&amp;b&#13;
. the entire nickel was not necessary&#13;
the Parkside Union Advisory Haord&#13;
agreed lIlat instead of dealing with&#13;
penmes •• t would be easier to round&#13;
It off.&#13;
regardless of the size. The purpose&#13;
of this is so there is no encouragement&#13;
for the people to bUy the&#13;
larger. more economical size. If&#13;
there was a set price per ounce for&#13;
beer. the Union would have had to&#13;
go anotller 10 cents on the 20 ouace&#13;
size. but it was agreed tbat a 15&#13;
cent jwnp was pretty significant to&#13;
begin with.&#13;
The price of beer was raised j'!'t&#13;
enough to offset the bulk beer mcrease&#13;
so that the Union's budgetprofit&#13;
picture remains the same·&#13;
Generally. a profit of two to urree&#13;
per cent of the entire revenue u&#13;
made. Eventually this profit is returned&#13;
to tile students in the form&#13;
of n"!" .equipm"!'! ••t~evisions. fur·&#13;
niture, etc.&#13;
U_---------!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""""""'IIIIlIIIIIIIIIl~~~==-===;_---&#13;
RANGER&#13;
5 "Thursday, Sept. 13, 1984&#13;
UW-Extension offers selected short subjects&#13;
Dance on three consecutive Mondays from get "~n" aperience in the register call 55$-2312. Registration m~). To register call 55$-2312.&#13;
Co . L·"et and 1 to 5 p.m. beginning Oct. 1. use of legal researeh materials in deadline is.Wednesday, Sept. 26. Registration deadline is Thursda.y,&#13;
urses m ...., jazz-danc- Fee for the course, which will be l'arkside's library.&#13;
jog for high school stndents and held in the Parkside library, is $30. Genealogy Se~ 27~, to be taught by UW&#13;
adult beginners will be offered by To register, call 55$-2312. Reg_ Drawing&#13;
University Edension, Parkside. istration deadline is Wednesday, Acourse in genealogy that will ="L:::'~ ~ ~~&#13;
TKhethcIassesz&#13;
WildI be taught by Sept. 26. ~ =~g~rkshe an':,:I~ thandeRa&#13;
en&#13;
: ttheachparticipants how to trace eaIogists Joanne Baker and Dave&#13;
a erma ava a, a Parkside The course will cover the use and eir ancestors and learn about Holle, will teach participants bow&#13;
dance instructor who has been organization of \ega1 researeh mate- vironment as models will be of- their family histories will be 01-&#13;
dancing prolessioDally in the MiI- rial inclUding court reports, stat- lered by University Extension- lered by University Extension- ~:: to"=""~ =es~pastsar:&#13;
waukee area lor the past 10 years. utes, legal encyc\opedias, digests, .Parkside from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Parkside, over six consecutive&#13;
The ballet course, whicb will Shepard's Citator and \ega1 periodi- Saturday, Sept. 29 (rain date Satur- Tuesdays from 7 to 9 p.m. begin- . In addition, there will be a 9(l.&#13;
teach participants to use their bod- cals. day, Oct. 6.) ning Oct. 2. minute lecture on using microcomies&#13;
in a graceful manner while ton- Team taught by a Iibrarian ..law- Cost 01 the workshop, to be Cost of the course, which will be pulers to store, sort and print geiog&#13;
and stretching their muscles, d Iiti· . taught by Parkside art instructor held in Tallent Hall Room 261, is nealogical information that has&#13;
will meet on eight consecutive yer an po CI8II, partiClpanls will, Ingrid Gjerlev Harper, is $17. To $10 ($5 lor each additional family been collected.&#13;
Mondays from 6 to 7 p.m. begin_&#13;
ningOct.1.&#13;
The jazz-dancing course, which&#13;
will provide particiPants with physical&#13;
workouts wbiIe teaching them&#13;
dance combinations used by profes- ,&#13;
sionals, will be on eight consecutiv.e&#13;
Mondays from 7:15 to 8:15 p.m. beginning&#13;
Oct. 1. '&#13;
. Each course costs $26 and will be&#13;
held in Communications Arts Room&#13;
0.118. To register 55$-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline for both courses&#13;
is Wednesday, Sept. 26.&#13;
zavada, who also teaches dance&#13;
for the UW-Milwaukee Extension&#13;
program, holds a bachelor of fine&#13;
arts degree in dance from UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Photography&#13;
A photography course for beginners&#13;
interested in learning the basics&#13;
01 picture-taking will be offered&#13;
by University Extension,&#13;
Parkside, on three consecutive&#13;
Mondays from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. in&#13;
Tallent Hall \leginning Oct. 1.&#13;
To register for the course, which&#13;
costs $15, call 55$-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Wednesday, Sept. 26.&#13;
Instructor will be Paul Flagg, an&#13;
audio-visual coordinator in the Ra-&#13;
,!:ineUnified School District. Flagg&#13;
~astaught photography classes at&#13;
Carthage College and the Charles&#13;
A. Wustum Museum of Fine Arts in&#13;
Racine as well as at University Extension.&#13;
The class will teach basics of&#13;
camera use, film and picture composition.&#13;
Research&#13;
A .eourse in legal research skills&#13;
for paralegals, court personnel,&#13;
legal secretaries and those interested&#13;
in acquiring knowledge about&#13;
basic legal resources will be offered&#13;
by 'University E:lteIision, Parkside" . '~==:::::::=~;;;;;;;';&#13;
Solar heaters&#13;
An introductory session on the&#13;
installation of solar water heaters&#13;
for the home will be offered by&#13;
University Extension, Parkside&#13;
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. on Monday,&#13;
Oct. 1 in Tallent' Hall. '&#13;
Cost of the SessiOll is $10 for individuals;&#13;
$12 per couple. To register&#13;
call 55$-2312. Registration deadline&#13;
is Wednesday, Sept. 26.&#13;
The workshop will cover different&#13;
solar water heating systems&#13;
.available on the martet as well as&#13;
how one can assemble and install a&#13;
solar water heater through programs&#13;
available at University Extension.&#13;
Get down tobusiness faster.&#13;
With the BA:-35.&#13;
If there's one thing business calculations, amortizations A powerful combination.&#13;
students have always needed, and balloon payments. Think business. With&#13;
ness-oriented calculator. spend less time calculating, Business Analyst. '"&#13;
this is it: an affordable, busi- The BA-35 means you the BA-35 Student +&#13;
The Texas Instruments . and more time learning. One&#13;
BA-35, the Student Business keystroke takes the place UEXAS&#13;
Analyst. of many. I&#13;
·Its built-in business The calculator is just part NSTRUMENTS&#13;
formulas let you perform of the package. You also get Creating useful products&#13;
complicated finance, a book that follows most and services for you.&#13;
accounting and statistical business courses: the Business&#13;
functions - the ones that Analyst Guidebook, Business&#13;
usually require a lot'of time professors helped us write it,&#13;
and a stack of reference books, to help you get the most out&#13;
like present and future value. of calculator and classroom.&#13;
© I&lt;R}J'Ieeas InSTruments&#13;
- -- - ------&#13;
•&#13;
Input/Output&#13;
Terms take some time&#13;
into the outside of the computer and .the built-in programs&#13;
are coonected directly to the nucroprocessor on&#13;
the inside SwitcJlli,g on the computer causes the ROM p",,"&#13;
grams to run. There are usually two programs b'!'lt-m.&#13;
One is called the operating system, or OS. It IS this program&#13;
that communicates diredly with the nueropr ....&#13;
eessor in machine langUage. Since machine language .IS&#13;
very romplicated, another program is included m .&#13;
ROM. CaDed BASIC, (for "Beginner's All-PurpOSe&#13;
Symbolic InstrUction Cod",,"), this program mterpre!"&#13;
cOmmands to the microprocessor. For this reason It IS&#13;
knoWn as "programming Janguage," and comes standani&#13;
in most borne computers. It is this program that IS&#13;
~bIe for the READY prompt. yOU have purcbasec! software, you can respond&#13;
with commands sucb as WAD and RUN. H not, then&#13;
you can create your own programs by learning to use&#13;
BASIC aDd all it! commands.&#13;
Either ""y it all adds up to software. In fact, your&#13;
computer is M!y as powerful as the software that it&#13;
can run. The cost and type of software available is an&#13;
important consideration when selecting a computer.&#13;
Cboosing the right kind of software is another problem&#13;
that you will f"",. More on this in future colwnns.&#13;
By Chris Pappe&#13;
II is ~ to buy a computer aDd take it&#13;
_ to IIDd thai it won·t do anJlhing II just sits there&#13;
bIIatiIlI READY Rady for what' Anotber cause for&#13;
~ Is the start-up messace. II says only 38K of&#13;
memory Is me! What bappened to the rest?&#13;
WbeIl your computer says READY, it is waiting for&#13;
a command, You can loan a pn&gt;CI'IIll (instrUdiom and&#13;
clata to be uood) !rom disk aDd run it The command&#13;
_ ..., !rom bnDd to bnDd aDd leU your c0mputer&#13;
to f_ a procrarn !rom \be disk, place it in the&#13;
bet memory aDd start foUowiD&amp; the iJlstruc:lions.&#13;
'"'"" you swItcb \be computer off, \be pnlCnI11 is lost&#13;
!rom memory But, you can "*&#13;
It apm!rom \be diskAllotbeF&#13;
term for p....._ \bat are loaded Is "ooIt'Ift-&#13;
.... _ ao/t'Iftro, \be computer just sits.&#13;
Or _ it' WbeIl you swItcb on your computer and&#13;
_ a .... of memory, tbere Is a ""'" reason for&#13;
\bat The compula" &lt;011IOI .nth ooItwan! built in aDd it&#13;
Is IMlD&amp; up _ """""'l" ThIs memory Is a speciaJ&#13;
klad, ailIod ROM (~ OD/J M&lt;moryl. It cannot be&#13;
dloa&amp;Od II Is not lost _ you swItcb \be cornpula"&#13;
en, iIke ooItwan!. ,-- ROM procrams are stored on&#13;
a dIlp. just Ilke a cartridc&lt; procrarn. A cartridIle plues&#13;
Big Brothers "adopt" Sisters&#13;
Ilie BroIhen 01 GrtIOter fIadDe,&#13;
Is aDll"'Di,. a ..- c:IIaIlge.&#13;
The orpIlIDtloa wtDllOW be ca11ed&#13;
"Ilie BroIhen aDd IliC Sisters 01&#13;
GrtIOter fIadDe, IDe.." aDd Is ""-&#13;
_____ poDdiIIC III-.s eaperI&lt;Dc&lt; to IDcIud&lt;d fora&#13;
k!maIa&#13;
Jun Greoo, ""_ -,&#13;
IIlat "Ilie BroIhen 01 America&#13;
lad SiC SiIten IDtrmdh-w merpel&#13;
ID 1m to bocome IliC BroIhen&#13;
Illie Sisters 01 America. N we ....&#13;
a member 01 BII/BSA we feel compoIIod&#13;
to .- lIlo III!edI 01 f......&#13;
• well ....... ill oar cornm ...&#13;
ally.·'&#13;
BI. Brothus/Big SISters of&#13;
G.. ter fIadDe, IDe. will be deaIiJlc&#13;
with deliDqllenl aDd p~&#13;
gIrlI _ specia1 Deeds. A prof ...&#13;
sIonal staIf Is uttltsed to idelltiIy&#13;
probIenIo. lei goals for IliC aDd Lit-&#13;
~ 8rulIler and Sister relal_ipo,&#13;
nnp"rn!lfll't cae pIms foe ac:I:Iie'vu3c _ goals. aDd to pnMcIe _&#13;
supervision for the Big and Little&#13;
Team.&#13;
"These girls wtD not be without a&#13;
motile&lt; in \be borne as our little&#13;
brothers are without a father," says&#13;
Greco. "Moot of tbese girls wtD&#13;
have a motIle&lt;, and some will have&#13;
both parents, but will still be able&#13;
to benefit !rom a one-to-&lt;&gt;ne volunteer&#13;
apelieoce:'&#13;
The female volun~ wtD pr0-&#13;
vide guicllIIn aDd role IIIll Hiinc&#13;
tIlruugb inIormaI actIvlties to beIp&#13;
JOUIIC girls deaJ with \be specia1&#13;
pn&gt;blems they have. sucb as: "".,.,..&#13;
live dependeDcy, 1ooeIiness,Iirulted&#13;
opportunities for penooaI growth&#13;
and future options, confusion ~&#13;
ganIing appropriate SCJ:Uai behavior&#13;
and identity; poor socialsti1Is aDd&#13;
low seIf-&lt;5teem.&#13;
A volunteer wtD spend S-6 bours&#13;
per week with a child on a consislenl&#13;
weetJy basls for a minimum of&#13;
one ,.,ar. Girls refened sbou1d be&#13;
between silt and seventeen j'eII$&#13;
old aDd need beIp with one of the&#13;
above listed problems.&#13;
"A girl is never too young to&#13;
start gelting belp," said Greco.&#13;
"Problem boys are identified early&#13;
because they act oul, but girls are&#13;
passed over because they are quiet.&#13;
U we get to these girls young&#13;
enougb we bope we can help to&#13;
avoid serious problems such as&#13;
depression, pregnancy and drug&#13;
abuse in the future."&#13;
Anyone desiring further informalion&#13;
on becoming a Big Brother or&#13;
Big Siste&lt; volunteer or on referring&#13;
a cbi1d to lbe program should contact&#13;
the BB/BSGR office at 637-&#13;
'1625. The program serves all of Racine&#13;
county.&#13;
Accon!ing to Greco, "It·s serious&#13;
~' but we have a lot of fun,&#13;
RANGEIt&#13;
YMCA students' home&#13;
building. There is no need to go out&#13;
of the building for anything," said&#13;
Scbmerting.&#13;
Student residents can feel sale in&#13;
the building. The only access to lbe&#13;
floors with rooms is by elevator and&#13;
only residents are given operating&#13;
keys. .&#13;
Like any donn. there is a need&#13;
for students to have sUpervision&#13;
help and sometimes just a friend'&#13;
This need has been successfuly m:&#13;
led by students known as RAs&#13;
(Resident Assistants), according to&#13;
Scbmerting.&#13;
An RA is chosen as is any new&#13;
employee. Interested reSidents&#13;
must apply and he interviewed and&#13;
screened hefore they are bired.&#13;
There were 18 applicants for lbe&#13;
eight positions this year.&#13;
The RAs for this year went to'&#13;
Camp Anokijig Aug. 27-28 for a&#13;
leadership workshop. At camp lbey&#13;
hiamed about discipline, emer·&#13;
gency care and other procedures.&#13;
Susy Siel, a Parkside communication&#13;
major, taught the HAs about&#13;
listening skills. Stress and Time&#13;
Management were discussed by&#13;
Wayne Behrens. An RA handbook&#13;
is in the works, authored by E1leo&#13;
Kaminski. a second-year RA. Scb·&#13;
merling and Joe Weirtz.&#13;
The RAs for this year are Ka·&#13;
minski, Cindy Miller. Julie Jacobs&#13;
Laura Smitb, Steve Peck. To';&#13;
Ulich. Jobn Weatherall and Bob&#13;
~ieger.&#13;
"We're reaDy lucky to have such&#13;
marvelous students as HAs. Their&#13;
job is to help students make the adjustment&#13;
to living in a dorm, and I&#13;
think they will do a great job," said&#13;
Scbmerling.&#13;
The Ranger Hall Council, made&#13;
up of student residents, also beIps&#13;
students adjust to dorm life.&#13;
For more information about lbe&#13;
YMCA housing, contact Scbmerl·&#13;
ing. Union 209, or call 553-2320.&#13;
J&#13;
Students at most universities are&#13;
gettinC settled in their donn .rooms&#13;
,&#13;
which means making lbClf own&#13;
beds "'nO used to a roommate&#13;
.ge....... htu&#13;
and getting up early enoucPark shower with hot ""ter. Most -&#13;
side students, on the olber band,&#13;
merely remain iit their homes all&#13;
year. . 't&#13;
But this commuter campus ISO.&#13;
really left out of the "donn expenenee&#13;
"&#13;
\beine's YMCA, 725 Lake Street,&#13;
has served as a pseudo-donnitory&#13;
for Parkside students for the past&#13;
three years. About 90 male and&#13;
female students OCCUpy lbe four&#13;
floors of the compl"" each year. All&#13;
rooms are singles (no roomatesl,&#13;
some have private baths, although&#13;
most are shared· Rent is $S05 a&#13;
semester plus uptional charges for&#13;
extras, like a small room refrigerator.&#13;
Sbirley Schmerling, campus&#13;
Housing eonrdinator, feels that lbe.&#13;
YMCA is mucb better than the&#13;
average donn.&#13;
"What I really like about lbe&#13;
YMCA is that the students bave privacy.&#13;
In dorms they don't," she&#13;
said.&#13;
The YMCA olles comforts not&#13;
usually found in college housing. A&#13;
study room, television room, gyms.&#13;
swimming pools, weight rooms and&#13;
a track can be used by students at&#13;
no eJ:lra cost. For an additinnal $30&#13;
a semester, residents can participate&#13;
in the Nautilus program.&#13;
The YMCA is located on lbe&#13;
shoreline and within walking distance&#13;
of the downtown stores.&#13;
There is a small restaurant in the&#13;
building and students may purchase&#13;
a meal ticket if they wish. Popcorn&#13;
poppers are alluwed in the rooms&#13;
for cooking purposes (no hot plates)&#13;
and a stove and oven are. available&#13;
for residents' use.&#13;
"It's just wonderful. Everything&#13;
a resident needs is right in lbe&#13;
UW System due s~lary boost&#13;
MADfSON-A speciaI study group The academic staff saIary comconcluded&#13;
Aug. 30 that a saIary mittee was appointed May 21 by&#13;
caleb up provision in the 1985-87 President O'Neil. The action folState&#13;
Budget is due the academic lowed a suggestion from the goverstaff&#13;
of the University of WISCOnsin nor's committee, and both groups&#13;
Sysla"n as well as the faculty. used the same peer group instituAnd&#13;
to make the academic staff tio'!" in making their saIary com- .; :::::e",,,= :.::::: :~ ~urvey sao beads of salaries competitive, lbe stUdy pansons.&#13;
~ "~ III v ~_ ~ ft~ each COUDty.The in- group said, the one-time bonst In its three-month o"-'""tion&#13;
• .,Y ...'II:' ~""'.-uDII: tervA.GS will uk qoestioDs on should be big ugb to lift ~.~- , COGDbeI II beUIc C&lt;lIIdDcted by lIlo subjects iDcI8dinc job salIsfactloa eno pay tbe academic staff committee&#13;
CeIter for Sarver and MartetiDg attitudes _ lIlo KeDoiI»-~ levels to lbe median of lbose found ~ pay levels in most cate-&#13;
_ (CSMR) at ParbIde aDd tiDe area, siIopping habits, enla"- provided at peer institutions. gunes m the UW System heIow&#13;
bepIl Monday Sept. tainment and recreationai activi- The recommendation paraIIels those at peer institutions. The comThe&#13;
"qaaIItj '" \jf:~;or "ClIIlIli- ties, lifesly\es, aDd _ 011 educa- one submitted by the Governor's mlttee also concluded that "recruit-&#13;
.... .....,.11 beUIc IlIllIJCIried by a tloa, social-' crime and areIIl Facu!ty O&lt;1lpensation study Com- ment aDd retention problems bave&#13;
__ '"orp_ ill fIadDe media. mittee established by Gov. Antbony Increased over lbe past several&#13;
IIId K..... .-... ;1" h .... dI- The teIepboae int.mews wtD be ~ ~. ~'::ystem President years and that the problems primaroct&#13;
I1sDduIc '" .....-.I _ncl COllducted over a period of three The Academic Stall Salary Study rily are due to low saIary increases .&#13;
dol1an from \be K_ Area _, including wMends, with Committee and low starting salaries."&#13;
Cbamber '" CoauI&gt;ette and IIlaI or- students caIIing between 9 a.m. and estimated .. wasmillion·informed that an The committee report said It "inpaisa_'s&#13;
K_ Relail "--" ~.~ ........... _ _ p.m. 9 B0U3eh01ds contacted wtD pose revenue .. wouId mbe needed ~ . emphasize the relation- ceneraI pur tended to "&#13;
Aroa Emnm&gt;ic Develop- ' ........ 1. scientific sampting of fund the increase. ship between academic staff em-&#13;
_t Olfict: ... well .. .nth fuDds penons in \be _ counties. There are about 7,100 academic ployment and the academic mission&#13;
""'" ParbIde. RoveIstad said \be survey is a staff employees in the UW .... _. and ~uality of the University SysThe&#13;
sarvey Is beUIc led by Part· _ to government aDd cornmu- It IS -"h, u,.~u tern, and added'&#13;
ide business professor James nity leaders in both coun"-. '11's a an. = prof .... onaIs. ----ISomediverse group of "Thus . teach, others ' compensation for faculty&#13;
!I&lt;M\slad. diroctor 01 the CSMR.1t ""1 10 see bow people in lbe COlld.uct. research. counsel students, and academic stall shouldcontin&#13;
II boped IIlat lIlo _ can be ~ towns, cities aDd uil1._ of Ke- •• _,_,~ to he considered· th ue&#13;
I*ted ysrly to pnMcIe a beDcI&gt;- nooba and Racine "';"''ll'e; feel on a ~~,er educational programs tary m e same bu'dgmart&#13;
for attitudes 01 _ts over -t _ ..... of '-'-," be said. or perform other !unctions inu.: \. !,rocesses and wilb the same&#13;
__ r- •__ ., .......... grally related to teaching and the o.lective of ensuring bigh quaIi&#13;
iiiiiiiiii~;;;;~::~~••';CHcIa;;;;aed;'O;D;p; ..;;e;I ~:i.c~a~.lion~.:of~an:insti:'tu:tion:of~higb~':er~~~"::'~tion for the citizens ~ .• . .... ~. ~~ offered these five&#13;
... ~~..&#13;
specific recommendations:&#13;
• A special one-.time provision&#13;
should he included in the 198H1&#13;
State Budget to make academic&#13;
staff salaries in the UW System&#13;
more competitive.&#13;
• Changes made in the process&#13;
used to develop the pay plan for&#13;
faculty aIso should he made for the&#13;
academic staff ..&#13;
• .The recommendations to increase&#13;
the Board of Regents' Delibility&#13;
in allocating budget resources&#13;
to address faculty saIary problems&#13;
should he extended to academic&#13;
staff.&#13;
• Academic staff saIary mcreases&#13;
sbould he funded from the same&#13;
proportion of the general purpose&#13;
revenue and fees as that which supports&#13;
the UW Systern operating&#13;
budget. .&#13;
• The UW Systern aclJninistration&#13;
should set ohjectives and guidelineS&#13;
for the development of a compensa··&#13;
tion program for academic staf/.&#13;
The 19-member Academic Staff&#13;
SaIary Study Committee ...... cbaired&#13;
by UW System Vice PresideDI&#13;
RAln Bornstein. Stuart L. Rubner.&#13;
director of community studenl&#13;
services at Parkside, served'as vicechairman.&#13;
'&#13;
Local attitudes&#13;
being studied&#13;
RANGER 7' Tbursday;Sept. 13, 1984&#13;
Lots of clubs and organizations need you&#13;
Bored? Want to meet new people&#13;
who share your interests and professional&#13;
goab, or do you just want'&#13;
to have fun? There are over 50 student&#13;
clubs and organized activities&#13;
representing university departments&#13;
and special inlerst areas on&#13;
campus and they are walling for&#13;
. you!&#13;
Parkside's second cwriculum of&#13;
student activities will help students&#13;
develop skiDs that will enhance&#13;
their education and possible future&#13;
job opportunities. Learning to plan&#13;
and Implement activities, interact&#13;
and relale to the university community&#13;
and possible on-campus em,&#13;
ployment are some of the advantages&#13;
of becoming active in an organization.&#13;
Clubs and organizations are open&#13;
to all Parkside students and do not&#13;
discriminate on the basis of race,&#13;
creed, color J sex, age or sexual&#13;
preference.&#13;
I!you are interested in joining a&#13;
group or need additional informalion,&#13;
contact the Student Activities&#13;
Office in Union 209 or call 553-2278.&#13;
Students wishing to form new or- '&#13;
ganizations and clubs should contact&#13;
the Student Activities Office&#13;
for current guidelines and assistance.&#13;
The following is a list of campus&#13;
clubs and activities current as of&#13;
July I. The deadline for clubs tu&#13;
register for this year Is Oct. 1,&#13;
therefore some of the clubs in this&#13;
listing may become defunct or new&#13;
clubs may be created. Many of the&#13;
Individual&#13;
differences&#13;
"Individual Differences: Exploring&#13;
the Psychological Compass" is&#13;
the name of a course to be offered&#13;
~ by University ExtensIon, Parkside,&#13;
on four consecutive Tuesdays from&#13;
7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in Molinaro Hall&#13;
beginning Oct. 16.&#13;
The course, which costs $25, is&#13;
designed to beIP participants increase&#13;
both seU-understanding and&#13;
underslanding of others. To register&#13;
call 553-2312, A 12&amp;-item questionnaire&#13;
must be completed by participants&#13;
in advance and returned to&#13;
Extension by Friday, Sept. 28.&#13;
Instructor will be Paul Erling&#13;
Tungseth, a psycbotherapist with&#13;
the Ligbtho~ Counseling Associates&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
Estate planning&#13;
A course that will explain the basics&#13;
of estate planning will be offered&#13;
by University ExtensionParkside,&#13;
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. on&#13;
five consecutive Wednesdays beginning&#13;
Oct. 3 in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Cost of the course, to be taught&#13;
by Gregory A. Ruidl, a Racine attorney&#13;
and tax specialist, is $15 for&#13;
individuals, $25 for families. To register&#13;
call 553-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Friday, SePt. 28.&#13;
The course will locus on 'the recenUy&#13;
enacted niarttal property la.w&#13;
and the favorable cbanges In&#13;
Wisconsin's inheritance and gift tax&#13;
laws. Participants willleam bow ~&#13;
avoid unnecessary probate costs m&#13;
planning their estates. ." ,&#13;
clubs that will be active this year&#13;
will be represented at the Student&#13;
Organizations Council Recruitment&#13;
Fair, Sept. 26 in the concourse.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
A1I-campus Events Committee&#13;
Allocations Committee&#13;
American Society for Personnel Administrators&#13;
Anthropology Club&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
Baseball Team&#13;
Basketball Teams '&#13;
Black History Month&#13;
Black Students Organization&#13;
Bowling Club&#13;
Budget and Review Committee&#13;
Chamber Singers&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
Chemistry Club&#13;
Chorale Singers&#13;
Cinco de Mayo&#13;
Communicators (Parkside Ass0ciation&#13;
of)&#13;
Computer Club/Mega Byte ,&#13;
Contemporary Entertainment Committee&#13;
Cross Country Running Teams&#13;
Dance Ensemble&#13;
Dart Team&#13;
Data Processing Management Ass0-&#13;
ciation&#13;
Drama Activities&#13;
Dr. Who Fiction Society'&#13;
Engineering Society&#13;
Geology Club&#13;
GoU&#13;
Hispsnic Club&#13;
Homecoming CoIn,mittee&#13;
Indoor Track Team&#13;
Industrial and Environmental Hygiene&#13;
Association&#13;
International Students Organization&#13;
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
Jazz EJisembles&#13;
Leagues (recreational)&#13;
Life Science Club&#13;
Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative&#13;
Music Activities&#13;
National Hispsnic Heritage Week&#13;
Nalional Unity Party&#13;
Nordic Ski Club&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
Outdoor Track Team&#13;
Packside Activities Board&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Peer Support Organization&#13;
Phi Gamma Nu&#13;
Philosophical Society&#13;
eo.tlued .. _ •&#13;
Get to the answersfasten&#13;
With theTI-55-ll.&#13;
What you need to tackle&#13;
the higher mathematics of a&#13;
science or engineering curriculum&#13;
are inore functions -&#13;
more functions than a simple&#13;
slide-rule calculator has.&#13;
Enter the TI-55-Il, with&#13;
112 powerful functions. You&#13;
can work faster and more&#13;
accurately with the TI-55-Il,&#13;
because ir's preprogrammed&#13;
to perform complex calcula- the TI-55;Il even simpler,&#13;
dons - like definite integrals, and shows you how to use all&#13;
linear regression and hyper- the power of the calculator.&#13;
bolics - at the touch of a Get to the answers faster.&#13;
button. And it can also be Let a TI-55-Il "'i~&#13;
programmed to do repetitive show you how. 'V&#13;
problems without re-entering T~vA ~&#13;
the entire formula. I~&#13;
Included is the Calculator INSTRUMENTS&#13;
Decision-Making Sourcebook. Creating useful products&#13;
It makes the process of using and services for you.&#13;
._., •• '\1, .-.... ('., ,,'&#13;
.RANGER&#13;
• 11lunday, Sept. 13, 1*&#13;
which is sometimes required of&#13;
limbs affected by broken bones that&#13;
fail to heal. Goodman said.&#13;
Since the process by which living&#13;
matter responds to the EMF pulsewaves&#13;
is not knoWD, Parbide scientists&#13;
are breaking them into their&#13;
component parts to study bow different&#13;
eIeclnJIDlI&amp;Il'c frequencies&#13;
affect a s\ime mold called Physanun&#13;
poIycepbalum.&#13;
F'indinlls from those aperiments&#13;
are being compared with the way&#13;
the EMF pulsewaves as a wbole affect&#13;
the slime mold. Goodman said.&#13;
In this manner. the Partside scienlists&#13;
hope to isolale those etee-&#13;
...-Iy '100.000 in IUDds support. (EMF) intenel with \iving organi.oC&#13;
faculty reearch aDd lDOft tban imls. Amoog the __ ts being '1 mJIJioD iD studeul _uclloa conducted is one in which the sciaDd&#13;
auucIal lid at PubIde ... enlists are attempIi.Dg to discoVe&lt;&#13;
acc&lt;pled Fr\dIJ, Sept. 7 b7 \be UW the m..... ·nisms by which EMF&#13;
System Ibrd ol fteBmts. pulsewaves stimulale \be heaIillll&#13;
TIle Roceeb accepted $45.001 process in cases where broken&#13;
!rom \be Fedon1 ~t ol boDes ha.., failed to restore tbemIIeIllh&#13;
Illd HlIIIIID Servica in oup- oeIves.&#13;
port ol (llIlUnu!~ reearch b7 • Goodman said \be medical ~&#13;
...... ol PubIde ICioDtists led b7 plicalloa of EMF puJoewaves as a&#13;
1&amp;1. _ prol_ Euc- Good- way to restore olbenrioe ~&#13;
_. _ of \be ~s _ -.., boDes is bocomin«&#13;
8"........ , ~ __ iDcreaSID«IY popuIar _ ortbo-&#13;
",. ..-rdl ~ -....... pedic_.&#13;
\be ways ID which _ Eibi!ly low ",. IIIC 01 EMF pulsewaves can&#13;
lreqllODCJ ~ f..1ds IftYODt \be need foe ampulslloa,&#13;
Students may gain&#13;
Regent seats&#13;
Burckel authors Wiscons.intext&#13;
as on the slate's government and&#13;
economy and is geared to fourth&#13;
grade pupils. It already has been&#13;
adopted for us in the Milwaukee&#13;
Puhlic School District beginning&#13;
this fall.&#13;
One of only two fourth·grade&#13;
level texts on Wisconsin history&#13;
available, it is published by Silver&#13;
Burdelle Co" a leading New Jersey&#13;
textbook publisher.&#13;
Parkside archivist and bistorian&#13;
Nicholas C. Burckel and his wile&#13;
Lenore, an economist and former&#13;
elemenlsry school teacher, and&#13;
UW.Eau Claire gengraphy depart·&#13;
ment chairman Ingolf Vogeler,&#13;
whose wile Sharon Knopp served as&#13;
curriculum and instrUction consult·&#13;
ant for the project.&#13;
The textbook focues on Wisconsin's&#13;
history and gengraphy as well&#13;
Th. last baltle between WISCOnsin&#13;
Indians and the U.S. Cavalry&#13;
... fought in 1832. when Black&#13;
Han led 1.000 Fo&gt;:.sauk Indians&#13;
into a tbree·monlb campaign&#13;
against American soliders along the&#13;
Mississippi River.&#13;
",. dillereuce between Wisconsin's&#13;
highest and lowest point is less&#13;
tban the height 01 the Soars Tower&#13;
in Chicago.&#13;
The Nasb Motors Co. (now&#13;
American Motors Corp.) in Ke-&#13;
_ aDd the J.I. Case Co. in Racine&#13;
both made important CODtribulions&#13;
to \be AllIed effort in WW fiNash&#13;
bui\t tanb and Case produced&#13;
parts for guns and bombs.&#13;
Information lite the above&#13;
abounds in "WISCOIlSin yesterday&#13;
and Today," a just.published&#13;
elementary school t.. lbook on'&#13;
WISCOIISin history aDd gengraphy.&#13;
The testbook was eo-wrillen by&#13;
_ \be __ /MadiIoD campooes.&#13;
ODe !rom \be other UW campooes&#13;
aDd ODe lO&lt; \be UW-Cesller&#13;
sdlools."&#13;
The lbree studellls would be&#13;
pIcbd b7 Gov. ADtboay Earl aDd&#13;
wwId baoe to be wufhmed b7 the&#13;
SOIIate Ilke ...,lIar Board IIlOIDben.&#13;
TIle 0Il1y ~uislles to&#13;
date are that \be _ ha.., to&#13;
be earoIled ill \be UW System oe Ceater ScboaIo. Olbe&lt; •.., __&#13;
will be added as tlte bID COOS&#13;
tIIroaIb tile IecIsIalIve .....-. TIle Board _ IIIOIIlbIy aDd&#13;
determIDes policy aDd rules on&#13;
IOfdoliC tile UW System, ........&#13;
to meet ..... aeedI, lOtting ad-&#13;
_ .e-danIs Illd poIides aDd&#13;
revlewile and ~ university&#13;
bucIcets·&#13;
..,... ~,..&#13;
WlacoaoIIl Slate S-lor J_&#13;
Ilandocf (R) is iIllI......... biD ill&#13;
\be_ ...... ol\beJ 11" ....&#13;
lbIt a1IowI IMw UaIgenIly 01&#13;
"...... ...... to be IIMIIlben&#13;
01 \be Boord ol ~ ..... Ilandocf _ to _&#13;
_ ill \be UW "...... lIIId ... _It __ ....... _-&#13;
_ tile Ibrd ol He-&#13;
....... TIle • ..... -&#13;
be .1i ,." Iar '" i rM,.&#13;
\be Ibrd to It .-II !rom \be ,,-1..&#13;
"TIle tIIne .... will be pIS. ee1"..7&#13;
...,_eltlle&#13;
UW sr-," 2 7 0... lID11I..&#13;
J 7 ... tile SOIIaIor. "W ... ftIftLocalattitudes--~&#13;
Continued from Page 6&#13;
Rovelstad. who joined Parkside&#13;
in 1982 as a lull professor, ..... a&#13;
professor and director of the department&#13;
of tourism and Iravet ad·&#13;
ministratioD in the graduate sclIool&#13;
of management at the New School&#13;
for Social Research.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside be&#13;
conducted • researeb. projeCt 'that&#13;
analyzed economic impact of the "I&#13;
Love New York" promotional cam·&#13;
paigJI. lie also served as a consultant&#13;
for the ~ew York City Office of&#13;
PIanDiDg and was project director&#13;
for a study of tourism manpower&#13;
needs in New York City.&#13;
Under Rove~d's guidance, the '&#13;
CSMR. estahlished this summer&#13;
bas •oondu~ed numerous research&#13;
proJects Including analysis of&#13;
~elhods used to measure economic&#13;
~pact of tourism on slsle and regIOnal&#13;
economies. the impact of&#13;
Lak~ Michigan salmon and trout&#13;
ang1ing on regional economies and&#13;
pereepti"!'" and usage of local financial&#13;
lDstitutions by regional&#13;
households.&#13;
C~rren~ly, CSMR is studying&#13;
tounsm ID a·19-county 'area of&#13;
soutbeastern Wisconsin for the&#13;
Sla~ Departm~t of DeveIopment&#13;
and IS fese:arehiDg possible cooperalive&#13;
tourism progrlllllS belweea&#13;
seven .Great Lakes slales foe the&#13;
Council of Great Lakes Govemon&#13;
ClientS of the CSMR are located ~&#13;
eal1y; regiOnally, nationally and internationally.&#13;
The CSMR brings together Part·&#13;
side's diverse laeulty eq&gt;erlise to&#13;
work on practical problems lor&#13;
business, government, education&#13;
andoon-profit organizations. I&#13;
CSMR is able to provide this&#13;
. broad base of expertise because of&#13;
Parkside's organizalional structure&#13;
wh!ch. encourages laeulty from dil:&#13;
ferent fields to work together on&#13;
. common researeh projects Ravelslad&#13;
said. "In addition ~ univer·&#13;
sity's commitment to ';"'nomic indus~ial.and&#13;
urban develop~t&#13;
provIdes the environment to encourage&#13;
such lacully activity."&#13;
For more information caD 553-&#13;
2105.. .&#13;
"--.. ----&#13;
SHARE-A-RIDE&#13;
INFORMATION Ie SIGN UP AT&#13;
UNION INFORMATION DESK&#13;
Campus clubs&#13;
Coallllaed _ ... 7&#13;
Physics Students Society&#13;
Pi Mu Epsilon .&#13;
Political Science Club&#13;
Pre-Law Society&#13;
Pre-Med C1uh&#13;
Psychology C1uh&#13;
RANGER&#13;
~er Hall Club&#13;
Sailing Club&#13;
Segregated· University F&#13;
lions Committee ee Alloca·&#13;
Shoaling Club&#13;
Soceer Team&#13;
Softball Club&#13;
Softball Team&#13;
Special Events Co .&#13;
StUdent Nurses at '=e-UWM&#13;
Student Organizations Council&#13;
Student Services Committee&#13;
Student Wisconsin Education Ass0-&#13;
ciation&#13;
Swim Club&#13;
Table Tennis C1uh&#13;
Tennis Team&#13;
Tournaments/Recreation&#13;
University Committees&#13;
Veterans Club&#13;
Volleyball Club&#13;
Volleyball Team&#13;
Wargamers .&#13;
Weighllilting Club'&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
WinIer Carnival Committee&#13;
Women's History Week&#13;
Wrestling Team&#13;
Young Democrats.,&#13;
" •• I ~ ,&#13;
7:45 a.m.-7:30 p.m. Monday-Thursday&#13;
7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Friday&#13;
9:00 a.m.-1 :00 p.m. Saturday&#13;
RANGER 9 11bursday, Sept. 13, 1984&#13;
Foreign Film Series&#13;
-Students urged 'to attend&#13;
j&#13;
by Jim Nelbaur&#13;
Feature EdItor&#13;
•&#13;
Many people wbo are serious&#13;
about film look to foreign movies&#13;
as a means of escaping Hollywood's&#13;
commercialism. A series of contemporary&#13;
foreign fibn classics is being&#13;
presented at Parkside this year,&#13;
featuring an excellent variety of&#13;
film styles from various countries,&#13;
directors and genre.&#13;
Faculty members Nonn Cloutier,&#13;
Don Cummings and Richard Rosenberg&#13;
made the title selections based&#13;
on a slil'Vey conducted among last&#13;
year's patrons.&#13;
"There are very few students&#13;
who participate In the series," said&#13;
Cloutier; "There are even those&#13;
who asked if the fOreign fibns are&#13;
in EngIisb or subtitled, worrying&#13;
that they may have to see a fibn in&#13;
a foreign language with no translation."&#13;
Despite a lack of student participation,&#13;
the series bas been an extremely&#13;
suecesslul event, due at&#13;
least in part to the low prices: $17&#13;
for the sixteen fibn series ($15 lor&#13;
Parlrside students)-quite a price in&#13;
comparison to the current commercial&#13;
movie admission. .&#13;
"Even if you miss a lot of the&#13;
screenings, it's still worth it," said&#13;
Cloutier.&#13;
Among the fibns to be shown are&#13;
Bergeman's operatic MAGIC&#13;
FLUTE, Oscar winner MEPHISTO,&#13;
Erice's haunting SPUUT OF THE&#13;
BEEHIVE, LE CAGE AUX FOIr&#13;
LES n, and the Japanese classic,&#13;
DERSU USALA, another Oscar&#13;
winner.&#13;
Englisb language films are&#13;
represented by England's BETRAY&#13;
AL, with Mel Gibson and&#13;
STEVIE, with Glenda Jackson. All&#13;
foreign fibns not in English are, of&#13;
course, subtitled.&#13;
"We try not to use dubbed&#13;
films," said Cloutier. "We were&#13;
sent one mistakenly once and I raised&#13;
bell with the distributor."&#13;
The reason for choosing subtitles&#13;
over dubbing is simply because a&#13;
fibn's sound is one of its important&#13;
parts. To overdub is to change a&#13;
major portion of a fibn, thus lowerIng&#13;
its quality. Often, dubbed fibns&#13;
Student recalls D.C..trip&#13;
by .11m Ne1baur . " .'&#13;
Feature EdItor&#13;
"&#13;
s.mune" vacations have" been·&#13;
fodder lor numerous insipid cOmpositions,&#13;
but bow Parkside student&#13;
Sue Gustin spent a portlonof ber&#13;
summer proved to be quite interesting.&#13;
Gustin experienced poitions&#13;
of life and political existence in our&#13;
nation's capitol, Washington DC,&#13;
during a FOreign Policy Seminar,&#13;
Aug. l2-2t. . .&#13;
"The program was really 10Qd/~&#13;
sJll,said. "I would recommend!t to .&#13;
anybody. The only problem Was .&#13;
coming back to Kenosha aft&lt;lward&#13;
~ realizing I'm ill 'nowbere land:'&#13;
Among the peopl~ she met were.&#13;
Aleunder Haig, Paul Warnke&#13;
(chief negotiator for the SALT n&#13;
talks), and former El Salvador Ambassador&#13;
Emesto Riv~allonte.&#13;
One of the issueS that Gustin became&#13;
more knowledgeable. about&#13;
was arms control.&#13;
"SUPPOSedly the United States&#13;
wants to put satellites into space&#13;
and the Russians don't. On the&#13;
otber band, tbe Russians don't&#13;
want to limit their arms and we do&#13;
haye it limited," she said.&#13;
"There's so much I have questions&#13;
about since I've been to Washington,&#13;
because one speaker would&#13;
say the Russians are ready to negotiate,&#13;
and it's the United States&#13;
that won't; and another speaker&#13;
would say that the United States&#13;
has an their cards on the table, and&#13;
it's the Russians that won't negotiate.&#13;
You don't know what to&#13;
think."&#13;
One of the Incidence that caused&#13;
a bit of furor during Gustin's trip&#13;
was Reagan's offhand wisecrack&#13;
about bombing. Russia which he&#13;
made during a micropbone check.&#13;
"Everybody on the seminar&#13;
couldn't believe the President of&#13;
. the United. States could say someRanier&#13;
Pboto ~ Dave McEvoy&#13;
Sue Gustin.&#13;
tbIng like that," she said, "especia1- .&#13;
ly with the press there."&#13;
One of the others attending the&#13;
seminar was with the CIA and&#13;
worked with nuclear weapons.&#13;
UAt one of our sessions we were&#13;
talking about nuclear arms control,&#13;
and the way we figured it would&#13;
prohably go is that since we don't&#13;
trust the Russians, and they don't&#13;
trust us, we don't see any opportunity&#13;
to cut hack on weapons. Even&#13;
if there is an agreement, there's&#13;
still that distrust. It's kind of like&#13;
the prisoner's dilemma."&#13;
Gustin remembers the seminar&#13;
as an extremely rewarding experience&#13;
that never managed to get&#13;
dull.&#13;
"If the speakers weren't exciting,"&#13;
she said, "the bus and taxi&#13;
rides certainly were!"&#13;
Gustin is a mark~ting major with&#13;
a minor in International Studies.&#13;
Altbougb sbe wouljl accept a&#13;
chance to experience a seminar&#13;
sucb as this again, she states that&#13;
she'd prefer it to be a bit more&#13;
.. .huslness-ilriented the next'lime .&#13;
Ranger pboto by Jay Crapser&#13;
Nann Cloutier&#13;
have one man doing all the male&#13;
parts and one female band1Ing all&#13;
the female roles. The sound effects&#13;
can go from natural to obtrusive,&#13;
and the music is usually poorly selected&#13;
in place of the fibn's original&#13;
score.&#13;
Ranger Record Review&#13;
Dio: The Last in Line&#13;
w,,: by Jim Nelbaur&#13;
Featore EdItor&#13;
The latest release from Englisb&#13;
metal veteran Ronnie James Din is&#13;
an average bard rock tour de force,&#13;
not unlike last year's "Holy Diver"&#13;
but a far cry from the frenzied excitement&#13;
of Dio's vocals on Black&#13;
Sabbath'. "Country Girl" and Rainbow's&#13;
"Man on Silver Mountain."&#13;
"The Last In Line" is a pretty&#13;
standard Dio thumping and screaming&#13;
with the two good cuts - "Mystery"&#13;
and the tiUe tune - getting&#13;
radio play, wbile most of the rest&#13;
("Evil Eyes," "Eat Your Heart&#13;
Out," etc.) are rather fonnulaic· in&#13;
the April Wme/Wbitesnake assembly-line&#13;
tradition.&#13;
The tiUe cut is typical for Dio in&#13;
that it deals with the usual demonic&#13;
possession/trip to Hell theme,&#13;
while "Mystery" is a mellow number&#13;
with a stronger accent on Dio's&#13;
work as a keyboardist.&#13;
Die's soaring vocals screech&#13;
above a bard driving backup sound&#13;
supplied by Vinny Appice on&#13;
drums, Jimmy Bain on bass, Vlv&#13;
Ranger Pboto by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Cambell on guitar and Claude Schnell&#13;
alternating with Din on keyboards.&#13;
All in all, uThe Last In Line" is&#13;
an average rock record; one which&#13;
is artistically insubstantial, but may&#13;
possess stronger appeailor fan's of&#13;
Din's style.&#13;
o CHARD&#13;
(OURTS&#13;
STUDENT SPECIALS&#13;
FROM 5120 PER MONTH&#13;
*&#13;
MODERN "LOFT" APARTMENTS&#13;
• Appliances • Heat &amp; Water&#13;
• Carpeting • Electricity&#13;
• Drapes • Parking&#13;
• Furniture • Laundry facilities&#13;
RESERVATIONS FOR FALL TERM&#13;
•• By contacting the manager, you&#13;
can actually be sure of meeting your&#13;
housing rieeds in advance of the fall&#13;
semester.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 1, 1984 THRU&#13;
MAY 31, 1985 '&#13;
RENTAL OFFICE HOURS&#13;
Dally 1 pm to 5 pm .&#13;
Sun. 1 pm to 4 pm&#13;
PHONE 553-9009&#13;
Professionally managed by&#13;
THE LANDLORD LTD.&#13;
"Based On Double Occupancy&#13;
., Subject to Availability&#13;
The Parkside FOreign Film Series&#13;
is one of the best buys and&#13;
most ~ve cultural events in&#13;
our area: It i.s strongly reconi·&#13;
mendedJor everyone who is ....&#13;
slightly serious about fibn or the&#13;
arts In general. -&#13;
.St. Luke's&#13;
Free films&#13;
In an attempt to introduce the&#13;
public to mental health services at&#13;
Racine's St: Luke's Memorial Hospital,&#13;
program administrator Ben&#13;
Farbman bas announced a fibn series&#13;
at the hospital.&#13;
The theme of these fibns is a&#13;
mental bealth issue of one sort or&#13;
another. The fibns will be open to&#13;
the public, with free admission. Seating&#13;
is limited, so reservations&#13;
should be made prior to each&#13;
• screening by calling 636-2100 weekdays&#13;
between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The fibns In the series include:&#13;
ONE FLEW OVER THE&#13;
CUCKOO'S NEST(Sept. 18.)&#13;
TENDER MERCIES(Oct. 16)&#13;
GOLDEN POND (Nov. 20)&#13;
KING OF HEARTStDec. 18)&#13;
TERMS OF ENDEARMENT&#13;
(Jan. 15)&#13;
AN UNMAlUIlED WOMAN&#13;
(March 19)&#13;
ORDINARY PEOPLE (Apr. 16)&#13;
The fibns will be shown In the&#13;
Horlick Auditorium on the fourth&#13;
floor of the bospital, 1300 S.&#13;
Wisconsin Avenue. Patrons are&#13;
asked to come in tbrougb the main&#13;
entrance on Wisconsin Avenue.&#13;
Tbere will be an optional discussion&#13;
alter each fibn led by a staff member&#13;
from the mental health services&#13;
d~ent. .. ' •&#13;
I' THnday, Sept. 13, 1!IIl4&#13;
1lAN(l~&#13;
by Paul Berg/"&#13;
Post Nasal Strip&#13;
~ j&#13;
ENGAGING&#13;
IN A UTTLE&#13;
HAVE yOU NOTICED&#13;
THAT YOu NEVE.R&#13;
SEEM 10, HEAR ABOU,&#13;
"MEN WITHOUT HAlS"&#13;
.ANY fl(()RE'?&#13;
.3JJC&#13;
The Mate Was A Mighty Sailin' Man&#13;
1 think there's still room for the The answer is rather elementary.&#13;
type of comedy 1do," Denver has incred!ble Iikeabiliq:&#13;
After playing Gilligan for two You want to like his character ...lo&#13;
seasons Denver appeared in a sue- belnend this bumbling oaf. Never&#13;
cession' of similar shows. having done anything tantamount&#13;
. . to a George Bernard Shaw or Wil.&#13;
THE GOOD GUYS WIth Her~ liam Shakespeare. Denver remains&#13;
Edelman was Gilligan m a diner, popular in the same vein at lh&#13;
Denver playing cab driver Rufus Three Stooges, Gene Autry. Th:&#13;
Butterworth. Monkees, Leave It To Beaver. aod&#13;
DUSTY'S TRAIL with Forrest Andy Griffith. He's not Chaplin&#13;
Tucker was Gilligan out west. . but he does have the sort of appeal&#13;
THE FAR OUT SPACE NUTS, a that attracts enough children (even&#13;
Krafft kiddie show with Chuck Mc- old children) to give reruns of his&#13;
Cann, was Gilligan in outer space. shows good daytime ratings,&#13;
In between series, Denver also And now?&#13;
did some big screen work. He "1 do a lot of dinner th Ire&#13;
laughs when reminded of such .which 1like a lot. And my wiI~&#13;
films as FOR THOSE WHO THINK 1 have a house in Hawaii that&#13;
YOUNG (1964) with James Darren, spend a great deal of time at" we&#13;
and DID YOU HEAR THE ONE .&#13;
ABOUT THE TRAVELING "When I'm in HoUywood I'D do&#13;
SALESLADY? (1968) with Phyllis the available shows like THE&#13;
Diller, dismissing them as "sum- LOVE BOAT, and eventuaUy I&#13;
mer releases," . would like to do another series. but&#13;
One may wonder how Denver I really got tired of being locked&#13;
manages to retain his appeal after into Los Angeles working in televihaving&#13;
done so many weak te1evi- sion for so many years. Right now&#13;
sion shows. I'm happy with what I'm doinf.,"&#13;
he said.· '.'&#13;
For aU its blatant siUiness, GIT.-&#13;
LlGAN'S ISLAND is not a criticaHy&#13;
good show at aU. however when&#13;
one looks at the current crop of tel·&#13;
evision programs, an ounce of GILLlGAN'S&#13;
ISLAND is worth a ton of&#13;
A-TEAM, THE DUKES OF HAZZARD&#13;
OR WEBSTER.&#13;
hy Jim NtlbIllr&#13;
F..... EdlIO&lt;&#13;
An allrmpt to aplaUl why one&#13;
likes Gu.uGAN'S ISLAND is tantamount&#13;
to ap1alnmg the virtues of&#13;
A1I tar Wresllinl. There is just&#13;
some unknown force Wltllln a perIOn',&#13;
I0Il1 that causes him to be&#13;
amused hy the aiUy occurances on&#13;
this de:oerted lsIand inhabited only&#13;
by _ ... stranded castaways; victuns&#13;
of a ship casualty.&#13;
Pertupo beneath my phony Intellectlllllily&#13;
there torts a mindless&#13;
JDOuth·breatbin8 lout with an aHiJ&gt;.&#13;
.ty to&lt; the Mlflbomoric. AUybe it's&#13;
the sentimentality of the !hiD&amp;;&#13;
ba""'l BlOwn up "'th Giligan dur-&#13;
... the program', IDltial telecasts&#13;
dunnc the mid silties. Why ebe _ I 1iU • _ whooe priDclpab&#13;
_ hnDc such frivolitiel as&#13;
-r, cIoIbIn&amp;, costumes, pbaao- II'"Jlb reconII, aDd lUI __ supply&#13;
01 Iiq_ on what .... to be •&#13;
·'tbree boar tour."&#13;
A ldepbone interview with Bob&#13;
Omver, slat of the series, shed new&#13;
.... t on the perennial rerun favorIte.&#13;
Denver had essayed the role of&#13;
Dobi.'s beatnik pal Maynard G.&#13;
Knbs on the OOBIE GILLIS series&#13;
from 1~1962, landing the Gilligan&#13;
role in 1964.&#13;
"I bad longed to do old-fashioned&#13;
slapstick," the 47 year old actor&#13;
said, "so when Sherwood SCwartz&#13;
(creetoe and producer) offered me&#13;
the part, Itook it."&#13;
Wh en Gilligan left the air in 1967&#13;
It 1ftIlt into syndication (in rerun&#13;
fonn) wIIere it has remained ever&#13;
since. Even today. over fifteen&#13;
yean after the show left the air,&#13;
GILlJGAN'S ISLAND is still bigb&#13;
in the aftemoon ratings. (Milwaukee's&#13;
Channel 24 states that their&#13;
Gilligan reruns are champions of&#13;
\he weetday 4:30 pm time slot).&#13;
DespIte its ......... GILlJGAN'S&#13;
ISLAND is considered hy many to&#13;
be the --.I leIevision show of aU&#13;
time. Denver doesn·t argue this&#13;
point. "I think there's still&#13;
"It's definitelY down there with&#13;
'em. he said, "Basically everything room for the type of&#13;
the critics say about it is true," comedy I do."&#13;
"But along with programs that _Bob Denver. have tDOI'e substance and meaning, ....;;;..;..;.. _&#13;
SPECIAl.&#13;
FIESTA LUNCHEON&#13;
featunng&#13;
FOODS FROM SOUTH OF OUR BORDER&#13;
THIS FRI., SEPT. 14&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
•&#13;
Classifi,eds&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
Lost and Found&#13;
LOST!! MY weddiDc haDeI. Sept. f. Gold .Ub -"""".-.&#13;
......... IuD of 1eanUDg, UId ll'OWiDIlrith&#13;
you. Your LOVE-A..[pI'.&#13;
MEET mE ......... of the teadliDg.-&#13;
sioD. Joirl SWEA.&#13;
KEN: rrs great to 6nalIy be "home." I love&#13;
you! J"tD.&#13;
~ UNn'E: The kettle's GO to boil. Let&#13;
It DOt be us for dinner!&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
WANTED: SWEA members Sept 19 at 1&#13;
p.m. in MolD DW. PIIOI'OGRAPBY AND&#13;
-. part lime. _ houn.'::;:ieuce&#13;
_ ........... Portrait ....&#13;
3030, ast for Kim.&#13;
Student seats&#13;
The foUowing are the vacant student&#13;
seats on facultY committees,&#13;
Any stud,ent interested in filling a&#13;
vacancy IS encouraged to visit the&#13;
PSGA office, WLLC D139A or to&#13;
call 553-2036. This is an ""cellent&#13;
opportunity for students to participate&#13;
in the second cUcriculum at&#13;
Partside:&#13;
• Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review&#13;
• Academic Actions&#13;
• Campus Planning&#13;
• CoUegiate SiiUs Subcommittee&#13;
• Graduate I'rogramnw,g&#13;
• Library ILearning Center&#13;
• Non-instructional Affirmative&#13;
Action&#13;
• Registration Activities. " ,:&#13;
PAB film&#13;
Zoot Suit&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature EdlIO&lt;&#13;
This week's PAB film is ZOOT&#13;
SUIT, a dramatic musical starring&#13;
Edward James Obnos. and directed&#13;
hy Luis Valdez.&#13;
ZOOT SUIT is based on a Los&#13;
Angeles Slage hit that failed on&#13;
BroadWay. It tens the story 01 a&#13;
conflict between whites and chica·&#13;
nos in 194O's Los Angeles.&#13;
ZOOT SUIT has a stagebound&#13;
look that is very out of place on a&#13;
movie screen. However, the dazzling,&#13;
high energy dance numberS&#13;
help the film overcome its stagey&#13;
quality. .&#13;
If you're getting a bit tired of&#13;
average movie fare and you're looking&#13;
for something a bit different.&#13;
see "ZOOT SUIT. " , " ,&#13;
11 Thursday, Sept. 13, 1984&#13;
A pause Crime info&#13;
in the&#13;
disaster&#13;
by Rick Loeb&lt;&#13;
Asst. Feature EdItor .&#13;
This semester, as always, all of&#13;
us are going for the best grades we&#13;
can get, but studying all the time&#13;
cao get a bit boring. We are all entitled&#13;
to a little fun. So, to liven up&#13;
your life, here are some little diversions&#13;
guaranteed to stave off boredom.&#13;
Go to a pet store aod buy the nicest&#13;
barnster you can lind. Then, go&#13;
to your neigbborbood drugstore aod&#13;
buy a can of sbaving cream. The&#13;
next day, come to school with the&#13;
bamster aod the sbaving cream&#13;
con.cealed on your person. Go to&#13;
the Molinaro Concourse at about·&#13;
10:00, or aoy other time of peak&#13;
congestion, take the hamster in one&#13;
baud aod spray sbaving cream on&#13;
aod around the hamster's mouth.&#13;
Quickly put the hamster 0" the&#13;
floor, let it go, aod holler, "Rabid&#13;
woodcbuck!" as loud as you can.&#13;
Then stand back aod watch the fun.&#13;
The next time you're in the hookstore&#13;
aod it's quite busy, buy sometbing&#13;
small, like a candy bar, aod&#13;
pay for it with a five doUar bill.&#13;
After you have received your&#13;
change aod the salesperson has&#13;
closed the cash drawer, step a few&#13;
feet away from the counter, 1001&lt;&#13;
down at your cbaoge aod yell,' "I&#13;
gave you a fifty! You shortcbaoged&#13;
me forty-five dollars!" as loud as&#13;
you can. Make a big fuss aod demaod&#13;
to see the maoager. When&#13;
the maoager arrives, let everyone&#13;
in on your little joke. Everyone will&#13;
share in your Iaogbter, especially&#13;
the maoager aod the salesperson.&#13;
During linals week, go into tbe library&#13;
with a portable stereo. When&#13;
you get to 30 area wbere maoy&#13;
people are studying, turn the stereo&#13;
on at maximum volume. Then nm&#13;
around yelling aod screaming as&#13;
loud as you can. Also go around&#13;
knocking books off shelves. When&#13;
security arrives, tell them someone&#13;
told you tbst it was all rigbt to do&#13;
this stuff during linals week, because&#13;
at tbst point in the semester,&#13;
everybody knows everytbing about&#13;
their classes aod is just socializing&#13;
in the library. When the security&#13;
people tell you tbst someone was&#13;
playing a trick on you, apologize&#13;
nicely. Security will happily let you&#13;
go aod you can have a good Iaogb&#13;
as you leave.&#13;
These are just a few things tbst&#13;
you can do to escape boredom. 0thers&#13;
include: setting the emergency&#13;
stop on elevators aod then leaving,&#13;
knocking on classroom doors during&#13;
lectures aod running away, and trying&#13;
to see how maoy paper clips&#13;
you can put in the chancellor's&#13;
beard before he notices. Just&#13;
remember, you're not only bere to&#13;
learn, you're also bere to have fun.&#13;
Lots of fun.&#13;
A look' at entertainment news shows&#13;
by Jim Nelbaur&#13;
Feature EdItor&#13;
In Hollywood's heyday of the&#13;
thirties aod forties, people brougbt&#13;
movie lan magazines to lind out&#13;
such interesting trivial tidbits as&#13;
Clark Gable's favorite color aod&#13;
Spencer Tracy's choice for toothpaste.&#13;
Today, magazines like&#13;
PEOPLE aod US are our major&#13;
source for what's happening with&#13;
people in the limelight, showbiz&#13;
lind otherwise.&#13;
All in all, these magazines concentrate&#13;
more strongly on mindless&#13;
drek aod sidestep the really substantial&#13;
aoalysis tbat the arts deserve,&#13;
the type of coverage given by&#13;
sucb "respectable" publications as&#13;
FILM COMMENT aod VARIETY&#13;
(tlje Iatler being a bit more statistical.&#13;
A program tbat debuted on television&#13;
five years ago, ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
TONIGHT, bas attempted&#13;
to combine t'ie journalistic&#13;
approach of VARlETY, the mdepth&#13;
appreciative approacb of&#13;
FILM COMMENT aod the insipid&#13;
fluff of PEOPLE or US. Rather&#13;
thao blend, these elements often&#13;
clash.&#13;
On the positive side, we bave television&#13;
joumalist Scott Osbourne&#13;
doing investigative reports on such&#13;
matters as the controversy surrounding&#13;
John Belusbi's death aod&#13;
the accusations made by various&#13;
Animal Welfare orgaoizations regarding&#13;
cruelty to animals on movie&#13;
sets. . .&#13;
Also we have Leonard Maltin, a&#13;
!ibn critic wbose written credentials&#13;
include' dozens of excellent&#13;
books on the cinema aod a historieal&#13;
knowledge of motion pictures&#13;
tbst serves him well in his critiques&#13;
of current movies.&#13;
Maltin told me recently, "It's&#13;
hard to retain some integrity and&#13;
purvey some genuine information&#13;
on the tube, but it's a challenge&#13;
that I'm enjoying."&#13;
Maltin does accurate reviews as&#13;
well as some important feature stories&#13;
on various film genre and other&#13;
matters of historical interest, something&#13;
most reviewerS shy away&#13;
from.&#13;
"Maoy reviewers are journalists&#13;
who happened to get a job as !ibn&#13;
critics. Not all of them are in it beFaShion&#13;
Baubles big in college&#13;
Faded, wrinkled jeans and informal&#13;
T-shirts may nol have faded&#13;
from the college fasbion scene, but&#13;
today's college crowd has 30 eye&#13;
for elegaoce which shows in their&#13;
jewelry accessories, the Jewelry industry&#13;
Council reports.&#13;
There will be times for the dres-:&#13;
sy suits aod with it, the need for tie&#13;
pins, cuff links aod dressy watches -&#13;
or even a .gold and diamond ring ..&#13;
Chances are tbst students in the&#13;
height of fasbion will sport not one&#13;
but two watches in their collections.&#13;
Watches for sports aod class&#13;
appear in two-tone metal aod slainless&#13;
steel bands, For special oecaSions,&#13;
however, the new fall&#13;
watches appear with black dials&#13;
and bands, with the watchband&#13;
liiIks intersticed with slim gold&#13;
bars.&#13;
The aoalog is by far the must&#13;
popular in dressy quartz watches.&#13;
In addition to a timepiece for his&#13;
or her wrist, a compact travel&#13;
alarm clock will keep the student&#13;
body on schedule for classes.&#13;
Desk sets, and pocket pen aod&#13;
pencil sets, are part of the back-toschool&#13;
needs of serious scholars -,&#13;
Small diamonds appear in tie pins&#13;
aod rings, wbere the diamonds are&#13;
olten used in a pave effect, says the&#13;
council.&#13;
Women students will be taking&#13;
along their jewetry wardrobe to&#13;
switch daytime costumes to. evening&#13;
elegaoce with the aid of drop&#13;
earrings aod a mixture of pearls,&#13;
beads and stones to accent fall's&#13;
colorful new 'apparel: '&#13;
cause they love movies, or bave&#13;
more tban basic knowledge of&#13;
film," said Maltin.&#13;
Judging by the fact tbst Roger&#13;
Ebert recently referred to the great&#13;
director Ernst Lubitsch by calling&#13;
him "Ernest," I'd say Maltin was&#13;
rigbt.&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT's&#13;
flaws lie in the appel)[-&#13;
aoce and delivery of its co-hosli.&#13;
First we bave Ron Hendren. a&#13;
wholesome, baby-faced chap wbo&#13;
has the same bubbly effervescence&#13;
whether he's reporting on a movie&#13;
star's death or a place wbere the&#13;
stars' dogs go to be groomed. Next&#13;
we have Mary Hart, another "geewbiz'golly-swell"&#13;
sort wbo rarely&#13;
changes mood in facial expression&#13;
or tone of voice.&#13;
But if ENTERTAINMENT T0-&#13;
NIGHT is so-so, the local TAKE&#13;
TWO is positively in~pt. Produced&#13;
by Carmichael Communications out&#13;
of Kenosba (they say Chicago on&#13;
the show, but this is not so), lbe&#13;
same outfit tbst distributes the free&#13;
TV guide known as HAPPENINGS&#13;
MAGAZINE,TAKE TWOis a bombastic&#13;
farce attempting to cut in on&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT's&#13;
territory as far as !ibn is concerned.&#13;
Host Dave McGrath is a very&#13;
still, lifeless sort who speaks in 30&#13;
annoying monotone. His blandoess&#13;
is so outstaildilig tbst working as a&#13;
OJ on 30 easy listening radio station&#13;
is a career imperative. He&#13;
makes several errors in reviewing&#13;
his films (like stating John Belusbi&#13;
appeared with Ackroyd in GHOSTBUSTERS).&#13;
He's also the editor of&#13;
HAPPENINGS (be recenUy referred&#13;
to video failure Alan Tbicke&#13;
as "multitalented"!)&#13;
The show's resident historiao is&#13;
Dale Kuntz, one of those guys wbo&#13;
rates a film on the strength of&#13;
"Gee, isn't Tyrone Power haodsome"&#13;
or "My, aren't Judy Garland's&#13;
costumes lovely!" It's aoybody's&#13;
wager that the guy's favorite&#13;
film is GONE WITH THE WIND.&#13;
His breathtakingly fascinating feature&#13;
stories have included a piece&#13;
on "Great Movie Logos."&#13;
TAKE TwO does get some celebrity&#13;
interviews, but such inane&#13;
questions are asked. Roger Moore&#13;
was asked, "How did you meet&#13;
your wife?" Hodney Dangerfield&#13;
was asked, HWhat's your favorite&#13;
movie?"&#13;
How did TAKE TWO get its&#13;
name? One insider believes tbst the&#13;
name is representative of the num-·&#13;
ber of stations airing the program.&#13;
Perhaps there never will be an&#13;
entertainment news sbow tbsl caters&#13;
to those of us wbo desire a&#13;
more serious, intelligent sbowcase&#13;
when presenting various events pertaining&#13;
to tbe arts.&#13;
For now, ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
TONIGHT will bave to suffice.&#13;
a-BALL&#13;
LEAGUE&#13;
WHERE: Union .Ree Center - Length: Weeks&#13;
WHEN: Mon., 4 p.m.-5:30 p.m. Cost: $2/person/week&#13;
BEGIN: Mon. Sept. 24 (includes trophy fee)&#13;
SIGN UP AT UNION REC CENTER OR CALL 553-2695&#13;
FOR MORE INFO, ENTRY LIMITED TO 16 PLAYERS&#13;
The Kenosha Area Chamber of&#13;
Commerce has issued an invitation&#13;
to local organizations, charter&#13;
members aod the public to help finance&#13;
Operation Q.T", a crime&#13;
prevention program wbich offers&#13;
rewards for information leading to&#13;
the arrest of criminals.&#13;
The program, in cooperation&#13;
with thO' Kenosba Police Department&#13;
and lbe Kenosba Counly&#13;
Sheriff's Department, has resulted&#13;
'in the arrest of several people who&#13;
have committed crimes in the area,&#13;
said the chamber of commerce.&#13;
For further information, call the&#13;
Chamber at 65(..2165. "....-.....---... ~~ .-J! ..-::---./'r...t.&#13;
L/ \f .-1:1&#13;
Vr (l}lbr&#13;
l!owr.1 l!o~"pp.&#13;
~&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:11I am - 4:11I pm&#13;
• Jube Jells&#13;
• licorice Bully&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Milk Carmels&#13;
• Orange Slices&#13;
• Peanut Butter Chip&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
• Pep perm Int Kisses&#13;
• Rootbeer Barrels&#13;
• Sour Balls&#13;
• Spearment Leaves&#13;
• Starllte Mints&#13;
• Carmel Targets&#13;
• Cinnamon Discs&#13;
• Candy Pops&#13;
• Corn Nuts&#13;
• Assorted Perky&#13;
• Assorted Royal&#13;
• Assorted Toffee&#13;
• Bridge Mix&#13;
• Burndt Peanuts&#13;
• Butterscotch Oiscs&#13;
• Candy Coffee Discs&#13;
• Carmel Bully&#13;
• Chocolate Drops&#13;
• Chocolate Jots&#13;
• Chocolate Peanuts&#13;
• Chocolate Raisins&#13;
• Chocolate Stars&#13;
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• Carob Raisins&#13;
• Carob Peanuts&#13;
• Natural Pistachio&#13;
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• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Sunflower Seeds&#13;
• Student Food Mix&#13;
• Yogurt Malted Milk Ball&#13;
•. Yogurt Peanuts&#13;
• Yogurt Raisins&#13;
• Yogurt Sesame Brittle&#13;
• Smoked Almonds whole&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK Of SEPT. 17&#13;
CHOCOlATE&#13;
COVERED&#13;
PEANUTS&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
• ,i· \. .&#13;
1%&#13;
Wild Life&#13;
CIl~~)Wfllrr's nilS I&#13;
ItEA R A80IJr AtJOi\lER&#13;
WOMP,~?&#13;
Af'X&gt; SHE IJl)R~&#13;
/\T 1Hr flHDrOCl\Pl'&#13;
stbP.&#13;
Ranger film review: Another&#13;
.,. RId&lt; l.-...&#13;
Aat. F_ Edbar&#13;
Once Upocl • lime. iJl the mysti-&#13;
&lt;aI JJlO\'1e",m_, tbeft 1ived •&#13;
man ruomed JolIII Dora. JolIIIIibeI&#13;
10 wnu. IlId dIn!ct movies. John&#13;
bad a wile ruomed 80. 80 libel 10&#13;
lal:e her clothes aU. A lot.&#13;
One day. John IlId 80 bad an&#13;
Idea John would wrill!! IlId dIn!ct a&#13;
movie m _ 80 could IaI:e aU&#13;
her clothes. A lot. So John IlId 80&#13;
llOI oome lIlClDey from aome very&#13;
CUlhble people IlId made their&#13;
movie. Aft... lbey finished, lbey&#13;
sholred tbeir movie 10 a bunch of&#13;
men from a kiJJcdom called MGM/&#13;
UA who sald lbey would seod the&#13;
JDOVie aU IlOUDd the land. 'Ibese&#13;
IIlOIIlooted at the JDOVie IlId lbey&#13;
wee _ed. They sald the movie&#13;
would be 11lu.d X, _ WllS very,&#13;
very bad. The reason it would be&#13;
11lu.d X was that, iJl the JDOVie. 80&#13;
looIt off her clotbes. A lot. ADd so&#13;
did oome lIM!II. 10 fact, many times&#13;
80 IlId lbe m... bad tbeir clolbes&#13;
off at the same time. ADd lbey did&#13;
naughty lbinp. The men from the&#13;
CROSSWORD PUZZLER&#13;
,"CROSS&#13;
1 Bother&#13;
.. ex.sI&#13;
6 Vessels&#13;
11 Tough $.1\,9(-&#13;
"",Me metal&#13;
13 Ambassador&#13;
15 Negallve&#13;
1e Reol&#13;
Hl \le",.e&#13;
19 etHer ",etch&#13;
21 Bridge&#13;
22 ~tkhon:&#13;
abbr.&#13;
23 Stgoll'e5&#13;
2680w&#13;
29 Cloth stnp&#13;
31 TransactIOn&#13;
33 A,."er 111naly&#13;
34 Heblew&#13;
month&#13;
35 SUitable&#13;
38 Change&#13;
COlOr ot&#13;
39 Near&#13;
40 Negat1lo'e&#13;
prellx&#13;
4 18.bkal weed&#13;
43 Small valley&#13;
45l,mb&#13;
47 PtelU"e·&#13;
lall'ng&#13;
dtt\llCes&#13;
50 Rupees&#13;
abbr&#13;
52 Heap&#13;
53 Church&#13;
bench&#13;
56 Spoken&#13;
58 Small factory&#13;
60 As rat as&#13;
61 HOly&#13;
63 CIo'hesmaker&#13;
65 Apponloned&#13;
66 SpaOlsh&#13;
artICle&#13;
61 In addItion&#13;
OOWN&#13;
1 Skin aliment&#13;
2 Entrance&#13;
3 RiVer In&#13;
Siberia&#13;
.. Consecrated&#13;
5 Public&#13;
storehouse&#13;
6 Mtxed&#13;
7 Faeroe&#13;
Islands&#13;
whIrlwind&#13;
8 Matures&#13;
9 Claw&#13;
10 Mu$IC~as&#13;
wrltlen&#13;
12 Symbol for&#13;
alumlnum&#13;
14 Printer's&#13;
measure&#13;
17 Pulverized&#13;
rock&#13;
20 Drink slowfy&#13;
24 Tidy&#13;
25 Declare&#13;
27 Semi-precious&#13;
stone&#13;
28 laVIsh fondness&#13;
on&#13;
29 Caudal&#13;
appendage&#13;
30 Competent&#13;
32 Mother of&#13;
Castor and&#13;
PcHlux&#13;
36 Moccasin&#13;
37 Snared&#13;
42 Man's name&#13;
44 Snake&#13;
46 Solemn&#13;
48 Raise the&#13;
spirit 01&#13;
49 Pertaining to&#13;
lhe kidneys&#13;
51 Narrow&#13;
openlOg&#13;
54 Short jacket&#13;
55 Promise&#13;
56 Hypothetical&#13;
force&#13;
57 Edge&#13;
59 Note of scale&#13;
62 Compass&#13;
point&#13;
64 Note of scale&#13;
19&amp;4lJnlled F_tute SyndICate. Inc:.&#13;
Puzzler answers Page 15&#13;
kingdom of MGM/UA said they&#13;
would not seod lbe movie all over&#13;
the land unless 80 IlId the men&#13;
kept tbeir clothes on more. John&#13;
said he wouldn't change anything.&#13;
because be knew. deep in his heart.&#13;
that people wouldn't want 10 ...&#13;
the JDOVie unJess 80 looIt off her&#13;
clothes. A lot.&#13;
So John said nasty lbinp 10 lbe&#13;
m... from lbe kingdom of MGM/&#13;
UA IlId went 10 lbe Cannon Group&#13;
instead. The men from lbe Cannon&#13;
Group said lbey would seJ:.d lbe&#13;
movie all over lbe land. and lbey&#13;
wouIdn't ask John 10 change anytbp.&#13;
But, because many lbeaters&#13;
woiJIdo'l show a movie thai's rated&#13;
X, lbey would release it wilbout a&#13;
rating. They put a warning on the&#13;
movie that said nobody und er 17&#13;
could it. They should bave put&#13;
anolb warning on lbe movie that&#13;
said nobody over 17 sbouId ... it&#13;
eilb er, That would have been good.&#13;
Because John's and Bo's movie&#13;
stinks. A lot.&#13;
As you can probably tell from lbe&#13;
preceding fairy tale. I dido't like&#13;
BOLERO. ADd I'm going 10 tell&#13;
you why. Allow me 10 begin by giv_&#13;
ing you a brief plot synopsis.&#13;
10 BOLERO, 80 Derek plays a&#13;
virgin (bet you dido't know this&#13;
llick was science fiction. did ya?)&#13;
who graduates from college. To celebrate,&#13;
80 does what I'm sure all of&#13;
us are going 10 do when we graduau..&#13;
She runs around the college&#13;
grounds taking off all ber clotbes.&#13;
Thea she. ber friend Catalina IlId&#13;
her cllauffeur. Cotton, go 10 Morocco.&#13;
where 80's character (I nev ...&#13;
did catch lbe name) wants 10 lose&#13;
her virBinity with a I'eIl1 sheik. You&#13;
.... she loves Rudolph ValeDtino .&#13;
movies, ao naturally she bas the&#13;
hots fc!r sheiks. Anyway. she meets&#13;
thia sheik, who lal:es ber off 10 his&#13;
tent, pours milk IlId boDey all over&#13;
her body IlId licks it off. Due 10 circumstances&#13;
beyond b... control, she&#13;
doesn·t lose her virBinity. 10. of&#13;
course. it's off 10 Spain.&#13;
10 Spain she faUa iJl love wilb a&#13;
buJJfillhter who isn't popuIar because&#13;
be doesn't like 10 kill bulls.&#13;
Instead. be sticks the swonIs into a&#13;
pad strapped 10 lbe buD's back&#13;
thus pleasing the HIIDlIDe SocietY&#13;
10 no end. 80 and the buJlfipter&#13;
11IItT5 R16rIf· 7&#13;
HoU DID 'rbLl KtvlIw.&#13;
have some really good sex. Then&#13;
lbe hullfigbter gets gored by a hull&#13;
and becomes impotent. Meanwhile.&#13;
lbe sheik (remember him?) tries to&#13;
kidnap 80 and fly h... back to his&#13;
country. 80 wants none of this; so,&#13;
expert skydiv... lblit she is, she&#13;
bails out. When she gets back to the&#13;
love of h... life, she decides to try a&#13;
radical cure for his impotence. She&#13;
ball him teach h... 10 become a hullfighter.&#13;
This, of course, works. and&#13;
Bo and her guy have some more&#13;
great sex and lbey get married.&#13;
Okay. so the synopsis wasn't all&#13;
that short. I bave a couple of good&#13;
reasons why Ilold you the entire&#13;
plot. First, I wanted you to know&#13;
just bow dumh lbe plot is, and second,&#13;
now that you know how the&#13;
movie turns out. you woo't spend&#13;
$3.75 out of curiosity. Now. I know&#13;
that lbere are some of you out&#13;
there who might go to see it just to&#13;
see if it·s as bot as the ads make it&#13;
out 10 be. Don't bolb.... This movie&#13;
is about as «;rotic as eJectro.sJiock&#13;
therapy and aJmost as fun.&#13;
The dialogue in BOLERO is&#13;
among lbe worst Ibave ever beard&#13;
I'd quou, some, butI'm afraid thai&#13;
I'd make you sick. The acting is as&#13;
abysma) as the script. Do delivers&#13;
all her lines wilb a kind of wideeyed&#13;
look that, Iguess, is SlIpposed&#13;
10 convey. h... innocence. but only&#13;
succeeds 10 making her loot hraindamanged.&#13;
George Kennedy. as&#13;
Cotton. the cllauffeur. Iooks totany&#13;
embarrassed. All of.lbe supporting,&#13;
by John Kovalic&#13;
BO&#13;
DEREK&#13;
n.A~&#13;
~AnAd1!en/ure&#13;
in Ecstas»&#13;
cast speak in accents so thick thai&#13;
this is the first English language&#13;
movie I've ever seen that n'"&#13;
subtiUes.&#13;
In conclusion: BOLERO is an&#13;
inept, boring. tacky. tasteless, unerotic,&#13;
.silly and incredibly stnpid&#13;
film. Iwould call it a dog or a tur·&#13;
key. but I don·t want 10 lal:e !be&#13;
chance of offending our friends in&#13;
lbe animal kingdom. Let me put it&#13;
this way: H you set this movie out&#13;
on a hot day. even the flies&#13;
wouldo't louch it.&#13;
Conference&#13;
A one-day conference OD "Grado·&#13;
ate Education for Minority Students"&#13;
will be held on Oct. 12 at&#13;
the University of I\Iinois Chicago&#13;
Campus, sponsored by the Committee&#13;
for Institutional Cooperation.&#13;
The annual event is open 10 stlIdents,&#13;
faculty and staff, IlId .wiI\&#13;
feature Dr. Samuel lletances, pr0-&#13;
fessor of Sociology at Northwestern&#13;
University and cohost of WMAQ's&#13;
"Inside Out," as lbe keynote spook-&#13;
.... Dr. Betances, an ezperl on IllCO&#13;
and ethnic reJatiOllS. is a co-founder&#13;
of the Latino Institute of Chicago.&#13;
In addition to lbe conference.&#13;
there will be a workshop on lbe&#13;
Graduate Record Examination,&#13;
which is open to bolb counseJors&#13;
and students. For furth ... inf0rmation.&#13;
call the Committee lor Institutional&#13;
Coo~tjon.at (312) 88&amp;f63O.&#13;
13 Thursday, Sept. 13, 1984&#13;
Unusual Sport&#13;
Australian rules football&#13;
One of the most popular sports in&#13;
the world is also one you may never&#13;
bave heard of, unless you have&#13;
cahle T.V. Even then, you either&#13;
bave to stay up late or get up early&#13;
to see it. This unusual sport is characterized&#13;
by a hunch of guys in&#13;
shorts and muscle-type shirts runniug&#13;
around trying to get hold of an&#13;
oblong, blunt-ended ball. When&#13;
they finally 'do get a grtp on the&#13;
ball, they inunediately punch it or&#13;
kick it away.&#13;
This game is Australian Rules&#13;
Football. 'Footy,' as it is known to&#13;
the people "down under," contains&#13;
elements of rugby and. soccer to&#13;
create a totally unique sport.&#13;
It is only one of four divisions of&#13;
football in Australia. There are two&#13;
divisions of rugby and one of soeeer;&#13;
hut footy is by far the most exciting&#13;
and the most followed. Supporters&#13;
of these tearns often seem&#13;
fanatical in their following. Crowds&#13;
at these games commonly exceed&#13;
big part. Paulson added, "Being 60,000.&#13;
mentally tough is one of the biggest Australian Rules is not new; the&#13;
parts of the game." Paulson be- game originated in 1858. It was&#13;
, lieves that physically his team will used as a way for soccer players to&#13;
always be in the game, but the keep active in the winter. It is playmental&#13;
preparation must come cd primarily in the southern Ausfrom&#13;
within each player. "As far as tralian states of Victoria, South&#13;
intenectually playing the game, that Australia, West Australia and Tascan&#13;
be trained. Emotionally, which - mania. '&#13;
, is most important,has to come "&#13;
:~ within. That can't be train- WOmen'S Cross Country&#13;
Besides training bard and entering&#13;
the season,&#13;
pumy tournaments tbrcJuCbout&#13;
the volleyball team has&#13;
Freshmen dominate team&#13;
organized what Paulson calls&#13;
"media night." Media night, which&#13;
occured last saturoay. (Sept. 8) in&#13;
the Porbide gym, consists of food.&#13;
fun and volleyball. Paulson set up a&#13;
volleyball match between the Kenosha&#13;
media and the Racine media.&#13;
When the games between the&#13;
two teams were finished, the members&#13;
went upstairs to the conference&#13;
room where they enjoyed refreshments&#13;
as they watched the&#13;
women's volleyball team play Parkside&#13;
alumni.&#13;
Paulson organized "media night"&#13;
mainly to have some fun, but also&#13;
becatise he wanted to introduce the&#13;
media to good women's volleyball.&#13;
"It's nice to know them." be says.&#13;
"And if the Parkside team needs an&#13;
article: the media is happy to do&#13;
it...&#13;
Although the women's volleyball&#13;
team may be a liWe shorter than&#13;
previous teams, the hustle and defense&#13;
of this team will surely pro-&#13;
'vide a cballenge to all opponents.&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
who won all three matches against&#13;
carthage last Thursday, Sept. 6.&#13;
The results were: IS-3, 11&gt;-4and IS13.&#13;
Women's&#13;
Rang~;PhoiOby Dave MCEvoy&#13;
Alumni Volleyball Touruamenl&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Team looks good;&#13;
brings home' wins&#13;
by Kimberlle Kronich&#13;
The Parkside women's volleyball&#13;
team is off to a good start, baving&#13;
beaten their first opponent, carthage&#13;
College, last Thursday. TbIrd&#13;
year coach Terry Paulson seems to&#13;
bave a good idea of his team's&#13;
streogtbs and weaknesses. The tenmember&#13;
team consists of: Kim&#13;
Tesber, senior; Fran Busalacchi,&#13;
LorIe Herman, Janet Koenig and&#13;
Kim VanDeraa, juni~rs; Amy&#13;
Henderson, Karen Greene and&#13;
Sberi LechDer, sophomore; and&#13;
Laurie Jatusz and Sharon Abbott,&#13;
Iresbmen.&#13;
Paulson admits that the team&#13;
bad some weaknesses from the&#13;
start. For one, the team is only carr,ing&#13;
ten players, whi~ makes it&#13;
Io'gb at practice, especially when&#13;
the team waDts to scrimmage one&#13;
another.Secondly,the team is Dot a&#13;
tall blockingteam, with the average&#13;
beightabout 5'6".&#13;
Teammember Janet Koenig admits,&#13;
"This year we're a little bit&#13;
weakerthan other years because&#13;
we're shorter, hut we make up for&#13;
It on our defense and our quickness,"&#13;
Paulson agreed that the&#13;
strengthof the team is in its "opPOrtunity&#13;
to be a good, fast team." .&#13;
H the success of the women's&#13;
volleyballteam lies in its defensive&#13;
ability, Koenig certainly plays a&#13;
maJOrole. Paulson stated, "Janet&#13;
bustles.Kim Tesber is also doing'&#13;
g"'"! tbings on the court, both de-&#13;
~ensivelyaod offensively. In addion,&#13;
some of the players who sat&#13;
out all uf last year are starting to&#13;
~, in aod play some good,volleySince&#13;
volleyball is a game of&#13;
momentum,mental altitude plays a&#13;
Sports trivia quiz&#13;
Hey,trivis fans -did last week's&#13;
, qUestionthrow you for a loop?&#13;
Here'sthis' week's question and last&#13;
Week's answers:&#13;
In the 1971Super Bowl, this man&#13;
becaJIle~ .b~ 'in Bal\i!nOre wheq ,&#13;
be kicked the winDIng field i!oai in&#13;
the Colt's 16-13 victory over the&#13;
Dallas Cowboys. Yet, two years&#13;
later, he was out of pro football.&#13;
Who was this man?&#13;
Last week's answ:er: Jlack:Wilson;&#13;
56 home' runs, 190RBI's: - ...&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
by Carol KoneDdieil:&#13;
Sports EdItor&#13;
Accoring to Coach Mike DeWitt,&#13;
this year's women's cross country&#13;
team is young. The team, which has&#13;
been practicing before school, is&#13;
compbsed of six freshmen, one&#13;
sopbomore and one junior.&#13;
The members are: Carol Romano,&#13;
junior; sarah Hiell, sophomore;&#13;
and Michelle Marter, Julie&#13;
McReynolds. Jill Fobair, Colleen&#13;
Wisner, Julie Wuarow and Cathy&#13;
Polacheck, freshmen. .&#13;
The young team, however, looks&#13;
pretty good, according to DeWitt.&#13;
He feels the team has the poteotial&#13;
to fit right behind the top tearns -&#13;
UW-LaCrosse, UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Marquette. He's hoping the team&#13;
finishes in the top 15 out of about&#13;
The playing field is about the size&#13;
of a soccer field, with slight variations&#13;
betweeo stadiums. The dimensions&#13;
are 165to 215 yards loog,&#13;
130to 165yards wide.&#13;
The game is played in four sominute&#13;
quarters, or 'turns,' with a&#13;
haHtime in betweeo the second and&#13;
third quarters. There are 32 players&#13;
on the field at all times with substitutes&#13;
available. The object of the&#13;
game is to get the ball through goal&#13;
posts at the end of the field.&#13;
There are four posts: two tall&#13;
ones in the middle with a short one&#13;
on each side. A ball kicked or&#13;
punched through the tall posts is a&#13;
goal worth siz points and a ball that.&#13;
goes betweeo a tall and a short post&#13;
is a 'behind,: worth one point. The&#13;
team with the highest point total at&#13;
the end of two hours of play is the&#13;
winner. There is an eztremely high&#13;
potential for inflated scores. The&#13;
record is 287 points.&#13;
The game begins with the center&#13;
bounce, much like the jump ball in&#13;
basketball. The ball is tipped to a&#13;
teammate, who inunediately starts&#13;
down the field. The ball is advanced&#13;
by kicking, punching or running&#13;
with it. Tackllog is allowed, but&#13;
only by grabbing the opponent between&#13;
the shoulders and knees.&#13;
H a ball is loose on the field, a&#13;
mad scramble often results. The&#13;
roughness of the game seems un26&#13;
teams.&#13;
The team ran a scrimmage meet&#13;
at Stevens PoiDt. The meet was&#13;
close, with Parkside losiog by one&#13;
point. The score was 27-28.&#13;
The women will begin the season&#13;
this saturday at Michigan. They&#13;
will compete against Hillsdale College&#13;
(Michigan) and MaloDeCollege&#13;
(Canton, Ohio). "H we just go out&#13;
and hold our own, we should do&#13;
very good," said DeWitt.&#13;
Thougb the team looks promising,&#13;
DeWitt is also impressed with&#13;
the team's spirit. "The team is the&#13;
best and easiest to coach because&#13;
the altitudes are good about workouts.&#13;
H they run with that altitude&#13;
all year, we whould reach our goal.&#13;
H we don't, however, it still will be&#13;
a successful season," concluded DeWill.&#13;
TRY A&#13;
VIDEO GAME&#13;
in the&#13;
REC CENTER OR&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
We have a wide selection. featuring:&#13;
*&#13;
STAR WARS&#13;
*&#13;
TAPPER *&#13;
CRYSTAL CASTLES&#13;
*&#13;
TRACK &amp; FIELD *&#13;
MS PACMAN&#13;
*&#13;
TUfENKHAM *&#13;
MILLIPEDE&#13;
*&#13;
FAX&#13;
, &lt;; •*&#13;
Ji1.llCK WIDOW&#13;
controlled, but the referees keep a&#13;
close watch on the game. Penalties&#13;
can be called for excessive rough&#13;
play, interference and tackling&#13;
above the shoulders or below the&#13;
Imees. Penalties range from yardage&#13;
markoffs to free kicks.&#13;
H a kicked ball is caught, that is&#13;
a 'mark,' which entitles the catcher&#13;
to bave an uoobstructed kick toward&#13;
the goal. H he begins to run,&#13;
be is fair game; but if he elects to&#13;
kick the ball. no player can inter-&#13;
[ere with him. Marks can be made&#13;
up to 12 feet in the air.&#13;
Despite the fact that this game is&#13;
mown almost exclusively to Australians,&#13;
it draws as many people in&#13;
a year as pro football does in the&#13;
U.S. Also consider that out of a&#13;
population of ahout 13 million&#13;
people, there are over 500,000registered&#13;
fooly players. That's about&#13;
four percent of the total populalion.&#13;
For unequalled action and excitement,&#13;
Dothing beals Australian&#13;
Rules Foothall.&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
OUTDOOR&#13;
RENTAL CENTER&#13;
.2 MAN TENTS&#13;
.4 MAN TENTS&#13;
• SLEEPING BAGS&#13;
• GROUND PADS&#13;
• GAS HEATERS&#13;
• GAS LANTERNS&#13;
• COOK STOVES&#13;
• COOKING KITS&#13;
• ICE CHESTS&#13;
• WATER JUGS&#13;
• CANTEENS&#13;
• VITTLE KITS&#13;
• CAMP SHOVELS&#13;
• BELT AXES&#13;
• HUNTING KNIVES&#13;
• POCKET KNIVES&#13;
• COMPASSES&#13;
• FIRST AID KITS&#13;
• FLASHLIGHTS&#13;
• CAMP STOOLS&#13;
• FISHING RODS&#13;
• FISHING NETS&#13;
• FISH BASKETS&#13;
FALL RENTAL HOURS&#13;
Mon. 1 pm-s pm&#13;
Thur. 4 pm- 8 pm&#13;
Fri. 1 pm-6 pm&#13;
ADVANCE&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
NECESSARY&#13;
. CALL: 553.2408&#13;
. ,.... '&#13;
~~.- - ,&#13;
14 n.ndllJ, SepL 13, 1184&#13;
..&#13;
--&#13;
Vinegar great for skin&#13;
"'ConI Kr ,..&#13;
s,.toA&#13;
smooth comp\elloo is WIJOderful&#13;
to have (for both IIlOIl and&#13;
_&gt; but bani to obQIn. 0DIy a&#13;
lew pc.- aaturaIIJ dou *in,&#13;
and I'm DOt .... of them. 1.. acImlrtnc&#13;
a fri&lt;Dd'. comp\elloo ....&#13;
day and told her 1 wisbed my lace&#13;
_ed so uublemisbed.&#13;
In the Ioncth of a lecture me told&#13;
me what me did to oblaiD her lair&#13;
*in, and _ to tftp it.&#13;
Her dermatoJocist pre5Cibed a&#13;
daily "'IiJDe. First, wasil the lace&#13;
.nth a llOl&gt;&lt;leodonntJOaP, sucb as&#13;
Ivory. Alter wahiIlC tbe lace, rime&#13;
it well .nth warm to semi-bot&#13;
water&#13;
Alter riDsiDC the lace, fill ~&#13;
hatbroom sink .nth water as but as&#13;
the lace .no tolerate. Be careful&#13;
DOt to get itlDo bot, "'" could bum&#13;
the face. '!beD add about a quarter&#13;
to a ball of a cup of apple cider&#13;
YiDepr to tbe water.&#13;
With Ibis solution, rinse each&#13;
side of the lace ten limes on each&#13;
side, tbeu 20 limes on the entire&#13;
lace. To be effective, do Ibis everyday,&#13;
twice a day. In fact, the sikin&#13;
mau appear worse for a couple of&#13;
weeks, but acconIiDg to her doctor,&#13;
it', the skin gettiDg rid of its impurities.&#13;
In about a montb, the face&#13;
sbouId begin to clear up. Wbeo it&#13;
does, don't stop the "'IiJDe, but iJ&gt;-&#13;
stead continue. This sboukI become&#13;
as habitual as brushing your teetb.&#13;
I tried it for a couple of montbs&#13;
(yes I'm guilty 01 quitting too&#13;
soon), and lound that it was truly&#13;
effective to combatting my skiD&#13;
problems. Also, to pleasant surprise,&#13;
it oost less tbao most skiD&#13;
care produets. The apple cider vim&gt;-&#13;
gar eon be purchased at any groeery&#13;
store, aIoog with the soap.&#13;
I! you've given up all other&#13;
metbods, try Ibis and perhaps nol&#13;
overnight but in a month you'll&#13;
bave a new compiesion.&#13;
FALL BOWLING LEAGUES&#13;
IN THE&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
Mixed Couple - Every Other Fri. - Begin Sept. 28 - 7 p.m.-g:30 p.m. _&#13;
4 Person Teams - 7 Weeks - $2.50/Person&#13;
Mixed Couple - Sundays - Begin Sept. 30 - 7 p.m.-g:30 p.m. _&#13;
4 Person Teams - 8 Weeks - $2.50/Person&#13;
Parent-Child - Sat. - Begin Oct. 6 - 10 a:m.-12 p.m. _&#13;
4 Person Teams - 16 Weeks - $1.25/Person&#13;
"League Fee Includes Trophies &amp; End of Year Pizza Party&#13;
SIGN UP FOR LEAGUES AT THE REC CENTER OR&#13;
CALL 553-2695 FOR MORE INFORMATION&#13;
Men &amp; Women'.&#13;
IoWIIIl9 Club&#13;
&amp;V-.ltyT .....&#13;
IIMtlII9&#13;
• .• PX~~I~~~i~~~N:&#13;
f &gt; --.\...&#13;
'.,' .... BIG 6 CONFERENCE '0/0 I&#13;
•. " ST. LOUIS MATCH GAME '* t ..."MIDWEST INTERCOLLEGIATE&#13;
.. I "ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGE&#13;
~&#13;
., "UNIONS -INTERNATIONAL ) . 'L": . ( .~\i REGIONAL TOURNAMENTS&#13;
,..... ~.~ Ij " AREA INVITATIONAL&#13;
. ""-' TOURNAMENTS '1--......&#13;
Fri., Sept. 14, 1 p.m.&#13;
Aec Center&#13;
NO MINIMUM BOWLING&#13;
AVERAGE REOUIRED&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT MIKE MENZHUBER&#13;
IN THE REC CENTER OR CALL 553-2408&#13;
Fomen's Tennis&#13;
Team forced&#13;
by Robb Luebr&#13;
Partwde's· wamen's tennis ~&#13;
is now doWDto five members, WIth&#13;
the Joss of Carol swenson and June&#13;
H~~ 6 the Rangers bad a .&#13;
dual meet ;.g.inst the College of S~.&#13;
Francis at parkside. St. Fran.","&#13;
won every match to blank parkside&#13;
&amp;-0 Included were two forfeits bea';'"&#13;
of the sbortage 01 players ·for&#13;
Parbide. The oo1y match to ~o&#13;
three _ was a doubles match mvolYingAnn&#13;
Althaus and Kim Krani~&#13;
Sept. 8, the Rangers toot a&#13;
sbort bop over to eartbage .CoDege&#13;
for a quadraDgu1armeet WI!\,Carthage,&#13;
Rosary and Coneordia Co1-&#13;
to forfeit&#13;
leges. There was no ollieial linaI&#13;
score for the meet beeause the d0ubles&#13;
matches were aD.raioed&#13;
but best estimates put p"':;&#13;
fourth.&#13;
Four Parkside players woo 00le&#13;
match each. Jaclde Rillmer belt&#13;
Rosary 7-5, 6-4; Ann Althaus belt&#13;
Rosary 6-4, 6-0; Kim Kraoieh belt&#13;
Coooordia 6-4, 6-2; and Linda Ma.-&#13;
ters beat Rosary 6-2, 6-0. Ontt&#13;
again, there was a forfeit due 10 a&#13;
Iael&lt; of team members.&#13;
The next meet lor ParbieIe is&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 11 agaiDst UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
On Saturday, Sept. l5,lbe&#13;
Rangers .no travel to Osbkosb to&#13;
participate to a doubles tournament.&#13;
Results will be published&#13;
next week.&#13;
Men's Golf&#13;
Stephens predicts&#13;
great season&#13;
by Robb Luebr&#13;
This laD, the Parkside golf team&#13;
looks strong and experienced. Six&#13;
members of last year's team returned,&#13;
with Oo1yJobo Sclmelder&#13;
and Bob SobOllost to graduation.&#13;
"I'm looking lorward to a good&#13;
year," said Coach Steve Stephells.&#13;
"We have some good golfers returning,&#13;
and we have some good&#13;
young golferS, wbo so far haven't&#13;
been tested."&#13;
Rick Elsen, Stephens' top g&lt;l1fer&#13;
from last faD, earne back to lead&#13;
the Parkside team. Also returning&#13;
are senior Mike Ritaea; Scotf&#13;
Sehellfeffer, . Ken Maegard, Bill&#13;
Aiello and Don Messersmith. Maegan!&#13;
is perhaps the most improved&#13;
golfer this year, baYing the lowest&#13;
orore (75) at the team's qualifying&#13;
tournament last week.&#13;
A starting player of note is freshWed,&#13;
Sept, 12&#13;
man Kyle Corrigal. He was the&#13;
number one golfer lor Kenosha&#13;
Tremper last year anti is deserlbed&#13;
by Stephens as a "confident play.&#13;
er." Other new members include&#13;
Jim Zuzinee and Tim Sobol. Despite&#13;
the fact that he has siJ: veterans&#13;
this year, Stephens said. "We're&#13;
counting on our young players."&#13;
The Ranger's schedule Ibis fall is&#13;
similar to last year's to the respect&#13;
that all the matches but one are&#13;
large tournaments (eigbt to 16&#13;
teams). The single exception is a&#13;
dual meet with Marquette, which is&#13;
an annual riva1ly. LaSt year, Stephen's&#13;
team bad one first place and&#13;
two seoond place lioisbes, and was&#13;
in the top ball nearly aD the lim •.&#13;
With most of his players relutning,&#13;
and some good beginners, Stephens&#13;
is oonfident that his team&#13;
will have a great golf season.&#13;
at Whitewater Triangular&#13;
(UW-Qshkosh, UW·Whltewater) 7: 15 &amp; 8:30&#13;
Fri,-Sat,&#13;
-Sept. 14-15&#13;
Tues,-Sept. 18&#13;
Thurs,-Sept, 20&#13;
Fri.oSat ...&#13;
Sept. 21-22&#13;
Thurs,-Sept. 27&#13;
Fri.-Sal,_.&#13;
Sept. 28-21&#13;
Wed.-Ilct.3&#13;
Fri,-Sat.·&#13;
Ocl. 5-6&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee 5 p.m. &amp; 9 a.m,&#13;
Home vs. Marquette University 7 p.m.&#13;
Home vs. Elmhurst College 7' p.m.&#13;
at UW-LaCrosse&#13;
Tournament&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee&#13;
at Ferris State College&#13;
Tournament&#13;
at UW-Madison&#13;
Home-Ranger Invitational&#13;
UW-Parkside, Elmhurst,&#13;
NE Illinois, Ferris State&#13;
III. Benedictine ' 4 p.m. &amp; 9 a.m.&#13;
Home-vs. National College '&#13;
of Education 7 p.m.&#13;
at St. Ambrose Tournament&#13;
Home-Triangular .&#13;
Lewls vs Parkside&#13;
UW-Milwaukee vs. Lewis&#13;
UW·MlIwaukee vs. Park.ide&#13;
at University of III,-ehicago&#13;
at U. ,of Minn.-Duluth Tourney. "&#13;
. Tues.-Ilcl, 9&#13;
Fri.-Sal._&#13;
Ocl. 12-13&#13;
Wed.-Ilct, 17&#13;
Tues,-Ilct. 23&#13;
Fri.-Sat.-&#13;
Ocl, 28-27&#13;
4 p.m., 9:30 a.m.&#13;
7 p.m.&#13;
6 p.m. &amp; 9 a.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
TBA&#13;
5:341&#13;
8:38&#13;
7:38&#13;
7:38&#13;
TBA '. , ,,;,&#13;
" " '&#13;
15 lrhursday, Sept. 13, 1984&#13;
Last year's soeeer team 'kick II oul' iD previous ma~'&#13;
Soccer team conquered&#13;
Soceer team scrimmages to prepsre for, grueUug season.&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
the Union Building. Teams are required&#13;
10 provide a referee who&#13;
will be assigned to a game other&#13;
than their own.&#13;
There is no entry fee. Entries&#13;
must be turned in by 4:30 p.m. on&#13;
Sept. 18 at the Phy Ed offices on&#13;
the second floor. Entry forms DI!ly&#13;
be obtained from the Phy Ed build:&#13;
ing.&#13;
by Carol KorleDdick&#13;
Sports, Editor&#13;
The soccer team lost their first&#13;
game to Northern Dlinois last Wednesday.&#13;
SepL5, The Iinal score was&#13;
2-1. Parkside was winning 1~ in the&#13;
first baH, but at the 65th minute of&#13;
the game, Northern Dlinois scored&#13;
their first,point. One minute and 7&#13;
seconds later, Dlinois scored again,&#13;
making their Iinal score of two,&#13;
Coach Rick Kilps felt the team&#13;
'played very well. "The team improved&#13;
since the beginning of the&#13;
Flag football&#13;
The fall intramural flag football&#13;
league is beginning' After a successful&#13;
year in 1983, teams are looking&#13;
forward to the 1984 season.&#13;
Plan now to enter. '&#13;
A team is composed' of six individuals.&#13;
Games will be scheduled&#13;
for 3: 30, 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesdays and Thursdays beginning&#13;
Sept. 20, on the field adjacent to&#13;
Exercise over medicine&#13;
by Carol Kortendick patients with '1nIId' high blood&#13;
Sports Editor pressure should be on a regimen&#13;
that emphasizes a weight reducing&#13;
By now, most people realize the diet (if overweight), restricted salt&#13;
importance of incorporating eser- intake and exercise rather than&#13;
. cise into their' lives. According to medication," as stated in the Aurecent&#13;
studies, however, exercise gust issue of Glamour magazine:&#13;
may be a form of medication for in- According to Glamour, over thirdivlduals&#13;
with high blood pressure, ty-five million Americans suffer&#13;
Usually, high blood pressure pa- from high blood pressure, Of this&#13;
tients are treated with antihyper- number, about 70 per cent fall into&#13;
tensive drugs, such as diuretics, hut the 'mild cases.' Those who do not&#13;
, now some doctors are prescribing respond to a non-drug treatment,&#13;
exercise. however. are advised to return to a&#13;
"According to 'new guildelines drug treatment. Before embarking&#13;
from the Joint National C.ommittee on any form of exercise program,&#13;
on Detection, Evaluation and however, consult your physician&#13;
Treatment of ~ Blood Pressure, first.&#13;
Investment course&#13;
The, prosect of bankruptcy and -Raymond Burezyk, Attoney,&#13;
foreclosure can be a ,devasta!ing Trustee for Chapter 13 AlloealioDs.&#13;
and frightening experience. In' to- "Chapter 13: An Alternative to,&#13;
day's dilflcult economy, more and Bankruptcy."&#13;
more people are confronted with fi- -PaUlcla Ruffolo, Budgel Coon·&#13;
.::;+~+~nancial problems, But bankruptcy selor, FamIly Services of RaeiDe.&#13;
and foreclosure can be preveuted. "Budgeting Basics "&#13;
Join legal and financial experts , . " , ' ,&#13;
in exploring the prevention of bank- Heservations for this program&#13;
ruptcy and foreclosure on Wednes- are requested and can be madehy&#13;
day, Sept. 19 at the Golden Rondel- calling the Rondell.e at 631-21~&#13;
Ie Theater. The program begins at 7' Monday through Friday. There IS&#13;
p.m.' " no admission charge. The Golden&#13;
Featured speakers for the pro- Hondelle Theater is located on the&#13;
PEW gram are: ~rner .of 14th and Franklin Streets&#13;
-KIm Buras, ProgrIIIIl ~r, mHaeme.&#13;
T 0 Westside Home Buyer's CliDIe,MIl- This program is a cooperative ef·&#13;
,L 0 ,R "waukee "Deta";nD ForeclosUre Ac-&lt; fOrts.with, Family,SeMee of&gt;l\aeiIle&#13;
• 'N '0 'don:"- ...... '. ,-;-&lt;&gt;, " •••• ~ •• , and Project F.A,C.E.&#13;
Puzzler&#13;
answers&#13;
from&#13;
PageTz&#13;
season. Dlinois had eight of last&#13;
year's eleven starting players; we&#13;
only had three:' said Kilps,&#13;
Parkside's only point was made&#13;
in the first baH hy Wayne Aderna,&#13;
with an assist hy Scott Gerhartz. In&#13;
the second half, the team started to&#13;
slip. Andy Buchanan, a returning&#13;
player, sprained his ankle in a tackle.&#13;
The second baH also revealed nlinois'&#13;
conditioning advantage.&#13;
Kilps explained, "11Iinois began&#13;
practicing about len days before us,&#13;
and at the 65th minute the condi·&#13;
tioning showed."&#13;
Last Saturday, the soccer team&#13;
played against Parkside's alumni.&#13;
The team lost again, with a 4-2&#13;
score. "The game started in a&#13;
downpour and ended in one. No&#13;
one really wanted to be out there:'&#13;
Kilps said.&#13;
The soccer tearns' next games&#13;
will be Tuesday, Sept. 11 and Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 19. Tuesday's game&#13;
will be held in Deerfield at 3:30&#13;
p.m, Parkside will host Wednesday's&#13;
game, starting at 4 p.m,&#13;
NORTH&#13;
SHORE&#13;
SNJINGS&#13;
and the&#13;
smart&#13;
Student&#13;
LOANS&#13;
Get your s ut dent loan application at the college&#13;
.&#13;
d&#13;
. . t atl'on office or from North Shore Savings, amllllsr .&#13;
1601 Washington Avenue, Racme, or telephone 552-7124.&#13;
O u have the form, it's easy to get your financing.&#13;
nce yo f h ffi I I"&#13;
S· I complete your portion 0 teo icia app rcation&#13;
irnpry . . Th h I&#13;
and submit it to your school administrator, e sc 00.&#13;
in turn, will notify you of it's approval and return the&#13;
appplication to you.&#13;
Next, bring in or mail the application to the Uptown&#13;
Office of North-Shore Savings. We take it from there&#13;
and coordinate the details with Madison ';&#13;
You'll be notified when your check is ready. That's it!&#13;
Fast efficient service on a complicated matter.&#13;
No one does it better! .&#13;
II&#13;
e and zraduat tuden are invited 10&#13;
n to fllWl th r ed lion.&#13;
Let'. romilkr SOf1U' SlUMm Loon facts:&#13;
-'" have an open door lending policy .•.&#13;
money ,~ble 10 all dipble tudent .&#13;
-If .~ J ,there IS no need for co- igners,&#13;
-You have 10 2.500 a year ••.&#13;
even mon for cradua&lt;e students!&#13;
lO\\,GOn:R ML ;r-APPRO\'D)&#13;
Iy, there isn't a better deal anywhere.&#13;
-TIle r te start riih IS the rate you ta) with,&#13;
lhe tune to lock Into th auraeuve rate!&#13;
n'l an until 6 month&gt; .fter zraduation.&#13;
WHEN YOU'RE· READY FOR A STUDENT WAN,&#13;
MOVE FAST. THE SOONER YOU ACT THE&#13;
SOONER YOUR LOAN WILL BE APPROVED.&#13;
NORTH SHORE SAVINGS IS EXPECTING YOU.&#13;
DoI1't&#13;
mcdriculate&#13;
without one&#13;
\ h,on n ,I I oan 1h.-('.Hll1h:nl&#13;
'1&gt;(11 \\ ,I11111ion \"'I\II~ K.I 111". \\ I 51-ll}1 •&#13;
R.h,:illl.' Pholll.' o.n-I.2J7 • }\l.'Iw"ha Phulle 55Z-7124</text>
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              <text>&#13;
Thursday, &#13;
April &#13;
26, &#13;
1984 &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
Vol. &#13;
12, &#13;
No. &#13;
28 &#13;
—— &#13;
1 &#13;
... &#13;
. &#13;
•    • &#13;
' &#13;
. &#13;
J &#13;
Ki.SjiV &#13;
... &#13;
Easter &#13;
visitors &#13;
Photo &#13;
by &#13;
Dave &#13;
McEvoy &#13;
Easter &#13;
Bunnies &#13;
Harvy &#13;
and &#13;
Harriot &#13;
visited &#13;
the &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Child &#13;
Care &#13;
Center &#13;
last &#13;
week. &#13;
See &#13;
story &#13;
and &#13;
in­&#13;
terview &#13;
on &#13;
page &#13;
9. &#13;
Parkside &#13;
dins &#13;
Freshman &#13;
applications &#13;
soar &#13;
in &#13;
UW &#13;
System &#13;
by &#13;
Jo hn &#13;
Kovalic &#13;
Feature &#13;
Editor &#13;
UW-Whitewater &#13;
i s &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
stop &#13;
accepting &#13;
all &#13;
applications &#13;
from  pro­&#13;
spective &#13;
new &#13;
freshmen &#13;
after &#13;
July &#13;
1. &#13;
Administrative &#13;
sources &#13;
in &#13;
White­&#13;
water &#13;
were &#13;
quoted &#13;
as &#13;
saying &#13;
that &#13;
applications &#13;
have &#13;
risen &#13;
by &#13;
ove r &#13;
250 &#13;
as &#13;
of &#13;
April &#13;
1 &#13;
since &#13;
the &#13;
same &#13;
time &#13;
last &#13;
year. &#13;
This &#13;
represents &#13;
a &#13;
10 &#13;
percent &#13;
in­&#13;
crease &#13;
in &#13;
new &#13;
freshman &#13;
applica­&#13;
tions. &#13;
At &#13;
th e &#13;
same &#13;
time, &#13;
the &#13;
UW-Madi-&#13;
son &#13;
campus &#13;
is &#13;
expecting &#13;
a &#13;
new &#13;
high &#13;
in &#13;
its &#13;
admissions, &#13;
having &#13;
already &#13;
admitted &#13;
9,366 &#13;
new &#13;
freshmen &#13;
by &#13;
April &#13;
1. &#13;
This &#13;
is &#13;
already &#13;
7 &#13;
percent &#13;
higher &#13;
than &#13;
recorded &#13;
last &#13;
April. &#13;
Both &#13;
Madison &#13;
and &#13;
Whitewater &#13;
set &#13;
records &#13;
for &#13;
enrollment, &#13;
with &#13;
43,-&#13;
075 &#13;
and &#13;
10,493 &#13;
students &#13;
respectively &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
1983-84 &#13;
acad emic &#13;
year. &#13;
Ste­&#13;
vens &#13;
Point &#13;
and &#13;
other &#13;
UW &#13;
campuses &#13;
are &#13;
experiencing &#13;
similar  increases. &#13;
The &#13;
UW &#13;
System &#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
whole &#13;
is &#13;
al­&#13;
ready &#13;
up &#13;
1,000 &#13;
admissions &#13;
ov er &#13;
last &#13;
year, &#13;
according &#13;
to &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Assist­&#13;
ant &#13;
Chancellor &#13;
Carla &#13;
Stoffle. &#13;
Total &#13;
applications &#13;
to &#13;
Parkside &#13;
have &#13;
fallen &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
records &#13;
set &#13;
in &#13;
1983, &#13;
dropping &#13;
from &#13;
914 &#13;
applica­&#13;
tions &#13;
as &#13;
of &#13;
April &#13;
1 &#13;
last &#13;
year &#13;
to &#13;
844, &#13;
a &#13;
fall &#13;
of &#13;
over &#13;
7.5 &#13;
per cent. &#13;
Stoffle &#13;
blames &#13;
the &#13;
apparently &#13;
topsy-turvy &#13;
fortunes &#13;
of &#13;
Parkside &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
economy. &#13;
INSIDE &#13;
Manning &#13;
"walks" &#13;
to &#13;
Olympic &#13;
trials &#13;
Kennedy's &#13;
private &#13;
life &#13;
examined &#13;
Wind &#13;
Ensemble, &#13;
Chamber &#13;
Singers &#13;
present &#13;
concerts &#13;
PSGA &#13;
looks &#13;
for &#13;
more &#13;
Senators &#13;
Parkside &#13;
group &#13;
visits &#13;
Russia &#13;
"Last &#13;
year &#13;
the &#13;
economy &#13;
was &#13;
a &#13;
lot &#13;
worse," &#13;
she &#13;
said, &#13;
and &#13;
students &#13;
who &#13;
couldn't &#13;
afford &#13;
the &#13;
cost &#13;
of &#13;
living &#13;
(away &#13;
from &#13;
home) &#13;
chose &#13;
to &#13;
stay &#13;
at &#13;
home &#13;
and &#13;
commute &#13;
instead. &#13;
This &#13;
is &#13;
why &#13;
P arkside's &#13;
enrollment &#13;
jumped &#13;
up &#13;
between &#13;
1982 &#13;
and &#13;
1983 . &#13;
A &#13;
lo t &#13;
of &#13;
Southeastern &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
kids &#13;
were &#13;
coming &#13;
to &#13;
us." &#13;
Now &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
economy &#13;
has &#13;
im­&#13;
proved, &#13;
many &#13;
students &#13;
are &#13;
leaving &#13;
for &#13;
campuses &#13;
further &#13;
away &#13;
with &#13;
dormitory &#13;
facilities. &#13;
A &#13;
Whitewater &#13;
spokesman &#13;
was &#13;
reported &#13;
on &#13;
saying &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
on-campus &#13;
housing &#13;
situa­&#13;
tion &#13;
there &#13;
is &#13;
extremely &#13;
limited &#13;
and &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
university &#13;
would &#13;
be &#13;
un able &#13;
to &#13;
insure &#13;
satisfactory &#13;
class &#13;
selec­&#13;
tion. &#13;
Therefore &#13;
Whitewater &#13;
was &#13;
left &#13;
with &#13;
little &#13;
else &#13;
to &#13;
do &#13;
but &#13;
institute &#13;
the &#13;
July &#13;
1 &#13;
cut-off &#13;
date &#13;
for &#13;
freshman &#13;
applications. &#13;
"Last &#13;
year &#13;
we &#13;
added &#13;
classes &#13;
(when &#13;
faced &#13;
with &#13;
the &#13;
higher enroll­&#13;
ment)," &#13;
Stoffle &#13;
said. &#13;
"We &#13;
added &#13;
a &#13;
PUAB &#13;
few  and &#13;
filled &#13;
the &#13;
others &#13;
chock-&#13;
full." &#13;
"All &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
campuses &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
sys­&#13;
tem &#13;
have &#13;
basically &#13;
th e &#13;
same &#13;
policy &#13;
on &#13;
admittance," &#13;
said &#13;
Stoffle, &#13;
"but &#13;
Madison's &#13;
rejection &#13;
rate &#13;
is &#13;
higher &#13;
because, &#13;
for &#13;
one &#13;
thing, &#13;
they &#13;
receive &#13;
a &#13;
lot &#13;
more &#13;
out-of-state  applica­&#13;
tions.". &#13;
Madison's &#13;
Chancellor &#13;
Irving &#13;
Shain &#13;
set &#13;
up &#13;
a &#13;
committee &#13;
to &#13;
study &#13;
the &#13;
possibility &#13;
of &#13;
an &#13;
enrollment &#13;
limit &#13;
as &#13;
well &#13;
as &#13;
the &#13;
effect &#13;
a &#13;
tuition &#13;
increase &#13;
would &#13;
have &#13;
on &#13;
e nrollment. &#13;
"We've &#13;
never &#13;
limited &#13;
the &#13;
num­&#13;
ber &#13;
of &#13;
applications &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside," &#13;
said &#13;
Stoffle. &#13;
"In &#13;
fact, &#13;
applications &#13;
and &#13;
admittances &#13;
are &#13;
still &#13;
up &#13;
from &#13;
two &#13;
years &#13;
ago." &#13;
Applications &#13;
increased &#13;
by &#13;
about &#13;
3.5 &#13;
per cent &#13;
over &#13;
this &#13;
period, &#13;
rising &#13;
from &#13;
816 &#13;
to &#13;
844. &#13;
"I &#13;
think &#13;
this &#13;
makes &#13;
a &#13;
more &#13;
ap­&#13;
propriate &#13;
figure &#13;
for &#13;
comparison &#13;
with &#13;
the &#13;
other &#13;
U.W. &#13;
System &#13;
(schools)," &#13;
added &#13;
Stoffle. &#13;
Special &#13;
events &#13;
guests &#13;
limited &#13;
by &#13;
Je nnie &#13;
Tunkieicz &#13;
News &#13;
E ditor &#13;
What &#13;
to &#13;
do &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
guests &#13;
of &#13;
Parkside &#13;
students &#13;
in &#13;
regard &#13;
to &#13;
spe­&#13;
cial &#13;
events &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Union &#13;
Square &#13;
and &#13;
Rec &#13;
Center &#13;
was &#13;
addressed &#13;
Monday &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
PUAB &#13;
(Parkside &#13;
Union &#13;
Advi­&#13;
sory &#13;
Board) &#13;
meeting. &#13;
The &#13;
committee &#13;
decided &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
prior &#13;
recommendation &#13;
to &#13;
allow &#13;
all &#13;
Park-&#13;
side &#13;
students &#13;
use &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Union &#13;
Square &#13;
and &#13;
Rec &#13;
Center &#13;
while &#13;
preventing &#13;
under-age &#13;
students &#13;
from &#13;
obtaining &#13;
alcohol &#13;
by &#13;
means &#13;
of &#13;
iden­&#13;
tification. &#13;
The &#13;
group &#13;
also &#13;
stated &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
past &#13;
recommendation &#13;
that &#13;
all &#13;
stu­&#13;
dents &#13;
may &#13;
attend &#13;
any &#13;
special &#13;
events &#13;
sponsored &#13;
by &#13;
student &#13;
organizations, &#13;
unless &#13;
the &#13;
said &#13;
organization &#13;
limits &#13;
the &#13;
event &#13;
to &#13;
students &#13;
19 &#13;
and &#13;
over. &#13;
The &#13;
recommendation &#13;
approved &#13;
Monday &#13;
sta tes &#13;
that &#13;
recognized &#13;
stu­&#13;
dent &#13;
organization &#13;
sponsored &#13;
events &#13;
where &#13;
alcohol &#13;
is  served &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
:pen &#13;
to &#13;
aU &#13;
Parkside &#13;
students &#13;
and &#13;
their &#13;
guests, &#13;
but &#13;
guests &#13;
must &#13;
be &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
legal &#13;
drinking &#13;
age. &#13;
Guests &#13;
of &#13;
Parkside &#13;
students &#13;
under &#13;
the &#13;
legal &#13;
drinking &#13;
age &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
refused &#13;
admit­&#13;
tance. &#13;
The &#13;
committee &#13;
discussed &#13;
wheth­&#13;
er &#13;
or &#13;
not &#13;
this &#13;
recommendation &#13;
should &#13;
in clude &#13;
high &#13;
school &#13;
stu dents &#13;
who &#13;
t ake &#13;
classes &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside. &#13;
"Opening &#13;
up &#13;
dances &#13;
to &#13;
students &#13;
who &#13;
are &#13;
underage &#13;
bothers &#13;
me," &#13;
said &#13;
Bill &#13;
Niebuhr, &#13;
Union &#13;
Director. &#13;
Florence &#13;
Shipek, &#13;
faculty &#13;
repre­&#13;
sentative, &#13;
said &#13;
she &#13;
feels &#13;
high &#13;
school &#13;
students &#13;
won't, &#13;
be &#13;
much &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
prob­&#13;
lem. &#13;
"My  experience &#13;
shows &#13;
that &#13;
high &#13;
school &#13;
students &#13;
who &#13;
are &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
college &#13;
to &#13;
take &#13;
extra &#13;
courses &#13;
are &#13;
responsible," &#13;
she &#13;
said. &#13;
A &#13;
motion &#13;
also &#13;
passed &#13;
stating &#13;
that &#13;
any &#13;
events &#13;
not &#13;
sponsored &#13;
by &#13;
stu­&#13;
dent &#13;
organizations &#13;
where &#13;
alcohol &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
served &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
reviewed &#13;
on &#13;
an &#13;
individual &#13;
basis &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
Union &#13;
ad­&#13;
ministration, &#13;
whereby &#13;
appropriate &#13;
policies &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
determined. &#13;
This &#13;
motion &#13;
was &#13;
made &#13;
to &#13;
ensure &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
laws &#13;
pertaining &#13;
to &#13;
drinking &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
followed &#13;
by &#13;
all &#13;
groups  who &#13;
use &#13;
the &#13;
Union &#13;
facilities, &#13;
such &#13;
as &#13;
wed­&#13;
ding &#13;
receptions, &#13;
Gen &#13;
Con, &#13;
commu­&#13;
nity &#13;
meetings, &#13;
etc. &#13;
PUAB &#13;
has &#13;
now &#13;
finished &#13;
makfiig &#13;
recommendations &#13;
and  rationale &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
implementation &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
new &#13;
Continued &#13;
on &#13;
Page &#13;
12 &#13;
2 &#13;
Thursday, &#13;
April &#13;
26&#13;
,1984 &#13;
HANGER &#13;
1 &#13;
Letters &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
Editor &#13;
I &#13;
Ranger's &#13;
crime &#13;
reporting &#13;
welcome &#13;
To &#13;
the &#13;
Editor: &#13;
I &#13;
would &#13;
be &#13;
glad &#13;
to &#13;
see &#13;
more &#13;
of &#13;
this &#13;
type &#13;
of &#13;
reporting &#13;
of &#13;
crime &#13;
on &#13;
campus. &#13;
(Editor's &#13;
note: &#13;
Media &#13;
Services &#13;
theft &#13;
story &#13;
in &#13;
April &#13;
12 &#13;
issue). &#13;
I &#13;
feel &#13;
that &#13;
students &#13;
have &#13;
a &#13;
right &#13;
to &#13;
know &#13;
what &#13;
is &#13;
going &#13;
on &#13;
around &#13;
this &#13;
campus. &#13;
According &#13;
to &#13;
your &#13;
last &#13;
article, &#13;
if &#13;
you &#13;
steal &#13;
something &#13;
on &#13;
this &#13;
cam­&#13;
pus, &#13;
your &#13;
police &#13;
record &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
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if &#13;
i t &#13;
is &#13;
your &#13;
first &#13;
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you &#13;
are) &#13;
under &#13;
the &#13;
age &#13;
of &#13;
21. &#13;
Boy, &#13;
now &#13;
you &#13;
can &#13;
steal &#13;
and &#13;
get &#13;
away &#13;
with &#13;
it. &#13;
Are &#13;
we &#13;
open &#13;
to &#13;
this &#13;
kind &#13;
of &#13;
justice? &#13;
All &#13;
I &#13;
can &#13;
say &#13;
is &#13;
— &#13;
k eep &#13;
up &#13;
the &#13;
good &#13;
work, &#13;
Ranger, &#13;
and &#13;
keep &#13;
the &#13;
students &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside &#13;
well &#13;
informed &#13;
of &#13;
other &#13;
thefts. &#13;
Paul &#13;
Johnson &#13;
PSGA &#13;
Vice &#13;
President &#13;
P.S. &#13;
How &#13;
about &#13;
a &#13;
story &#13;
of &#13;
theft &#13;
right &#13;
here &#13;
in &#13;
o ur &#13;
own &#13;
library? &#13;
How &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
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of &#13;
p roperty &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
library? &#13;
How &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
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and &#13;
drinking &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
library? &#13;
How &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
students &#13;
who &#13;
leave &#13;
trash &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
hall &#13;
and &#13;
we &#13;
all &#13;
have &#13;
to &#13;
look &#13;
at &#13;
it &#13;
all &#13;
day &#13;
long? &#13;
Students &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
more &#13;
considerate &#13;
To &#13;
the &#13;
Editor: &#13;
I &#13;
would &#13;
like &#13;
to &#13;
address &#13;
this &#13;
letter &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
people &#13;
in &#13;
"The &#13;
Office" &#13;
in &#13;
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1 &#13;
hope &#13;
you &#13;
have &#13;
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for &#13;
your &#13;
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stu­&#13;
dents &#13;
and &#13;
clean &#13;
up &#13;
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mess &#13;
at &#13;
day's &#13;
end &#13;
instead &#13;
of &#13;
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it &#13;
for &#13;
someone &#13;
else &#13;
to &#13;
do. &#13;
I &#13;
hope &#13;
you &#13;
don't &#13;
live &#13;
at &#13;
home &#13;
like &#13;
that, &#13;
leaving &#13;
paper &#13;
and  dishes &#13;
sitting &#13;
around. &#13;
I &#13;
am &#13;
glad &#13;
you &#13;
have &#13;
your &#13;
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group, &#13;
but &#13;
please &#13;
clean &#13;
up &#13;
your &#13;
mess. &#13;
I &#13;
would &#13;
like &#13;
to &#13;
address &#13;
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to &#13;
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people  who &#13;
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have &#13;
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right &#13;
as &#13;
you &#13;
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to &#13;
use &#13;
the &#13;
library &#13;
to &#13;
study. &#13;
I &#13;
don't &#13;
believe &#13;
that &#13;
either &#13;
one &#13;
of &#13;
us &#13;
has &#13;
a &#13;
right &#13;
to &#13;
destroy &#13;
anything &#13;
that &#13;
is &#13;
in &#13;
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typewriters &#13;
and &#13;
their &#13;
coin &#13;
boxes &#13;
are &#13;
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to &#13;
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not &#13;
destroy. &#13;
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chairs &#13;
are &#13;
to &#13;
sit &#13;
in, &#13;
not &#13;
to &#13;
fight &#13;
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rooms &#13;
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you &#13;
to &#13;
destroy. &#13;
The &#13;
rules &#13;
were &#13;
made &#13;
so &#13;
that &#13;
every &#13;
student &#13;
could &#13;
use &#13;
the &#13;
li­&#13;
brary, &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
sign &#13;
that &#13;
says &#13;
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smoking, &#13;
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or &#13;
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is &#13;
there &#13;
for &#13;
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purpose, &#13;
not &#13;
for &#13;
you &#13;
to &#13;
say, &#13;
"It &#13;
doesn't &#13;
apply &#13;
to &#13;
me." &#13;
Name &#13;
withheld &#13;
Open &#13;
Forum &#13;
with &#13;
Guskin &#13;
April &#13;
30 &#13;
Ranger &#13;
is &#13;
sponsoring &#13;
an &#13;
open &#13;
forum &#13;
with &#13;
Chancellor &#13;
Alan &#13;
Guskin &#13;
on &#13;
Monday, &#13;
April &#13;
30 &#13;
a t &#13;
1 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
in &#13;
Main &#13;
Place. &#13;
All &#13;
welcome &#13;
to &#13;
at­&#13;
tend &#13;
to &#13;
ask &#13;
questions &#13;
or &#13;
make &#13;
comments &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
chancellor. &#13;
Be &#13;
sure &#13;
to &#13;
at­&#13;
tend. &#13;
Chancellor &#13;
Alan &#13;
Guskin &#13;
AS &#13;
SECRETARY &#13;
OF &#13;
HEALTH &#13;
AN D &#13;
HUMAN &#13;
SERVICES, &#13;
I &#13;
AM &#13;
PLEASED &#13;
ID &#13;
ANNOUNCE &#13;
that &#13;
we &#13;
have &#13;
found &#13;
the &#13;
probable &#13;
CAUSE &#13;
OF &#13;
THE &#13;
DEADLY &#13;
DISE ASE &#13;
"AIDS": &#13;
CONGRESSIONAL &#13;
DEBATE &#13;
( &#13;
ON &#13;
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OMEONE &#13;
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V &#13;
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looks &#13;
to &#13;
fill &#13;
up &#13;
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by &#13;
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Meyer &#13;
Editor &#13;
New &#13;
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Student &#13;
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ment &#13;
Association &#13;
(PSGA) &#13;
Senate &#13;
Pro &#13;
Tempore &#13;
Joe &#13;
Vignieri &#13;
is &#13;
seek­&#13;
ing &#13;
to &#13;
fill &#13;
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vacant &#13;
seats &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
18-seat &#13;
Senate. &#13;
"I &#13;
am &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
actively &#13;
recruit," &#13;
said &#13;
Vignieri, &#13;
who &#13;
was &#13;
elected &#13;
Pro &#13;
Tempore &#13;
three &#13;
weeks &#13;
ago. &#13;
"There's &#13;
6000 &#13;
s tudents &#13;
and &#13;
only &#13;
five &#13;
seats &#13;
open. &#13;
There &#13;
must &#13;
be &#13;
interested, &#13;
qualified &#13;
students &#13;
out &#13;
there." &#13;
Vignieri &#13;
says &#13;
the &#13;
process &#13;
of &#13;
be­&#13;
coming &#13;
a &#13;
PSGA &#13;
Senator &#13;
is &#13;
not &#13;
a &#13;
difficult &#13;
one. &#13;
A &#13;
potential &#13;
Senator &#13;
should &#13;
inform &#13;
the &#13;
Pro &#13;
Tempore &#13;
or &#13;
the &#13;
PSGA &#13;
Vice &#13;
President, &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
Senate &#13;
votes &#13;
to &#13;
appoint &#13;
the &#13;
person &#13;
to &#13;
a &#13;
two-week &#13;
internship. &#13;
A &#13;
student &#13;
may &#13;
also &#13;
be &#13;
appointed &#13;
to &#13;
an &#13;
intern­&#13;
ship &#13;
by &#13;
two &#13;
Senators. &#13;
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internship &#13;
consists &#13;
of &#13;
address­&#13;
ing &#13;
a &#13;
topic &#13;
that &#13;
affects &#13;
the &#13;
PSGA &#13;
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or &#13;
is &#13;
Parkside-related. &#13;
Vig­&#13;
nieri &#13;
said, &#13;
"The &#13;
emphasis &#13;
is &#13;
on &#13;
a &#13;
report &#13;
that &#13;
will &#13;
aid &#13;
the &#13;
Senate &#13;
in &#13;
some &#13;
way, &#13;
but &#13;
we &#13;
won't &#13;
deny &#13;
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dents &#13;
who &#13;
have &#13;
a &#13;
strong &#13;
interest &#13;
in &#13;
another &#13;
area &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
university." &#13;
Vignieri &#13;
said &#13;
when &#13;
he &#13;
interned &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Senate, &#13;
his &#13;
report &#13;
addressed &#13;
the &#13;
membership &#13;
problem &#13;
of &#13;
th e &#13;
Senate. &#13;
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possible &#13;
topics, &#13;
he &#13;
said, &#13;
in­&#13;
clude &#13;
the &#13;
minority &#13;
retention &#13;
pro­&#13;
gram &#13;
and &#13;
whether &#13;
or &#13;
not &#13;
a student &#13;
Code &#13;
of &#13;
Ethics &#13;
is &#13;
necessary. &#13;
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writing &#13;
a &#13;
report &#13;
is &#13;
required &#13;
of &#13;
an &#13;
intern, &#13;
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admits &#13;
it &#13;
is &#13;
extra &#13;
work. &#13;
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they're &#13;
unsure &#13;
if &#13;
they'll &#13;
have &#13;
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time &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
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tor, &#13;
it's &#13;
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to &#13;
ask &#13;
for &#13;
more &#13;
work &#13;
(right &#13;
away)." &#13;
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said &#13;
he &#13;
compiled &#13;
his &#13;
report &#13;
in &#13;
two &#13;
weeks &#13;
working &#13;
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total &#13;
of &#13;
about &#13;
six &#13;
hours. &#13;
Senators &#13;
are &#13;
required &#13;
to &#13;
put &#13;
in &#13;
at &#13;
least &#13;
three &#13;
office &#13;
hours &#13;
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week &#13;
and &#13;
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on &#13;
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tee. &#13;
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point &#13;
that &#13;
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mentions &#13;
is &#13;
that &#13;
past &#13;
PSGA &#13;
Senators &#13;
will &#13;
probably &#13;
have &#13;
their &#13;
two-week &#13;
in­&#13;
ternship &#13;
waived &#13;
if &#13;
they &#13;
wish &#13;
to &#13;
re­&#13;
join &#13;
the &#13;
Senate. &#13;
Vignieri &#13;
rejoined &#13;
the &#13;
Senate &#13;
recently &#13;
after &#13;
his &#13;
unsuc­&#13;
cessful &#13;
bid &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
vice &#13;
presidency &#13;
in &#13;
March. &#13;
Vignieri &#13;
realizes &#13;
that &#13;
some &#13;
stu­&#13;
dents &#13;
may &#13;
want &#13;
to &#13;
wait &#13;
until &#13;
the &#13;
fall &#13;
elections &#13;
to &#13;
join &#13;
the &#13;
Senate &#13;
in &#13;
order &#13;
to &#13;
avoid &#13;
the &#13;
internship. &#13;
He &#13;
said &#13;
that &#13;
many &#13;
students &#13;
do &#13;
not &#13;
have &#13;
any &#13;
spare &#13;
time &#13;
with &#13;
their &#13;
cur­&#13;
rent &#13;
schedules, &#13;
many &#13;
students &#13;
work &#13;
and &#13;
Parkside &#13;
has &#13;
a &#13;
non-traditional &#13;
student &#13;
body. &#13;
AU &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
five &#13;
vacant &#13;
Senate &#13;
seats &#13;
are &#13;
fall &#13;
seats; &#13;
nine &#13;
seats &#13;
are &#13;
elelcted &#13;
each &#13;
semester. &#13;
Whoever &#13;
in­&#13;
terns &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Senate &#13;
now &#13;
will &#13;
have &#13;
to &#13;
run &#13;
for &#13;
reelection &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
fall. &#13;
But, &#13;
said &#13;
Vignieri, &#13;
"anybody &#13;
get­&#13;
ting &#13;
in &#13;
right &#13;
now &#13;
will &#13;
get &#13;
benefits," &#13;
because &#13;
the &#13;
Senate &#13;
meets &#13;
monthly &#13;
over &#13;
the &#13;
summer, &#13;
so &#13;
new &#13;
Senators &#13;
will &#13;
spend &#13;
less &#13;
time &#13;
while &#13;
getting &#13;
the &#13;
experience. &#13;
"We &#13;
(have &#13;
had) &#13;
problems &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
past &#13;
in &#13;
student &#13;
government, &#13;
but &#13;
now &#13;
we &#13;
have &#13;
a &#13;
new, &#13;
young, &#13;
active &#13;
Senate &#13;
addressing &#13;
the &#13;
issues &#13;
on &#13;
campus," &#13;
said &#13;
Vignieri. &#13;
Any &#13;
student &#13;
wishing &#13;
to &#13;
join &#13;
the &#13;
Senate, &#13;
said &#13;
Vignieri, &#13;
"should &#13;
see &#13;
me &#13;
and &#13;
I &#13;
will &#13;
help &#13;
them." &#13;
Interes­&#13;
ted &#13;
students &#13;
should &#13;
stop &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
PSGA &#13;
office, &#13;
WLLD &#13;
D139. &#13;
U &#13;
9 &#13;
*06 &#13;
c&#13;
% &#13;
&amp; &#13;
Ken &#13;
Meyer &#13;
Jennie &#13;
Tunkieicz &#13;
John &#13;
Kovalic &#13;
Patricia &#13;
Cumbie &#13;
Michael &#13;
Kailas &#13;
Dave &#13;
McEvoy... &#13;
Andv &#13;
Buchanan &#13;
Catherine &#13;
Chaffee.... &#13;
Jill &#13;
Whitney &#13;
Nielsen. &#13;
Pat &#13;
Hensiak &#13;
.Editor &#13;
News &#13;
Editor &#13;
Feature &#13;
Editor &#13;
Sports &#13;
Editor &#13;
.Photo &#13;
Editor &#13;
Copy &#13;
Editor &#13;
..Business &#13;
Manager &#13;
..Advertising &#13;
Manager &#13;
...Distribution &#13;
Manager &#13;
....Asst. &#13;
Business &#13;
Manager &#13;
WRITERS &#13;
5*5 &#13;
D&#13;
!?&#13;
0&#13;
,&#13;
n&#13;
' &#13;
?°&#13;
b &#13;
Kiesli&#13;
n&#13;
S. &#13;
Carol &#13;
Kortendick, &#13;
J eff &#13;
Leisgang, &#13;
Rick &#13;
Luehr, &#13;
Robb &#13;
Luehr, &#13;
Dick &#13;
Ober-&#13;
bruner &#13;
Tony &#13;
Rogers, &#13;
BUI &#13;
Stou -&#13;
gaard, &#13;
Nick &#13;
Thome, Sarah &#13;
Uhlig &#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS &#13;
Karen &#13;
Cairo, &#13;
Todd &#13;
Herbst, &#13;
Karen &#13;
Trandel &#13;
ffonger &#13;
is &#13;
wntlen &#13;
and &#13;
edited &#13;
by &#13;
students &#13;
of &#13;
UW-Porkside &#13;
and &#13;
they &#13;
Thur.°2 &#13;
y &#13;
?&#13;
S&#13;
p&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
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'&#13;
b&#13;
'&#13;
e &#13;
fo&#13;
r &#13;
"&#13;
s &#13;
editorial &#13;
policy &#13;
and &#13;
content. &#13;
Published &#13;
every &#13;
ay &#13;
uring &#13;
the &#13;
academic &#13;
year &#13;
except &#13;
during &#13;
breaks &#13;
and &#13;
holidays, &#13;
^nger &#13;
,s &#13;
printed &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
Racine &#13;
Journal &#13;
Times. &#13;
&lt;it» &#13;
yZ™* &#13;
l&#13;
nce &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
addressed &#13;
to: &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Ranger, &#13;
Univer-&#13;
Le &#13;
t &#13;
,]&#13;
c&#13;
o&#13;
"&#13;
s&#13;
'&#13;
np&#13;
arkside. &#13;
Box &#13;
No. &#13;
2000, &#13;
Kenosha, &#13;
Wis. &#13;
53141. &#13;
the &#13;
edl,or &#13;
w&#13;
'll &#13;
be &#13;
accepted &#13;
if &#13;
typewritten, &#13;
double-spaced &#13;
on &#13;
sianed &#13;
Jtk* &#13;
P&#13;
°&#13;
P&#13;
f&#13;
r&#13;
' &#13;
ieMer&#13;
s &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
less &#13;
than &#13;
350 &#13;
words &#13;
and &#13;
must &#13;
be &#13;
, &#13;
° &#13;
, &#13;
P"&#13;
ON&#13;
E &#13;
number &#13;
included &#13;
for &#13;
verification &#13;
purposes. &#13;
&#13;
Tuesday &#13;
10 &#13;
a.m. &#13;
for &#13;
publication &#13;
Thursday-&#13;
lory &#13;
content"*' &#13;
'° &#13;
re&#13;
'&#13;
os&#13;
e &#13;
htters &#13;
containing &#13;
false &#13;
&#13;
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              <text>SOC considers major status</text>
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              <text>Thursda  March 29 1984&#13;
soc.&#13;
considers&#13;
•&#13;
major status&#13;
that clubs must go through in order&#13;
to have an event&#13;
kills&#13;
members'&#13;
en--&#13;
thusiasm.&#13;
"If&#13;
there is a guest speaker&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
area, it is possible that a club won't&#13;
be&#13;
able to have&#13;
him&#13;
or her appear&#13;
on campus because of the time&#13;
it&#13;
takes  to have funds  reallocated,"&#13;
said Olson.&#13;
Olson  and  Galbraith  both  feel&#13;
that  SOC is ready  to become  a&#13;
major  organization.  "We've&#13;
been&#13;
treated  as a major organization,&#13;
and given almost every right of&#13;
being  a major  organization,&#13;
with&#13;
the  exception  of the&#13;
title,"&#13;
said&#13;
Galbraith.&#13;
"There's  a real grey line between&#13;
the  definition&#13;
of a standing   commit-&#13;
tee and a major organization.  There&#13;
are  little,  petty  dillerences,   but&#13;
they are important,"  said Olson.&#13;
Olson  and  Galbraith  both  leel&#13;
that although&#13;
SOC&#13;
has&#13;
had a past&#13;
history 01 weak leadership,  the&#13;
or-&#13;
ganization  is now flourishing  and&#13;
members  are showing great enthu-&#13;
siasm  and  interest  in the  group.&#13;
. They also feel that the question  01&#13;
luture leadership  should not be the&#13;
indicator for the group's not&#13;
be-&#13;
coming a major organization.&#13;
"Every  organization  is going&#13;
to&#13;
have their  time  when  there&#13;
is&#13;
not&#13;
going to be a lull leadership.&#13;
Train-&#13;
ing potential  leaders  and holdlD~&#13;
by&#13;
Jennie TunkieiC'l.&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Ylhether or not to seek major or-&#13;
ganization status  is the  question&#13;
being&#13;
addressed  by SOC (Student&#13;
Organization Council). SOC is an or-&#13;
ganization consisting of over&#13;
40&#13;
stu-&#13;
deat clubs, representing  over&#13;
1000&#13;
Parkside students,  which acts as a&#13;
fOl'lDD&#13;
for&#13;
interorganizational   dis-&#13;
cussion, helps  plan  and  execute&#13;
budgels&#13;
and helps  new  organiza·.&#13;
_   form and develop.&#13;
Presently  SOC is one  of  four&#13;
.tlllding  committees   of  PSGA&#13;
lParUide Student Government&#13;
As-&#13;
lOCiation).&#13;
As&#13;
a standing&#13;
commit-&#13;
tee,&#13;
\he organization  must have all&#13;
their&#13;
major motions and budgetary&#13;
lll:IIons&#13;
approved by the PSGA Sen-&#13;
lie,&#13;
a process  which  takes  from&#13;
lour&#13;
to&#13;
ten&#13;
weeU&#13;
according&#13;
to the&#13;
orpa!zalion's  representatives.&#13;
"By&#13;
becoming a major&#13;
organiza-&#13;
tioa,&#13;
we would alleviate the respon-&#13;
libility of the  Senate  having  to&#13;
watch over anolher  committee.  A,&#13;
I'eat&#13;
deal&#13;
of the PSGA meetings&#13;
are&#13;
spent with&#13;
SOC&#13;
business.  We&#13;
leel that receiving major stalus will&#13;
encourage clubs  to do more  on&#13;
&lt;ampus and they won't  feel as if&#13;
Big&#13;
Brother is watching  them&#13;
con-&#13;
Itontly," said Dan Galbraith,&#13;
SOC&#13;
ViceChairman.&#13;
Valerie Olson,&#13;
SOC&#13;
Chairperson,&#13;
feels&#13;
that many limes the red tape&#13;
',&#13;
.• nl&#13;
P  01&#13;
Joh&#13;
"e\\l)  elected PSG.\ pr~ident.   ott Pet r-.oft&#13;
llt·ru&#13;
and \ir-e--p&#13;
fir-;l PSGA   nate meeting last Thur"MIa\&#13;
er&#13;
010&#13;
'l&#13;
'Ii&#13;
hHI&#13;
o moreMiller time'&#13;
BiD&#13;
lebuhr&#13;
then&#13;
had&#13;
the&#13;
jani&#13;
rial&#13;
WI&#13;
remove&#13;
!be&#13;
unwonted&#13;
pur&#13;
lions&#13;
of&#13;
Ihe&#13;
bann&lt;'n&#13;
'.1be&#13;
probl&lt;rn&#13;
mine,  .t&#13;
had&#13;
nothi.nC&#13;
to do&#13;
WI&#13;
til  I1I1.r"&#13;
',ebuhr  'I   .'" til.."  (PSF.I per-&#13;
to&#13;
put&#13;
up&#13;
the&#13;
001""''''&#13;
caUJO&#13;
Budd)&#13;
oul&#13;
0/&#13;
lowIl.&#13;
It&#13;
was  an  moore&#13;
1 d&#13;
I&#13;
on  The&#13;
..-bole&#13;
I""lion&#13;
0/&#13;
corporat&#13;
10&#13;
P&#13;
Is&#13;
bein&amp;&#13;
(d&#13;
t&#13;
now&#13;
Once  "'"&#13;
de\lnes&#13;
d&lt;dslon3&#13;
10k&#13;
II&#13;
are&#13;
in&#13;
charge 01 approvong    ten.&#13;
10&#13;
1 talt(d&#13;
to&#13;
Bill&#13;
:'ollObuhr,&#13;
the&#13;
Umon D1rector,&#13;
and&#13;
he&#13;
IUthorued&#13;
\he&#13;
bannen'·&#13;
When Buddy&#13;
Couv.OII,&#13;
0l0rd1fla.&#13;
tor 01 Student  ActiVIties, returned&#13;
to campus,  be   ed that \he .....&#13;
portion&#13;
of \he&#13;
posten&#13;
he&#13;
"""",,(d&#13;
because  be felt  they  were  map-&#13;
propnate.  He said that \he (duca-&#13;
I&#13;
tional aspect&#13;
of \he&#13;
worbbop&#13;
&lt;OU1d&#13;
be better  emphasiud  ....thout \he&#13;
Miller beer poctures&#13;
b) Pit Zirkelhach&#13;
Miller beer&#13;
signs&#13;
were removed&#13;
from banners advertising the  Illler&#13;
Brewing&#13;
Co.&#13;
Strategies  wortsbop&#13;
that&#13;
was&#13;
hosted by&#13;
Pi&#13;
Sigma Epsi-&#13;
Ion (PSE), the business  lraterruty,&#13;
when PSE failed&#13;
to&#13;
get&#13;
tile&#13;
bannen&#13;
properly authori2ed.&#13;
"We put up tile banners  at \he&#13;
end of spnng break," said Bill&#13;
Tro-&#13;
pin, president of PSE.&#13;
"At&#13;
tile lime&#13;
there&#13;
was&#13;
no one&#13;
OD&#13;
campus from&#13;
the Student  Activities Office, who&#13;
Continued  on Page 13&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
Ted Mondale st  p&#13;
for his father&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Gushkin&#13;
slain&#13;
Pocan campai&#13;
8&#13;
&amp;11  .....&#13;
on UW-P campus&#13;
See&#13;
Inside&#13;
for&#13;
Stranger&#13;
Things&#13;
PUAB limits&#13;
alcohol purchases&#13;
Sarah Hiett runs&#13;
in transition&#13;
%&#13;
Thancllly, Marcb&#13;
%t,&#13;
l!lll4&#13;
--------------------------------Q&#13;
RANGER&#13;
I&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
I&#13;
Student&#13;
"su:"&#13;
offered&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
This year&#13;
ill&#13;
the fIrst year&#13;
we&#13;
are&#13;
offenng an EducaUooal Gift to a&#13;
coBece&#13;
st_t.&#13;
The&#13;
UWEX-Homemakers  are&#13;
of-&#13;
lenne a _  Educational Gift to a&#13;
student wbo&#13;
wishes&#13;
to enter&#13;
the&#13;
Home&#13;
Economics&#13;
Related Field.&#13;
ApplIc:atlons bave&#13;
been&#13;
sent&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
FInancial&#13;
Aids&#13;
Dept. and&#13;
our&#13;
posten&#13;
sbould&#13;
be posted to&#13;
give&#13;
you&#13;
an&#13;
Idea&#13;
of&#13;
JOIlle&#13;
of  the&#13;
areas&#13;
of&#13;
study&#13;
one can&#13;
enter.&#13;
The&#13;
spectrum&#13;
ls broader tban most students&#13;
thlnk.&#13;
CoIJese&#13;
students will be&#13;
allowed&#13;
more&#13;
lime&#13;
lor&#13;
return&#13;
of&#13;
application&#13;
due&#13;
1Io&#13;
the&#13;
dlffaaKes&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
spriIl(l&#13;
breaks.&#13;
The appticaUoos should be re-&#13;
turned  to the UWEX-Qllice  by&#13;
April&#13;
30th.&#13;
H&#13;
there are any ques-&#13;
tions&#13;
concerning&#13;
the lields, the offi-&#13;
ce coo be 01 assistance to you.&#13;
Scholastic ability will be taken&#13;
into consideration, but other&#13;
thlncs&#13;
will be taken into consideration as&#13;
well. This EducaUooal Gift is&#13;
not&#13;
based&#13;
on need, but primarily&#13;
the&#13;
fields&#13;
the&#13;
students are entering.&#13;
There&#13;
are&#13;
approximately&#13;
30&#13;
areas&#13;
01&#13;
study&#13;
open&#13;
as&#13;
the&#13;
major area&#13;
01&#13;
study and&#13;
several secondary areas.&#13;
Carol McCarver&#13;
ScholarshIp Chairperson&#13;
Pocan for Mayor&#13;
To&#13;
the&#13;
Editor:&#13;
With Electioo  Day quietly ap-&#13;
Proachin«&#13;
us,&#13;
it is time lor voten to&#13;
start&#13;
makine&#13;
decisions&#13;
about&#13;
the&#13;
many candidates who&#13;
are&#13;
seeking&#13;
offIces.&#13;
One&#13;
important&#13;
decision&#13;
that Ke-&#13;
nosha residents need to make is in&#13;
the&#13;
Mayoral election.&#13;
There&#13;
are&#13;
two&#13;
candidates that emerged&#13;
from&#13;
the&#13;
primary - incwnbent Mayor John&#13;
Bilotti and Alderman Bill Paean.&#13;
In&#13;
1980,&#13;
Mayor John Bilotti slat-&#13;
ed that be&#13;
wouJd&#13;
"set spending li-&#13;
mits, eliminate  waste and&#13;
ineffI-&#13;
ciency." He also said be would "de-&#13;
clare&#13;
war&#13;
on waste in government."&#13;
However, wbat be has done is&#13;
to&#13;
in-&#13;
crease government spending&#13;
by&#13;
32%.&#13;
He also has raised the city's&#13;
budget surplus  Irom $628,728 to&#13;
$1.2&#13;
mlIllon.&#13;
It&#13;
seems&#13;
as&#13;
though   the&#13;
Mayor, as well as&#13;
the&#13;
Kenosba&#13;
tall-&#13;
payers. have lost the "war on&#13;
waste."&#13;
Bill Pocan, wben elected, will&#13;
get&#13;
city spending in control and will&#13;
keep&#13;
it&#13;
in&#13;
control by runnine&#13;
the&#13;
city like a business. Pocan realizes&#13;
the&#13;
key in doing this -&#13;
you&#13;
can't&#13;
spend more than you have. He also&#13;
realizes&#13;
that&#13;
the&#13;
government cannot&#13;
continue raising property taxes to&#13;
cover&#13;
expenses.&#13;
Most importantly,&#13;
he&#13;
realizes&#13;
that, since Kenosha has&#13;
a large&#13;
budget&#13;
surplus. It should be&#13;
used&#13;
instead 01 mcreasine property&#13;
taxes.&#13;
Also in 1980 Bilotti vowed to&#13;
"seek&#13;
more quality stores down-&#13;
town, more adequate&#13;
parking.&#13;
a&#13;
carefree environment&#13;
and&#13;
a com-&#13;
mercial complex&#13;
downtown." How-&#13;
ever, during his admmistration,&#13;
Wards and Penney's&#13;
have&#13;
both lell&#13;
Kenosha and no real signs of eco-&#13;
nomic&#13;
growth&#13;
are&#13;
anywhere to be&#13;
lound.&#13;
Pocan  understands   tfusiness&#13;
since he is a businessman.  As&#13;
mayor, be will work not only to at-&#13;
tract&#13;
new&#13;
industry to Kenosha, but&#13;
to keep&#13;
the&#13;
industry that is curren-&#13;
tly in the city. He will be the chief&#13;
salesman for&#13;
the&#13;
city and will work&#13;
with labor and civic leaders and&#13;
with local businessmen,  to create&#13;
and&#13;
maintain a favorable business&#13;
ctimate  for new and expanding&#13;
businesses.&#13;
However, probably one 01 the&#13;
more&#13;
important goals 01 Pocan is to&#13;
improve the mayoral working rela-&#13;
tionship with the state. Bilotti has&#13;
been spending a great deal 01 time&#13;
over&#13;
the&#13;
past&#13;
year attemtping to get&#13;
more&#13;
state&#13;
revenues&#13;
to&#13;
cover&#13;
his&#13;
spending increases.&#13;
In&#13;
his luWe at-&#13;
tempt,&#13;
he has appeared&#13;
petulant&#13;
and has embarrassed many taxpay-&#13;
ers as&#13;
well&#13;
as&#13;
city&#13;
and state offi-&#13;
cials.&#13;
Pocan will re-establish&#13;
the&#13;
work-&#13;
ine relationship that existed belore&#13;
Bilott's  tenure.  He will contact&#13;
state ollicials once his tenn begios&#13;
and will begin&#13;
to&#13;
erase&#13;
the&#13;
bad&#13;
name&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
bas recently receiv-&#13;
ed.&#13;
So nut Tuesday, April 3, remem-&#13;
ber that&#13;
you&#13;
bave many decisions to&#13;
make lor many offices.&#13;
Also,&#13;
please&#13;
remember that your vote&#13;
will&#13;
count&#13;
and that Bill Paean is&#13;
the&#13;
"positive&#13;
alternative for mayor" of Kenosha.&#13;
Concerned and committed.&#13;
Jeanne Buenter-Phillips&#13;
Student votes ARE important&#13;
Five days from now, on Tuesday,&#13;
April 3, a number 0110cal races will&#13;
be decided in the Kenosba/Racine&#13;
area. Heading the&#13;
list&#13;
is Kenosha's&#13;
race for mayor between the incum-&#13;
bent John Bilotti and the strong&#13;
challenger, Bill Paean. The lollow-&#13;
ing&#13;
are the most prominent races&#13;
in&#13;
our  area and&#13;
the respective candi-&#13;
dates:&#13;
Kellosha&#13;
City PositioDS&#13;
Mayor&#13;
John M. Bilotti&#13;
William&#13;
Pocan&#13;
MuDicipal JUdge&#13;
Katherine Lingle&#13;
Mark Fennema&#13;
School&#13;
Board&#13;
Mary Jane Landry&#13;
Genevieve&#13;
Turk&#13;
Patrick F. Moran&#13;
Robert G. Bramsher&#13;
Racine&#13;
City Positllo ..&#13;
Alderman&#13;
(2nd&#13;
District)&#13;
Dorothy H. Constantine&#13;
Myrtle H. Harrell&#13;
Alderman (4th District)&#13;
Fredrick&#13;
L.&#13;
Lawrence&#13;
Thomas&#13;
E.&#13;
Dawkins&#13;
Municipal Judge&#13;
Guadalupe G. Villarreal&#13;
Robert Michelson&#13;
Voting' is patriotic&#13;
On March  23, 1775, Patrick&#13;
Henry&#13;
made&#13;
his famous "Give&#13;
me&#13;
liberty or give me death" speech.&#13;
In&#13;
1776,&#13;
at the age 01&#13;
21,&#13;
Nathan&#13;
Hale made an inspired speech end-&#13;
ing with his last words:&#13;
"I&#13;
only&#13;
regret that&#13;
I&#13;
have but one life to&#13;
lose for my country" and then was&#13;
executed&#13;
by banging.&#13;
These were two great American&#13;
patriots of the Revolutionary War,&#13;
but there are many unsung patriots&#13;
of this country who have exercised&#13;
their freedoms&#13;
by&#13;
voting in munda-&#13;
ne elections on the local level such&#13;
as surveyor, municipal judge or dog&#13;
catcher,&#13;
where there is no great&#13;
bwning&#13;
issue. Those people&#13;
who&#13;
year&#13;
after year vote are the true&#13;
American patriots who make this&#13;
country  great.  Be&#13;
grateful&#13;
that&#13;
many of our forefathers have defen-&#13;
ded our liberty by voting or by hav-&#13;
ing to regret that they had only one&#13;
life&#13;
to&#13;
lose for their country.&#13;
Won't you also consider becom-·&#13;
ing true American patriots by vot-&#13;
ing&#13;
in&#13;
the next election April 3 and&#13;
the Democratic caucus April&#13;
7?&#13;
Franklin Kuezenski&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Carl&#13;
Cbernouski,&#13;
Karl&#13;
Dixon, Michael&#13;
Firdtow, Walter&#13;
Hermann,&#13;
Mary&#13;
Kirtoa-Kaddatz,&#13;
Bob&#13;
Kiesling,&#13;
Carol&#13;
Korteadid:,&#13;
Dawn&#13;
KroDke,&#13;
Rick&#13;
1...Debr,&#13;
Robb Loebr, Dick Oberbrun-&#13;
OU, Tony Rogers, Bm&#13;
Stougaard,&#13;
Nick&#13;
Thome, Sarah Uhti"&#13;
Kevin Zirkelbach&#13;
Pat Zirkelbacb.&#13;
•&#13;
KeD Meler&#13;
Editor&#13;
...   Je.aie TvDkieicz.&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
of&#13;
~=~.~~:.:~::.:::.::.::.~~:.::.~.:::::.::.:.:.~.::.~:::::.::::.~~:.:.:::.~:::.~~::.~::.::J.r::~&#13;
5::&#13;
,&#13;
Dave McEvoy&#13;
COpy Ediwr&#13;
II&#13;
AJldy BucbalWl&#13;
Bosiaess Maaager&#13;
Cath.rtae Chaflee&#13;
Advertislllg Manager&#13;
Jill&#13;
Whitney Nielse&#13;
Distributio.  Manager&#13;
Pat HeDsiak&#13;
Asst. Bosiaess Manager&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
Karen Cairo, Rob Eicbhorn  Todd&#13;
Herbst, KareDTrudel.&#13;
I&#13;
Ranger is ....ritten&#13;
and  edited  by&#13;
students&#13;
0'&#13;
UW-Parkside  and&#13;
H1ty   -&#13;
are solely&#13;
respons~le   lor its editorial  policy  and&#13;
conlen!. Pub'ished_e~el)'&#13;
Thursday&#13;
durmg 'he&#13;
academic   year&#13;
except during breaks&#13;
and holidoyl-&#13;
Ranger  is&#13;
prinled&#13;
by Ihe Racine&#13;
Jourrtol Times.&#13;
All&#13;
conespondence    shcwld&#13;
be&#13;
addressed   to:&#13;
Porbide&#13;
Ranger,&#13;
I1ft,tlt.·&#13;
sity&#13;
0'&#13;
W;'consjn-PorJr.side,   Bo....No.  2000,&#13;
Kenosho,&#13;
Wis.  5314/.&#13;
letters to&#13;
the&#13;
editor&#13;
will be&#13;
occepted  il&#13;
typewrillefl,&#13;
double.~poced&#13;
011&#13;
standard&#13;
size paper. tenets&#13;
should&#13;
be&#13;
leu&#13;
rhon&#13;
350&#13;
words ond mllJ'&#13;
be&#13;
~igned&#13;
wi,h  a&#13;
lelephone  number included&#13;
lor&#13;
lferilicalion pvrpaJes.&#13;
Nomes&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
withheld&#13;
'or&#13;
lfolid&#13;
reosons.&#13;
Deadline   lor&#13;
letfers is&#13;
Tuesdoy&#13;
10 O.m.&#13;
lor&#13;
pl,lblicalion&#13;
Thursdoy&#13;
Ranger reserves&#13;
the&#13;
right to&#13;
refuse&#13;
leiters containing 'al~e&#13;
and delo&#13;
rne&#13;
tory&#13;
con'ent.&#13;
Circuit Court Judge (bra.cb&#13;
3)&#13;
Charles Swanson&#13;
Jon B. Skow&#13;
Coostable&#13;
Fredrick&#13;
L.&#13;
Lawrence&#13;
Thomas&#13;
E.&#13;
Dawkins&#13;
Held jointly with the local&#13;
elec-&#13;
tions is the open presidential&#13;
pri-&#13;
mary in which&#13;
a&#13;
voter may vole&#13;
for&#13;
anyone candidate in one party.&#13;
The&#13;
only ticket that has competition,&#13;
however,&#13;
is&#13;
the Democratic&#13;
party&#13;
ticket, and for them the primary is&#13;
largely a "beauty contest."&#13;
The Democratic  National&#13;
Con-&#13;
vention will only accept the results&#13;
of the Wisconsin caucuses which&#13;
are to be held on Saturday, April&#13;
7.&#13;
The primary  does not determine&#13;
delegates  lor any candidates;&#13;
it&#13;
only acts&#13;
as sort&#13;
of&#13;
a poll, showing&#13;
who is stronger or weaker.&#13;
The following are the candidates&#13;
as&#13;
they will&#13;
appear&#13;
on Tuesday's&#13;
ballot:&#13;
Democratic Party&#13;
Ernest F. Hollings&#13;
Alan Cranston&#13;
Walter F. Mondale&#13;
George&#13;
S. McGovern&#13;
Jesse Jackson&#13;
Gary  Hart&#13;
John Glenn&#13;
Reuben Askew&#13;
Continued on Page 3&#13;
</text>
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            <name>Title</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="71048">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 12, issue 24, March 29, 1984</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="71049">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1984-03-29</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="71054">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="71055">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <text>English</text>
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          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="71058">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="71061">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
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        <name>chancellor alan guskin</name>
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