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              <text>Anderson steps down</text>
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              <text>SOC gets major status&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
After sbc months of work and five drafts of its constitution,&#13;
the Student Organizations Council (SOC) has gained&#13;
major status and is no longer a standing committee of the&#13;
farkside Student Government Association (PSGA).&#13;
f!SPA Senate voted on Monday, April 27, in favor of&#13;
attaining major status, provided the change passes&#13;
as a fall referendum.&#13;
SOC's constitution will go into effect July 1. It plans to&#13;
continue its standing programs, including Toys for Tots,&#13;
Food for Families, involvement in the Recruitment Fair&#13;
and helping clubs with budgeting.&#13;
In addition, it plans to start a Student Orientation Corn-&#13;
Committee freshmen and a sPrin£ Leadership Workshop&#13;
Before the Senate vote, Don Harmeyer, president of&#13;
SOC, addressed the Senate with some of his concerns.&#13;
"It would be nice if we could set personalities aside and&#13;
focus on the issues. I don't want SOC to become the political&#13;
football of PSGA and Ranger. SOC doesn't write what&#13;
goes in the paper," he said.&#13;
Harmeyer commented on SOC's accomplishments.&#13;
"Like I said back in January when I took over SOC chairmanship,&#13;
our number one goal would be to gain major&#13;
status. We've accomplished that, so I feel it's been a successfull&#13;
semester.&#13;
"We're very proud of the constitution. After five drafts&#13;
we finally got one we felt we could work with. That's the&#13;
one we presented to the Senate. It's very hard to sit down&#13;
and write a 25 page document and have it turn out exactly&#13;
the way you want it on the first try," he said.&#13;
Harmeyer also addressed the concerns other major&#13;
status organizations had about SOC. "With SOC gaining&#13;
SOC see page 9&#13;
Inside...&#13;
ildinBS Moody visits •. .v.4&#13;
Student debuts on TV........................page 5&#13;
Women of color special center&#13;
"Cradle," "Camelot" reviews page 10&#13;
Stranglers interview page 11&#13;
Wrestler also racewalker ...page 15&#13;
PSGA vice president resigns&#13;
Anderson steps down&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
Citing scheduling conflicts&#13;
and lack of cooperation from&#13;
colleagues, Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Vice&#13;
President Corby Anderson resigned&#13;
Tuesday, April 28.&#13;
At press time, PSGA officials&#13;
were in the process of&#13;
setting up a selection procedure&#13;
for his successor.&#13;
In his resignation letter,&#13;
Anderson said the decision&#13;
"was in the best interests of&#13;
the university."&#13;
"I think the senate is an&#13;
important enough body that&#13;
we need somebody who can&#13;
be an effective leader (to&#13;
serve as vice-president)," Anderson&#13;
explained when interviewed&#13;
Wednesday morning.&#13;
"I thought I could work my&#13;
way toward that - but I don't&#13;
envision things getting better;&#13;
they're just getting&#13;
worse."&#13;
The resignation has "very&#13;
little" to do with the controversy&#13;
surrounding the senate's&#13;
approval of SOC's major&#13;
status bid. "That wasn't a&#13;
deciding factor," he noted.&#13;
One of the factors that did&#13;
contribute to his resignation,&#13;
Anderson said, was that the&#13;
job required more time than&#13;
he had anticipated it would.&#13;
"When I decided to run, I&#13;
was told by Sue (Brudvig,&#13;
former PSGA vice-president)&#13;
and Adrian (Serrano, former&#13;
PSGA president) that I would&#13;
need to put in between 20 and&#13;
Corby Anderson&#13;
30 hours per week. I was prepared&#13;
to do that, but I wound&#13;
up putting in that much time&#13;
and more, and I wasn't getting&#13;
anything done.&#13;
"It's not that I can't make&#13;
it my top priority," he went&#13;
on. "But I can't make it the&#13;
only reason I come to school.&#13;
I do have to work, I do have&#13;
to take classes and I do have&#13;
to do well in them."&#13;
Another problem, according&#13;
to Anderson, was that he and&#13;
PSGA President Alex Pettit&#13;
"got off to a bad start" with&#13;
the senate.&#13;
"A lot of people didn't support&#13;
our candidacy in the beginning,&#13;
and they weren't&#13;
about to start after we won&#13;
the election," he commented.&#13;
"It's a relatively young senate,&#13;
and rather than working&#13;
together to try to gain some&#13;
experience as a body, the senate&#13;
seemed to work against&#13;
me and A1 right from the&#13;
start."&#13;
Anderson admits that his&#13;
inexperience (he had never&#13;
worked in student government&#13;
prior to winning the&#13;
March election) contributed&#13;
to the difficulty of the transition&#13;
of administrations, but&#13;
he doesn't believe all the&#13;
problems can be traced to&#13;
that source.&#13;
"I think my inexperience&#13;
only hurt me to the extent&#13;
that other people anticipated&#13;
I wasn't going to be able to do&#13;
the job," he said. "And when&#13;
that's the case, you don't get&#13;
much cooperation or respect&#13;
from your colleagues.&#13;
"You get to feeling," he&#13;
added, "that you're just a figurehead&#13;
and that other people&#13;
are really running the organization."&#13;
Although the experience&#13;
hasn't been as rewarding as&#13;
he would have liked, Anderson&#13;
has no regrets about&#13;
seeking as capturing the position.&#13;
"The vice-presidency is&#13;
something you can't really&#13;
prepare for," he explained.&#13;
"But it's been a good experience&#13;
for me - and I don't&#13;
think I'm the only one who&#13;
benefitted from it. If anything&#13;
can be gained from this (resignation),&#13;
I hope it's that people&#13;
will realize how important&#13;
student leadership positions&#13;
like PSGA vice-president&#13;
are."&#13;
i ne old and the new PHOTO BY DAVE MCEVOI&#13;
Past PSGA president Adrian Serrano confers with SOC chair&#13;
Don Harmeyer at Monday's Senate meeting, in background,&#13;
current PSGA president Aiex Pettit and ex-SOC chair Bill&#13;
Serpe listen to the proceedings.&#13;
Carr takes over Ranger driver's seat&#13;
Vol. IS, No. 29&#13;
Jenny Carr has been named&#13;
editor-in-chief of the Ranger&#13;
for 1987-88.&#13;
The selection was made on&#13;
the recommendation of a&#13;
committee consisting of two&#13;
students, two faculty and a&#13;
member of the administration.&#13;
The Ranger Board of Directors&#13;
then voted to accept&#13;
the recommendation.&#13;
She replaces Gary Schneeberger,&#13;
who has held the position&#13;
for the past year.&#13;
Carr served as both news&#13;
editor and feature editor this&#13;
year, after contributing as a&#13;
staff writer during 1985-86. In&#13;
addition to her Ranger involvement,&#13;
she's been PSGA&#13;
senator, a Campus Ambassador,&#13;
a member of SUFAC, a&#13;
tutor in the writing center&#13;
and has served on several&#13;
faculty and university committees.&#13;
"I hope the students will&#13;
recognize that the Ranger is&#13;
their paper," Carr commented.&#13;
"I want to encourage students&#13;
who have story ideas or&#13;
would like to be part of the&#13;
Ranger family to come in and&#13;
get acquainted with our eclectic&#13;
group.&#13;
"When I was first a student&#13;
at Parkside I was very critical&#13;
of the paper," she continued.&#13;
"I kept my mouth shut,&#13;
however, because I was not in&#13;
a position to give the time&#13;
necessary to make a contribution."&#13;
• "When I did become involved,&#13;
I realized that the&#13;
production of a quality paper&#13;
is &amp; difficult job and takes a&#13;
lot of cooperation from a&#13;
number of people. (Former&#13;
editors) Jennie Tunkiecz and&#13;
Gary Schneeberger have very&#13;
different managment styles&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
and they both leave very big&#13;
shoes for me to attempt to&#13;
fill."&#13;
April 30, 1987 University of Wlaconaln-Parkalde Vol. 1 IS, No. 29&#13;
The old and the new&#13;
P t PSGA p dent Adrian Senano confer• with SOC chair&#13;
Don Harm y1 rat Mond y'a Senate m ting. In background,&#13;
current PSGA president Alex Pettit and ex~OC chair BIii&#13;
Serpe II t n to the proceedings.&#13;
SOC gets major status&#13;
ter 1x months of work and five drafts of Its constltutlo&#13;
, the tudent Organlzatton Council (SOC) has gained&#13;
m Jor status and la no longer a landing committee of the&#13;
Park ld Student Government Association (PSGA).&#13;
he P GA Senate voted on Monday. April 27, in favor of&#13;
ttalning major tatu • provided the change passes&#13;
f 11 r ferendum.&#13;
0 ' constitution wlll go into effect July 1. It plans to&#13;
n u Its landing program , including Toys for Tots,&#13;
Food for Families, involvement in the Recnlltment Fair&#13;
and h )ping club With bu g Ung.&#13;
In ddltlon, lt plans to ta.rt a Student Orlentatton Committ&#13;
for fr hmen and a spring Leader hip Work hop&#13;
mmltt .&#13;
fo the Senat vote, Don Harmeyer, president of&#13;
, ddre d the Senate with some of his concerns.&#13;
"J would be nlce lf w could set personallUes aside and&#13;
fo us on the issues. don't want SOC to become the pollU-&#13;
1 football of PSGA and Ranger. SOC doesn't write what&#13;
go ln the paper," he said.&#13;
H rm yer commented on SOC's accompllshmenta.&#13;
"Like J s Id back in January when I took over SOC chairmanshlp,&#13;
our number one goal would be to galn major&#13;
talus. We've accompllsh d th t, so If el tt• been a sucsfull&#13;
emest r.&#13;
" e're very proud of th consUtution. After f1v drafts&#13;
e flnally got one we felt we could work with. That's the&#13;
one we presented to the Senate. It's very hard to sit down&#13;
and write a 25 page document and have it tum out exactly&#13;
the way you want 1t on the fl.nt try," he said.&#13;
Harmeyer also addressed the concerns other major&#13;
statu organizations had about OC. "With OC gaining&#13;
S0Caeepage9&#13;
Inside ...&#13;
James Moody visits •.•••.••••••.•••..•.••••••• page 4&#13;
Student debuts on TV •.•••..•..••••..•.••••.• page 5&#13;
Women of color peclal. ...•••••..••....•••• center&#13;
"Cradle," "Camelot" reviews .•..••••••• page 10&#13;
Stranglers Interview ........•................ page 11&#13;
Wrestler also racewalker .......•...•...••. page 15&#13;
. . . . . . . . .&#13;
PSGA vice P..tesident reslgJ1.!&#13;
Anderson steps down&#13;
by Gar L chD&#13;
Editor&#13;
Citing scheduUng conflicts&#13;
and lack of cooperation from&#13;
colleague • Park Id Student&#13;
Government Association Vice&#13;
President Corby And rson resigned&#13;
Tue day, Aprll 28.&#13;
At pre s time, PSGA Ottl•&#13;
la.ls were in the proces of&#13;
ttlng up a election procedure&#13;
for his succes or.&#13;
In his r s gnation letter,&#13;
Anderson said the decision&#13;
"was in the best interests of&#13;
the un1versity."&#13;
"I think the senate la an&#13;
Important enough body that&#13;
we ne d som body who can&#13;
be a effective leader (to&#13;
serve as vice-president),'' Anderson&#13;
explained when Lntervtewed&#13;
W dnesday morning.&#13;
"l thought I could work my&#13;
way toward that - but I don't&#13;
enviston things getting better:&#13;
they're just getting&#13;
worse.''&#13;
The resignation has "very&#13;
Ultl " to do W1th the controversy&#13;
surrounding the senate's&#13;
approval of soc• major&#13;
status bid. "That wasn't a&#13;
deciding factor," he noted.&#13;
One of the factors that dld&#13;
contribute to his resignation,&#13;
Anderson aid, was that the&#13;
job required more time than&#13;
he had anticipated 1t would.&#13;
"When I decided to run, I&#13;
was told by Sue (Brudvig,&#13;
former PSGA vice-president}&#13;
and Adrl.a.n (Serrano, form r&#13;
SGA pre ident) that 1 would&#13;
n d to put Ln between 20 and&#13;
Corby Anderson&#13;
80 hours per week. I was prepared&#13;
to do that, but I wound&#13;
up putting 1n that much time&#13;
and more, an wasn't g tttng&#13;
anything done.&#13;
"It's not that 1 can't make&#13;
1t my top priority," he went&#13;
on. ''But I can't mak lt the&#13;
only res.son I come to school.&#13;
I do have to work, I do hav&#13;
to take classes and I do have&#13;
to do well in them."&#13;
Another problem, according&#13;
to Anderson, was that he and&#13;
PSOA President Alex P Wt&#13;
"got off to a bad start" with&#13;
the senate.&#13;
• A lot of people didn't support&#13;
our candidacy in the b •&#13;
giMlng, and they weren't&#13;
about to start a.tter we won&#13;
the election," he comment d.&#13;
"Jl'a a relatively young senate,&#13;
and rather than working&#13;
together to try to gain some&#13;
experience as a body, the nate&#13;
seemed to work against&#13;
me and Al right from the&#13;
et.art.''&#13;
Anderson admita that his&#13;
inexperience (he had nev r&#13;
worked in student government&#13;
prior to wlnnlng the&#13;
March election) contributed&#13;
to the difficulty of the transition&#13;
of admlnl trationa, bu&#13;
he doesn't believe all the&#13;
problem can be traced to&#13;
that source.&#13;
"I think my lnexperlenc&#13;
only hurt me to the extent&#13;
that oth r people anticipated&#13;
I wasn't going to be able to do&#13;
the job,·' he said. "And when&#13;
that's the caa , you don"t get&#13;
much cooperation or respect&#13;
from your colleagues.&#13;
''You get to feeling,.. he&#13;
added, ''that you're just a fig.&#13;
u.reh.ead and that other people&#13;
are really running th organization."&#13;
Although the experience&#13;
hun't been aa rewarding as&#13;
h would have llk d, Anderson&#13;
baa no regre about&#13;
seekbtg as capturing the position.&#13;
''The vice-preeldency 1s&#13;
something you can't really&#13;
prepare for," he explalned.&#13;
"But lt's been a good experience&#13;
or me • and I don't&#13;
think I'm the only one who&#13;
benef1tted from lt. H anyth1rt&#13;
can be gained from th1a (re •&#13;
lgnation), I hope lt's that people&#13;
wU1 realize how important&#13;
student leadership poslUo&#13;
like PSGA vice-preeld nt&#13;
are. ♦ '&#13;
Carr takes over Ranger driver's seat&#13;
J nny Carr has been named&#13;
editor-in-chief of the Ranger&#13;
for 1987-88.&#13;
The selection was made on&#13;
the recommendation of a&#13;
committee conststJng of two&#13;
students, two faculty and a&#13;
member of the adminlstration.&#13;
The Ranger Board of Directors&#13;
then voted to accept&#13;
the recommendation.&#13;
She replaces Gary Schneeberger,&#13;
who has held the position&#13;
for the past year.&#13;
Carr served as both news&#13;
editor and feature editor this&#13;
year, after contributing a a&#13;
staff writer during 1985-86. In&#13;
addition to her Ranger in•&#13;
volvement, she' been SOA&#13;
senator, a Campus Ambassa•&#13;
dor, a member of SUFAC, a&#13;
tutor in the writing center&#13;
and has served on several&#13;
faculty and university committees.&#13;
"I hope the tudents will&#13;
recognize that the Ranger ls&#13;
their paper," Carr commented.&#13;
"l want to encourage students&#13;
who have story ideas or&#13;
would llke to be part of the&#13;
Rang r family to come 1n and&#13;
get acquainted with our eclectic&#13;
group.&#13;
"When I was first a student&#13;
at Parkside I was very crttlcal&#13;
of the paper," she contln•&#13;
ued. "I kept my mouth shut,&#13;
however, ecause I was not Ln&#13;
a poslUon to give the time&#13;
necessary to make a contrtbuUon."&#13;
' "When I did b come involved,&#13;
I realized that the&#13;
productton of a quality paper&#13;
1s Q difficult job and takes a&#13;
lot of cooperation from a&#13;
number of people. (Former&#13;
edit.ors) J ennte Tunkiec.z and&#13;
Gary Schneeberger have very&#13;
different managment styles&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
and they both leave very btg&#13;
shoes for me to attempt to&#13;
fill ...&#13;
L ---&#13;
perspectives 2 Thursday, April 29, 1987 RANGER&#13;
youn views&#13;
Masturbation: pro&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I'm writing in response to&#13;
Mr. Hogan's letter about his&#13;
embarassment over the article&#13;
on masturbation.&#13;
I'm somewhat embarassed&#13;
(just a tiny bit) myself - only&#13;
my embarassment stems&#13;
from knowing there are&#13;
adults (I'm assuming Mr.&#13;
Hogan is over 18 years of&#13;
age) who are embarassed&#13;
just by reading about sexuality.&#13;
And I feel sorry for those&#13;
who equate non-exploitative&#13;
articles of sexuality with&#13;
phrases or terms such as "hit&#13;
bottom," "disgusting," etc.&#13;
The article was clearly titled,&#13;
so that if you were skittish&#13;
about the topic of masturbation,&#13;
you didn't have to read&#13;
it.&#13;
The Ranger has not pushed&#13;
"freedom of the press to the&#13;
extreme." One of the responsibilities&#13;
of "freedom of the&#13;
press" is to inform. The article&#13;
did just that - it informed.&#13;
And it did so in a non-sensational,&#13;
nonexploitative manner.&#13;
I fear for the survival of&#13;
our society if we are not willing&#13;
to accept an obviously&#13;
small risk of the "freedom of&#13;
the press;" that risk being&#13;
that we might read some&#13;
things that will bother us. It's&#13;
a small price to pay. Hopefully,&#13;
someday everyone will&#13;
be willing to pay it.&#13;
Glen Larson&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Two things bother me coneering&#13;
the April 16 edition of&#13;
the Ranger. The article entitled&#13;
"Masturbation is safe,&#13;
satisfying" was woefully&#13;
inappropriate and perhaps&#13;
misplaced. This article would&#13;
have served a better purpose&#13;
in a sex manual.&#13;
While it could be argued&#13;
that this article is part of the&#13;
"Safe Sex Campaign" and&#13;
prevention of AIDS, etc., I&#13;
hardly think that students of&#13;
college age need to be lectured&#13;
on safe sex practices.&#13;
This is especially true when&#13;
one takes into account all of&#13;
the information which has&#13;
been made readily available&#13;
since the ADDS scare broke&#13;
out. Is this institution In existence&#13;
for the purposes of developing&#13;
intellect while attaining&#13;
higher education, or it&#13;
is here to serve as a mainstay&#13;
for social workers from&#13;
and con&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Brian Hogan's letter in response&#13;
to the article on masturbation&#13;
echoes my own sentiments&#13;
on the article. The article&#13;
was hardly informative&#13;
unless one was interested in&#13;
Ms. Kranich's personal experiences&#13;
in the area of selfgratification.&#13;
In the article Ms. Kranich&#13;
states that she was in third&#13;
Planned Parenthood?&#13;
As staff reporters, editors,&#13;
publishers, etc., for the&#13;
Hanger, what you print reflects&#13;
very much on the other&#13;
Parkside students - which&#13;
brings me to my other complaint.&#13;
I do not appreciate&#13;
being portrayed as condoning&#13;
such "literary artwork" as&#13;
the use of the four-letter "f&#13;
word" in editorials (as was&#13;
used in the Prince editorial)&#13;
or any other article. I hear&#13;
these words often enough in&#13;
the hallways or student&#13;
Union. I do not need to be exposed&#13;
to them in my student&#13;
newspaper as well.&#13;
I Relieve that those responsible&#13;
for making such slop&#13;
ought to re-evaluate a few&#13;
priorities, as you are making&#13;
a mockery out of the Ranger&#13;
and those whom it represents&#13;
- the entire student body here&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
Elizabeth Osredkar&#13;
grade and that "for some reason"&#13;
she "knew not to share&#13;
my experience with any of&#13;
my schoolmates." Obviously&#13;
she had more taste and class&#13;
as a third-grader!&#13;
She was correct in assuming&#13;
one thing: nobody asked&#13;
and quite frankly I'm surprised&#13;
she thought anyone&#13;
would care.&#13;
Diane Perkins&#13;
Stranger puts protestor in "pique&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am writing this letter to&#13;
protest the sexual slur and innuendo&#13;
perpetrated by the&#13;
front cover of your April&#13;
Fools' issue of t he Stranger.&#13;
As a man, as a masculist,&#13;
and as one of Frank Sinatra's&#13;
biggest fans, I object to that&#13;
cover's obvious insinuation&#13;
that Frank Sinatra does not&#13;
measure up to some standard&#13;
of masculine attractiveness.&#13;
While all men are aware of&#13;
society's standards of beauty,&#13;
few can measure up to it.&#13;
Sure, Frank is no Tom Selleck,&#13;
but hey, with all his&#13;
hair, Tom Selleck looks more&#13;
like Chancellor Kaplan than&#13;
Frank Sinatra does. (Okay,&#13;
I'll grant that Ms. Kaplan has&#13;
no mustache, but the point is&#13;
that if the standards of masculine&#13;
attractiveness are to&#13;
have anything to do with objective&#13;
reality, they should include&#13;
baldness. You're welcome,&#13;
Gary.)&#13;
One cannot look at the Kaplan/&#13;
Sinatra photo in isolation:&#13;
in the same issue,&#13;
Frank Gorshin and Wayne&#13;
Dannehl are both demeaned&#13;
for their shared deviances&#13;
from the Leading Man Look,&#13;
and Sports Editor Robb&#13;
Luehr is once again held up&#13;
(oof!) to riduicule and derision&#13;
for the fact that his body&#13;
will probably never show up&#13;
in any Soloflex commercials.&#13;
Granted, your so-called&#13;
"Mr. Blackwell's Best&#13;
Dressed List" does mention&#13;
Ranger award surprises student To ttlA EHitnr*&#13;
two female professors, presumably&#13;
included to protect&#13;
yourself against charges of&#13;
sexism; this feeble gesture,&#13;
however, is shown for what it&#13;
is by the fact that there are&#13;
not two, not three, but six&#13;
male professors chided because&#13;
they fall short of GQ&#13;
criteria.&#13;
I call upon the Ranger to&#13;
learn to understand and annihilate&#13;
sexism. If this comes&#13;
at the expense of o ur sense of&#13;
humor, or ability to laugh at&#13;
ourselves, our sense of and&#13;
appreciation for beauty, and&#13;
the differences between us, so&#13;
be it. In seriousness,&#13;
blandness and sameness only&#13;
can we collectively triumph.&#13;
In a fit of pique,&#13;
Paul Berge&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
When I first read that the&#13;
Ranger won a national award&#13;
for excellence among college&#13;
and university newspapers, I&#13;
was surprised. After reading&#13;
the last few issues, that surprise&#13;
has changed to shock.&#13;
Have national standards&#13;
sunk so low that the Ranger&#13;
ranks among the top college&#13;
papers in the United States? I&#13;
surely hope that these high&#13;
marks have not been based&#13;
upon content.&#13;
Kim Kranich's article&#13;
"Masturbation is safe, satisfying"&#13;
(April 16, 1987) and&#13;
one of the (personal) ads&#13;
found in the current issue&#13;
(April 23, 1987) "The exploitation&#13;
of Frank Sinatra based&#13;
on his physical appearance&#13;
deeply upsets us. We ca n feel&#13;
ourselves becoming anorexic&#13;
already. Nancy and Frank&#13;
Jr."&#13;
Constance Rovelsta&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Gary L. Schneeberger Editor&#13;
Jenny Carr News Editor&#13;
Kelly McKissick Asst. News Editor&#13;
Kimberlie Kranich Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur Entertainment Editor&#13;
Tyson Wilda Asst. Entertainment Editor&#13;
Robb Luehr sports Editor&#13;
Michael J. Rohl Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Amy H. Ritter Copy Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bornhuetter Photo Editor&#13;
Leo Bose Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manager&#13;
Don Harmeyer Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan ...Business Staff Assistant&#13;
Dave Roback Advertising Manager&#13;
Steven Picazo Distribution Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Bernie Doll. Mary DeFazio, Terri DeRosier,&#13;
Michelle Eirich, Christina Lojeski, Randy LeCount,&#13;
Rick Luehr, Doug McEvoy, Julie Pendleton,&#13;
Michelle Petersen, Ted Price. Maria Rintz, Adrian&#13;
Serrano, Andy Tschumper, Jennie Tunkic'cz,&#13;
Karen Wegerhauer.&#13;
cyaml contenMns published evervThu!^ riarkSid»hWho days. puoiisned every Thursday during the acaadreem soicie ylye arre sePx°cenpsitb olev feorr bi,rse aekdist oarniadl phoollit&#13;
letfersmus/be signedW wiuf aafe I e otfon p 'li n m double"sPaced and 350 words or less \&#13;
held upon request ' elePhone number included for ver ification purposes. Names will be with&#13;
tag*. reserves the right to edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or de-&#13;
Thursday ** a" ^ a"d C,aSSified ads'is Mo^V at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
^?5«&#13;
Member of the caossuoeocairaeroe p«essia &gt;&#13;
your views&#13;
Masturbation: pro ...&#13;
To Ul EdHor:&#13;
I'm writing In respo e to&#13;
Mr. Hogan's letter about h1I&#13;
embaraaament over the arti•&#13;
cle on masturbation.&#13;
I'm somewhat emba.rassed&#13;
(just a tiny blt) my elf. only&#13;
my emba.rassment stems&#13;
trom knowing the are&#13;
adults (I'm assuming .&#13;
Hogan 1a over 18 yean of&#13;
ag ) who are embaraa ed&#13;
just by reading about aexuallty.&#13;
And I fe 1 sorry for those&#13;
who equate non-exploitative&#13;
articles of sexuality with&#13;
phrases or terms such a.a "hit&#13;
bottom," "dlaguetlng," etc.&#13;
Th article WU clearly tilled,&#13;
so that If you were klttish&#13;
about the topic of m turba•&#13;
t1on, you dldn•t have to read&#13;
lt.&#13;
The Ranger has not pushed&#13;
"freedom of the press to the&#13;
extreme." One of the responslbllltles&#13;
of ''freedom of the&#13;
press,. is to Inform. The article&#13;
did Just that - 1t informed.&#13;
And it did so In a non-sensational,&#13;
nonexploitaUve manner.&#13;
I fear for the survival ot&#13;
our society lf we are not will·&#13;
Ing to accept an obviously&#13;
small ruk of the "freedom of&#13;
the press;" that risk being&#13;
that we might read some&#13;
things that will bother us. It's&#13;
a small prtce to pay. Hopefully,&#13;
someday eveeyone w1ll&#13;
be will1ng to pay it.&#13;
GI n I.anon&#13;
• • and con&#13;
To tbe Editor:&#13;
Two things bother me concerlng&#13;
the Aprtl 16 edition of&#13;
th Rang r. Th artlcl entitled&#13;
''Masturbation 1s safe,&#13;
satisfytng'' was woefully&#13;
Inappropriate and perh&amp;p&#13;
misplaeed. ThJa article would&#13;
have aerv a better purpose&#13;
tn a aex manual.&#13;
Wh1I It could be argu d&#13;
that lhJa article is part or th&#13;
"Sa! X Campaign" and&#13;
p ventl n of AIDS, tc., I&#13;
hardly think that atudenta of&#13;
11 ge age ne d to be lectured&#13;
on safe ex practices.&#13;
Th1.a is specl.ally true wb n&#13;
o tak s lnto cc unt all of&#13;
th lnformaUon which baa&#13;
mad readily Vall bl&#13;
th AIDS broke&#13;
th1B lnaU uUon ln extstnc&#13;
for th purposes of dev&#13;
opln lntell ct whll attatning&#13;
higher e ucatton, or It&#13;
l here to serve as a mainstay&#13;
tor 1aJ wor en from&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Planned Parenthood?&#13;
M staff reporters, editors,&#13;
publishers, tc., for the&#13;
Ranger, what you print reflects&#13;
very much on the other&#13;
Parkside students ~ Which&#13;
brings me to my other complaJnt.&#13;
I do not appreciate&#13;
being portrayed as condoning&#13;
such "literary artwork " as&#13;
the use ol the four-letter • 'f&#13;
word" 1n editorial (as was&#13;
used In the Prince edltortal)&#13;
or any other article. I hear&#13;
these words otten enough 1n&#13;
the hallways or student&#13;
Union. I do not need to be exposed&#13;
to them 1n my student&#13;
newspaper as well.&#13;
I 6elleve that those responalble&#13;
for making such slop&#13;
ought to re.evaluate a few&#13;
prlortttes, as you are making&#13;
mockery out of the Ranger&#13;
and thOse whom it represents&#13;
• the entire student body here&#13;
at Park lde.&#13;
Elizabeth Osredkar&#13;
grade and that "for some reason"&#13;
she "knew not to share&#13;
my experience wlth any of&#13;
my schoolmates.' ' Obviously&#13;
she had mor taste and class&#13;
a.a a lhlrd-grader!&#13;
She was correct ln assuming&#13;
one thing: nobody asked&#13;
and quite frankly I'm surprised&#13;
she thought anyone&#13;
would care.&#13;
Dian Perkins&#13;
..&#13;
lrour views I&#13;
Stranger puts protestor in ''pique''&#13;
To tbe Editor:&#13;
I am writing lhls letter to&#13;
protest the sexual slur and In·&#13;
nuendo perpetrated by th&#13;
front cover of your April&#13;
Fools' issue of the Stranger.&#13;
As a man, as mascullst,&#13;
and as one of Frank Sinatra' s&#13;
biggest fans, I object to that&#13;
cover's obvious insinuation&#13;
that Frank Sinatra doe not&#13;
measure up to some standard&#13;
of masculine attractiveness.&#13;
While all men are aware of&#13;
society's standards of beauty,&#13;
few can measur up to lt.&#13;
Sure, Frank ts no Tom Selleck,&#13;
but hey, with all his&#13;
hair, Tom Selleck looks more&#13;
llke Chancellor Kaplan than&#13;
Frank Sinatra does. (Okay,&#13;
I'll grant that Ms. Kaplan has&#13;
no mustache, but the point is&#13;
that lf the standards of masculine&#13;
attractiveness are to&#13;
have anything to do with objective&#13;
reallty, the y should Include&#13;
baldne s. You' r welcome,&#13;
Gary. )&#13;
One cannot look at the Kaplan/&#13;
Sinatra photo ln isolation:&#13;
1n the same issue,&#13;
Frank Gorshin and Wayne&#13;
Da.nnebl are both demeaned&#13;
for their shared deviances&#13;
from the Leading Man Look,&#13;
and Sports Editor Robb&#13;
Luehr is once again held up&#13;
(oof!) to rtduicule and derision&#13;
for the fact that his body&#13;
will probably never show up&#13;
In any Soloflex commerc ial .&#13;
Granted , your SO·Call d&#13;
"Mr. Blackwell's Best&#13;
Dressed List" does mention&#13;
two female professors. pre.&#13;
sumably ineluded to protect&#13;
yourself against charges of&#13;
e m : this feebl ge ture,&#13;
however. ls shown for what tt&#13;
ls by tile tact that there are&#13;
not two, not three, but six&#13;
male professors chided b •&#13;
cause they fall short of GQ&#13;
criteria.&#13;
l call upon the Rang r to&#13;
learn to understand and rumlhllate&#13;
sexism. If thi comes&#13;
at the expense of our sen of&#13;
humor, or ability to laugh t&#13;
ourselves, our sense of and&#13;
appreciation for beauty, and&#13;
the differences betw en us, so&#13;
be tt. In seriousness,&#13;
blandness and samen s only&#13;
can we collecUvely triumph.&#13;
ID a flt of pique,&#13;
Paul Berge&#13;
Ranger award surprises student&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
When I flrst read tha the&#13;
Ranger won a national award&#13;
for excellence among college&#13;
and university newspapers, I&#13;
was surprised. After reading&#13;
the Ia.st few issues, that surprise&#13;
has changed to shock.&#13;
Have national standards&#13;
sunk low that the Ranger&#13;
ranks among th top college&#13;
papers in the United tates? I&#13;
surely hope that these high&#13;
marks have not been based&#13;
upon content.&#13;
Kim Kranich' s article&#13;
"Masturbation ls safe, $8.tlStying'&#13;
' (Aprtl 18, 19 7) and&#13;
one of the (person l) ads&#13;
found in the current I ue&#13;
(April 23, 1987) "The explolla·&#13;
Uon or Frank Sinatra based&#13;
on his physical appearance&#13;
deeply upsets us. W can feel&#13;
ourselves becoming anorexic&#13;
already. Nancy and Frank&#13;
Jr."&#13;
.-:nintr1tAnce Ro I tad&#13;
DITORIAL AFF BUSINESS STAFF Ranger is wntten and edited by students of UW-Parkside. who are solely res()OllSlble tor ,ts ed1ton~ ~t&#13;
cy and content It IS IIUbltShed every Thursday dunng the academte year except over brea ao Gary L. Schneeber r .... ............ ...... Editor&#13;
Jenny Carr .............................. News Editor&#13;
Ketly McK1ssick ................ Asst. News Editor&#13;
Kimberli Kr n ct, ................. Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Ne1baur .... .............. Entert 1nment Editor&#13;
Tyson Wilda ......... Asst Entert inment Editor&#13;
Robb Luehr ............... ......... .. $Ports Editor&#13;
Mtcha I J . Rohl ............... Asst . Sports Editor&#13;
Amy H Ritter ... ................ ...... ... Copy Edi.tor&#13;
Dave McEvoy ............ .... ............ Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bomhuetter ...................... Photo Editor&#13;
Leo Bose ..................... . .... Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan .. ............. Business Manager&#13;
Don Harmeyer .. ... . . Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan .. Business Staff Assistant&#13;
Dave ROback ... .... ... .. .... Advertising Manager&#13;
Steven Picazo ...... ........ Distribution Manager&#13;
GE .ERAL STAFF&#13;
8emie Doll. Mary D&amp;Fazio. Terri DeR0$191',&#13;
MiChelle EtrlCh . Chrishna, loie&amp;k1. Randy LeCount ,&#13;
Rlctc. Luohr. Doug McEvoy, Julie Pendleton .&#13;
Michelle Petersen. Ted Pnce, Mena R1ntz Adnan&#13;
Serrano . ArtfJy Tsehumper. Jennl8 Tunkr.·~.&#13;
Karen Wegemauer&#13;
days&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted only ti 1ney are typed . double •spaced and 350 wonts or °"'&#13;
letters most be signed, With a telephone number mclu&lt;led for venf1cat1on purposes Names •,,11 be Vilfflheld&#13;
UPOn reQUest&#13;
Ranoer reserves the right to edit lette rs and reruse those which are false and/or d&#13;
!amatory . ,,, ... ,. vi , ..&#13;
Deadline for all letters. and clasSthed ads. IS Monday at 10 am tor pub ication&#13;
Thursday .&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to Ra r. UW -Par e. Bo 2000 . Ke-&#13;
~ha WI 53141 . Telephone 414/5-53-2287 (Edrtonal) or 414/553 2295 (Adv rtis•&#13;
mg)&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, April 29, 1987 3 perspectives&#13;
Ranger lax in "reporting" details of SOC delay&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The article "reporting" the&#13;
delay of the approval of&#13;
major status for the Student&#13;
Organizations Council (SOC)&#13;
and the Ranger's editorial,&#13;
"Senate sloppy in dealing&#13;
with SOC," seriously lack the&#13;
proper perspective and do not&#13;
include all the issues involved.&#13;
In fall 1986. SOC placed the&#13;
pursuit of major status as one&#13;
of their top priorities of the&#13;
year. It took six months from&#13;
the time of inception to final&#13;
SOC approval for the matter&#13;
to be presented to the PSGA&#13;
Senate. To assume that a constitution,&#13;
titled a fifth draft&#13;
(not titled final copy) would&#13;
have to pass in one meeting&#13;
of the PSGA Senate after it&#13;
took six months to formulate&#13;
is absolutely ridiculous.&#13;
The UW-Parkside Student&#13;
Organization Handbook,&#13;
Chapter 10, states: "An organization&#13;
is granted major&#13;
group status by the PSGA,&#13;
Inc., Senate after an extensive&#13;
application process. For&#13;
the specific process that a&#13;
group must go through to become&#13;
a major status organization,&#13;
contact the Pro-Tempore&#13;
of the PSGA, Inc., Senate."&#13;
Both Don Harmeyer, the&#13;
current SOC chair, and Bill&#13;
Serpe, the past SOC chair,&#13;
were informed by the Pro-&#13;
Tempore and myself that a&#13;
three-week process (consistent&#13;
with the three weeks it&#13;
took for Peer Support's appeal)&#13;
was in place and should&#13;
be used for SOC's appeal.&#13;
SOC's leadership not only ignored&#13;
this process, they also&#13;
failed to notify the PSGA Vice&#13;
President or Pro-Tempore&#13;
that this business would be&#13;
presented to the Senate at the&#13;
April 20 meeting. This was&#13;
highly irresponsible.&#13;
When Peer Support appealed&#13;
for major organization&#13;
status in 1981, not only did&#13;
they present their governing&#13;
documents, they included a&#13;
rationale, their budget, a list&#13;
of accomplishments and their&#13;
future plans. This information&#13;
was not presented by SOC to&#13;
the PSGA senate.&#13;
Finally, and most important,&#13;
SOC failed to propose&#13;
the appropriate changes to&#13;
PSGA's governing documents:&#13;
the PSGA constitution&#13;
(Article IV, sub-article II,&#13;
section 1), the PSGA Senate&#13;
By-Laws (XII) and the PSGA&#13;
Bylaws (SOC's governing&#13;
documents).&#13;
I suggest that the Ranger&#13;
get the facts straight before&#13;
they accuse the Senate of incomptence.&#13;
Sue Brudvig&#13;
1986-87 PSGA&#13;
Senate President SOC made some mistakes in major status bid&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Let's not discuss if SOC&#13;
should get major status or&#13;
not. Let's discuss the charges&#13;
that the PSGA Senate was&#13;
sloppy and irresponsible for&#13;
not making a decision on this&#13;
issue at a recent meeting.&#13;
The PSGA Senate meeting&#13;
in question took place April&#13;
20. The Senate did make mistakes&#13;
at this meeting; however&#13;
the blame for the mistakes&#13;
is not theirs alone.&#13;
At its April 8 meeting, SOC&#13;
approved a a fifth draft of its&#13;
proposed constitution. They&#13;
did not make nor pass a motion&#13;
to appeal for major&#13;
status. They finally passed&#13;
the motion to appeal two days&#13;
after the PSGA Senate meeting&#13;
on April 22. This is one&#13;
reason the PSGA Senate&#13;
should not have been asked to&#13;
act on this issue at the April&#13;
20th meeting.&#13;
At PSGA's April 20 Senate&#13;
meeting, Don Harmeyer, the&#13;
SOC chairperson, asked the&#13;
PSGA Senate to take action&#13;
on business that was done at&#13;
the April 8 SOC meeting, however,&#13;
no minutes of this meeting&#13;
were presented to the&#13;
senators. The Senate should&#13;
not have been asked to take&#13;
action on this issue without&#13;
the minute.&#13;
SOC has a committee called&#13;
the Budget and Review Committee&#13;
(B&amp;RC). I have been&#13;
attending SOC meetings for&#13;
over three years and SOC has&#13;
never approved business of&#13;
B&amp;RC without minutes of the&#13;
meeting when the business&#13;
took place. Why should the&#13;
SOC chairperson expect the&#13;
PSGA Senate to pass SOC&#13;
business without the minutes?&#13;
This is another reason the&#13;
PSGA Senate should not have&#13;
been asked to act on this&#13;
issue at the Senate meeting of&#13;
April 20th.&#13;
SOC started working on this&#13;
five or six months ago; obviously,&#13;
it is important. It took&#13;
them a long time to formulate&#13;
the constitution. Why should&#13;
SOC expect the Senate to act&#13;
in one week? Sure they set up&#13;
a meeting for those interested&#13;
to talk about the issue, but&#13;
this just shows how important&#13;
the issue is and should just&#13;
mark the beginning of long&#13;
debate on the issue.&#13;
Harmeyer stated that the&#13;
Senate was irresponsible.&#13;
What about the half-dozen&#13;
times this year that SOC&#13;
minutes should have been&#13;
presented to the Senate for&#13;
approval and the SOC chairperson&#13;
was not at the meeting&#13;
to present them? Also, it is irresponsible&#13;
on Harmeyer's&#13;
part that no documentation of&#13;
SOC's accomplishments or&#13;
goals have been presented to&#13;
the PSGA Senate to supportthe&#13;
appeal for major status.&#13;
The PSGA Senate did make&#13;
mistakes at this meeting,&#13;
however these facts show that&#13;
they are not the only group&#13;
that makes mistakes. We are&#13;
all students working for the&#13;
good of the students and what&#13;
is needed is more communication.&#13;
I will take fault for&#13;
some of this lack of communication&#13;
and the SOC officers&#13;
need to take some fault also.&#13;
Adrian Serrano&#13;
Nobody asked me. but...&#13;
Why are we making such a fuss over some jokes?&#13;
by Tyson Wilda&#13;
Anorexia, AIDS, homosexuality,&#13;
feminism, chauvinism,&#13;
racism, sexuality, masturbation,&#13;
abortion and rape are all&#13;
wonderful words to use to attract&#13;
attention to an article.&#13;
They also make good topics&#13;
of "tasteless" humor.&#13;
HELLO! I really hope&#13;
someone made it past that&#13;
last paragraph because this is&#13;
the important part. Is everyone&#13;
paying attention now?&#13;
THESE ARE ONLY JOKES!!&#13;
Somehow, someone seems&#13;
to have gotten the idea that&#13;
this "tasteless" humor is a&#13;
personal attack directed&#13;
straight at them and meant to&#13;
publicly humiliate them and&#13;
anyone like them. Somehow,&#13;
the new sensitive mood of the&#13;
Eighties seems to have replaced&#13;
our collective sense of&#13;
humor.&#13;
Lately, there's an anti-sexism&#13;
bandwagon claiming that&#13;
a photo poking fun at Chancellor&#13;
Kaplan is a disgrace to&#13;
all women. These same people&#13;
seem to have completely&#13;
missed the fact that the editor&#13;
of this same publication&#13;
was shown bald on the front&#13;
page and Sports Editor Robb&#13;
Luehr was the target of a&#13;
joke about obesity. The argument&#13;
could be made that this&#13;
would make men feel insignificant&#13;
about their self-images&#13;
much more directly than one&#13;
woman's fictional resemblance&#13;
to a popular male&#13;
singer.&#13;
Anorexia, AIDS, homosexuality,&#13;
feminism, chauvinism, racism, sexuality,&#13;
masturbation, abortion and rape are all&#13;
wonderful words to use to attract&#13;
attention to an article.&#13;
I'm sorry, I forgot that&#13;
white males aren't sensitive&#13;
to humor. I guess that this&#13;
means that a joke is only OK&#13;
if it's directed at a male&#13;
WASP. Only the "majority"&#13;
deserves to be made fun of&#13;
these days.&#13;
The point of a joke is to&#13;
make people laugh and forget&#13;
about their problems. The&#13;
point is not to hurt people.&#13;
The American culture has&#13;
always made jokes about&#13;
sensitive subjects in order to&#13;
not only brighten people's&#13;
moods, but also to point out&#13;
the serious nature of these&#13;
subjects. Three volumes of&#13;
"Tasteless" humor were published&#13;
in this decade. All of&#13;
them made a large profit. No&#13;
cases of suicide or homicide&#13;
are on record as being caused&#13;
,by these books. I doubt that&#13;
-the Ranger will cause this&#13;
such heartache either.&#13;
Look, people, they are just&#13;
jokes. If you find them offensive&#13;
don't repeat them. If you&#13;
censor them, the only jokes in&#13;
the future will be about abstract&#13;
concepts that can't&#13;
whine about their offensive&#13;
nature. When was the last&#13;
time you found an abstract&#13;
concept to be funny?&#13;
Next week is our last publication date.&#13;
All letters must be in by 10 a.m. Monday.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-Thurs-day,-AprU-29,19-87 -3 ------·'perspectives&#13;
I your views I&#13;
Ranger lax in ''reporting'' details of SOC delay&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
The article "reporting" the&#13;
del y of th approval of&#13;
major status fQr the Student&#13;
OrganlzaUons Council (SOC)&#13;
and the Ranger's editorial,&#13;
"S nate sloppy ln dealing&#13;
with OC," seriously lack the&#13;
proper per pectlve and do not&#13;
include all the Issues lnvolv&#13;
d .&#13;
In fall 1986, SOC plac d the&#13;
pur ult of major status as one&#13;
of their top priorities of the&#13;
year. It took slx months from&#13;
th tlme of Inception to final&#13;
SOC approval for the matter&#13;
to be presented to the PSGA&#13;
Senate. To assume that a constitution,&#13;
t1Ued a fifth drat&#13;
(not titled final copy) would&#13;
have to pass in one meeting&#13;
of the PSGA Senate after lt&#13;
took slx months to formulate&#13;
is absolutely ridiculous.&#13;
The UW·Park8iae Student&#13;
Organ®tion Handbook,&#13;
Ch.apt r 10, states: "An organJzation&#13;
ls granted major&#13;
group status by the PSGA,&#13;
Inc., Senate after an extenlve&#13;
appllcatlon process. For&#13;
the specific process that a&#13;
group must go through to become&#13;
a major status organization,&#13;
contact the Pro-Tempore&#13;
of the PSGA, Inc. , Senate."&#13;
Both Don Harmeyer, the&#13;
current SOC chair, and BW&#13;
Serpe, the past SOC chair,&#13;
were informed by the ProTempore&#13;
and myself that a&#13;
three-week process ( consistent&#13;
with the three weeks it&#13;
took for Peer Support's appeal)&#13;
was in place and should&#13;
be used for SOC's appeal.&#13;
SOC's leadership not only Ignored&#13;
Ul1s process, they al.so&#13;
failed to noWy the PSGA Vice&#13;
President or Pro-Tempore&#13;
that thls business would be&#13;
presented to the Senate at the&#13;
April 20 meeting. This was&#13;
highly irresponsible.&#13;
When Peer Support appealed&#13;
for major organization&#13;
status in 1981, not only did&#13;
they present their governing&#13;
documents, they included a&#13;
rationale, their budget, 11st&#13;
of accomplishments and their&#13;
future plans. Thls information&#13;
was not presented by SOC to&#13;
the PSGA senate.&#13;
Flnally, and most important,&#13;
SOC failed to propose&#13;
the appropriate changes to&#13;
PSGA's governing documents:&#13;
the PSGA constitution&#13;
(Article IV, sub-article II,&#13;
section 1), the PSGA Senate&#13;
By-Laws (XII) and the PSGA&#13;
Bylaws (SOC's governing&#13;
documents).&#13;
I suggest that the Ranger&#13;
get the facts straight before&#13;
they accuse the Senate of lncomptence.&#13;
Sue Brudvlg&#13;
1988-8'2 PSGA&#13;
Senate President&#13;
SOC made some mistakes • ,n major status bid&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
Let's not discuss lf SOC&#13;
hould g t major status or&#13;
not. Let's discus the charges&#13;
that the PSGA Senate was&#13;
sloppy and irresponsible for&#13;
not ma.kl.ng a decision on thl&#13;
l ue at a rec nt me ting.&#13;
Th PSGA Sena.te meeUng&#13;
tn question took place April&#13;
20. Th enate did make m .&#13;
takes at this meeting; however&#13;
the blame for the mistake&#13;
l not th lrs alone.&#13;
At its Aprll 8 meeting, SOC&#13;
approv d a a fifth draft of its&#13;
proposed consUtution. They&#13;
did not make nor pass a motion&#13;
to appeal for major&#13;
status. They finally passed&#13;
the motion to appeal two days&#13;
after the PSGA Senate meet•&#13;
ing on April 22. This ls one&#13;
reason the PSGA Senate&#13;
hould not have been asked to&#13;
act on thls issue at the Aprll&#13;
20th meeting.&#13;
At PSGA's Aprll 20 Senate&#13;
meeting, Don Harmeyer, the&#13;
SOC chairperson, asked the&#13;
PSGA Senate to take action&#13;
on business that was done at&#13;
the Aprll 8 SOC meeting, howver,&#13;
no minutes of this meeting&#13;
were presented to the&#13;
senators. The Senate should&#13;
not hav been asked to take&#13;
action on this lsaue without&#13;
the minute.&#13;
NobodY. asked roe~ but ...&#13;
SOC has a committee called&#13;
the Budget and Review Committee&#13;
(B&amp;RC). I have been&#13;
attending SOC meetings for&#13;
over three years and SOC has&#13;
never approved business of&#13;
B&amp;RC without minutes of the&#13;
meeting when the business&#13;
took place. Why should the&#13;
SOC chairperson expect the&#13;
PSGA Senate to pass SOC&#13;
business without the minutes?&#13;
This ls another reason the&#13;
PSGA Senate should not have&#13;
been asked to act on th.ts&#13;
issue at the Senate meeting of&#13;
Aprtl 20th.&#13;
SOC started working on th1s&#13;
five or slx months ago; obviously,&#13;
it ls Important. It took&#13;
them a long tim to formulate&#13;
the constitution. Why shOuld&#13;
SOC expect the Senate to act&#13;
Jn one week? Sure they set up&#13;
a meeting for those interested&#13;
to talk about the issue, but&#13;
this just shows how important&#13;
the issue is and should just&#13;
mark the beginnlng of long&#13;
debate on the issue.&#13;
Harmeyer stated that the&#13;
Senate was irresponsible.&#13;
What about the half-dozen&#13;
times this year that SOC&#13;
minutes should have been&#13;
presented to the Senate for&#13;
approval and the SOC chairperson&#13;
was not at the meeting&#13;
to present them? Also, it ls irresponsible&#13;
on Harmeyer'•&#13;
part that no documentation of&#13;
SOC's accomplishments or&#13;
goals have been presented to&#13;
the PSGA Senate to supportthe&#13;
appeal for major status.&#13;
The PSGA Senate did make&#13;
mistakes at this meeting,&#13;
however these facts show that&#13;
they are not the only group&#13;
that makes mistakes. We are&#13;
all students working for the&#13;
good of the students and what&#13;
ls needed ls more communication.&#13;
I wUl take fault for&#13;
some of this lack of communication&#13;
and the SOC officers&#13;
need to take some fault also.&#13;
Adrian. Serrano&#13;
Why are we making such a fuss over some Jokes?&#13;
I••&#13;
by Ty n Wilda&#13;
Anorexia, AIDS, homosexuality,&#13;
femlnlsm. chauvtnlsm,&#13;
racism, s xuality, masturbaUon,&#13;
abortion and rape are all&#13;
wonderful words to use to attract&#13;
attention to an article.&#13;
They also make good topics&#13;
of '•tasteless'' humor.&#13;
HELLO! 1 r ally hope&#13;
someone made lt pa t that&#13;
last paragraph because this is&#13;
the lmportant pa.rt. Is everyone&#13;
paying attention now?&#13;
THESE ARE ONLY JOKES!!&#13;
m how, som one seems&#13;
to have gotten the idea that&#13;
this "tasteles " humor t a&#13;
personal ttack dir cted&#13;
straight at them and meant to&#13;
publicly humlllate them and&#13;
anyone Uk them. Somehow,&#13;
the new sensitive rnood of the&#13;
Eighties seems to have replaced&#13;
our collective sense of&#13;
humor.&#13;
Lately, there's an anti-sexism&#13;
bandwagon claiming that&#13;
a photo poking fun at Chancellor&#13;
Kaplan is a disgrace to&#13;
all women. These same people&#13;
eem to have completely&#13;
missed the fact that the editor&#13;
of this same publication&#13;
was shown bald on the front&#13;
page and Sports Editor Robb&#13;
Luehr was the target of a&#13;
joke about obesity. The argument&#13;
could be made that this&#13;
would make men feel inslgniflcant&#13;
about their self-images&#13;
much more directly than one&#13;
woman's fictional resemblance&#13;
to a popular male&#13;
singer.&#13;
Anorexia, AIDS, homosexuality,&#13;
feminism, chauvinism, racism, sexuality,&#13;
masturbation, abortion and rape are all&#13;
wonderful words to use to attract&#13;
attention to an article.&#13;
I'm sorry, I forgot that&#13;
white males aren't sensitive&#13;
to humor. I guess that thls&#13;
means that a joke ls only OK&#13;
lf It's directed at a male&#13;
WASP. Only the "majortty"&#13;
deserves to be made fun of&#13;
theae days.&#13;
The point of a joke ls to&#13;
mak people laugh and forget&#13;
about their problems. The&#13;
point la not to hurt people.&#13;
The American culture has&#13;
, always made jokes about&#13;
sensitive subjects in order to&#13;
not only brlghten peopte•s&#13;
moods, but also to potnt out&#13;
the sertous nature of these&#13;
subjects. Three volumes of&#13;
"Tasteless" humor were published&#13;
in this decade. All of&#13;
them made a large profit. No&#13;
cases of suicide or homicide&#13;
are on record as being caused&#13;
, by these books. I doubt that&#13;
, the Ranger will cause this&#13;
such heartache either.&#13;
Look, people, they are just&#13;
jokes. U you find them offensive&#13;
don't repeat them. If you&#13;
censor them, the only jokes in&#13;
the fUture will be about abatract&#13;
concepts that can't&#13;
whine about their offensive&#13;
nature. When was the last&#13;
time you found an abstract&#13;
concept to be funny?&#13;
Next week is our last publication date.&#13;
All letters must be in by 10 a.m. Mond~y. . . . . . ... . . . . . . .. t .. • • • •• I • • ,. ...&#13;
,&#13;
4 Thursday, April 29, 1987&#13;
55 Ranger&#13;
— NEWS BRIEFS —&#13;
Deposit on admission required&#13;
New freshmen must pay a $100 deposit when applying&#13;
at Stevens Point to confirm their intent to attend the college,&#13;
reported the Stevens Point Journal.&#13;
Chancellor Phillip Marshall told members of the Faculty&#13;
Senate that the deposits are being used to help determine&#13;
how many students will indeed attend Stevens Point&#13;
JrV^S' The deP°sits will be applied toward the individual's&#13;
tuition.&#13;
The deposit requirement has been in effect for nearly&#13;
three weeks. Nearly 700 prospective students have paid,&#13;
while nineteen others requested waivers, citing need for&#13;
financial aid.&#13;
Marshall and his administrative staff have decided that&#13;
«ienew freshman class this fall should be limited to about&#13;
1.700 students, down nearly 122 from one year earlier.&#13;
Marshall said that if applications continue to be received&#13;
so quickly, it will be necessary to "close or greatly curtail'&#13;
admissions as has been done several times before.&#13;
Student credit more valuable&#13;
Obtaining a credit card has become easier for students&#13;
over the past few years as credit card companies compete&#13;
for sales, reported the National On-Campus Report.&#13;
Most credit card companies only handle billing and settlement&#13;
guidelines, leaving the banks, credit unions and&#13;
savings and loans to determine recipients of cards.&#13;
Although students are usually considered risks because&#13;
most have unstable employment records and no established&#13;
credit rating, competition between credit cardcompanies&#13;
has driven them to accept students.&#13;
However, some companies are lessening the risk of&#13;
monetary loss by requesting a parent to co-sign application&#13;
forms. Professor Noel Capon of Columbia feels that&#13;
the companies are taking more risks because "students&#13;
graduate and become real people. The companies are attempting&#13;
to make people loyal to them early on in their&#13;
lives and hope that they'll hold on to the cards over&#13;
time."&#13;
Valparaiso has complaint man&#13;
Students at Valparasio are encouraged to complain - to&#13;
Henry Prahl, head of a retention committee aimed at&#13;
really listening to students' concerns, reported the National&#13;
On-Campus Report.&#13;
Prahl makes himself a target for school complaints, inviting&#13;
angry students to tell him about their frustrations.&#13;
He directs specific complaints to the appropriate officials&#13;
and follows up on how the complaints are being handled.&#13;
-compiled by Kelly McKissick&#13;
FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
KENOSHA'S ONLY INDEPENDENT&#13;
COMMUNITY BANK&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Main Office — Auto Bank — TYME&#13;
NORTH BRANCH — TYME&#13;
SOUTH BRANCH — TYME&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C. PHONE: 658-2331&#13;
Trade bill means "massive job loss"&#13;
by Amy Hitter&#13;
The U.S. House of Representatives&#13;
began debate Tuesday&#13;
on a sweeping trade bill&#13;
and the controversial Gephardt&#13;
Amendment. Parkside&#13;
students Monday were&#13;
treated to a preview of the&#13;
discussion when congressman&#13;
Jim Moody, a member of the&#13;
house Ways and Means Committee,&#13;
spoke in Main Place.&#13;
Moody discussed free trade&#13;
and protectionism, the two&#13;
extremes around which debate&#13;
is expected to centralize.&#13;
"As a professional economist,"&#13;
he said, "I start with a&#13;
strong bias in favor of free&#13;
trade. Trade without barriers,&#13;
trade without tariffs&#13;
does benefit both parties. But&#13;
we do not live in a world of&#13;
free trade. We live in a world&#13;
where there is a vast array of&#13;
complex, and sometimes not&#13;
so complex, hidden, and&#13;
sometimes not so hidden, direct,&#13;
and sometimes not so direct,&#13;
barriers to free trade.&#13;
"Over the course of our history,"&#13;
Moody continued,&#13;
"trade with foreign countries&#13;
has not been a very significant&#13;
element. It hasn't made&#13;
much of a dent in our economy.&#13;
It has never been controversial.&#13;
But it has become&#13;
very controversial (now) because&#13;
of the staggering volume&#13;
of the trade imbalance."&#13;
The U.S. trade deficit has&#13;
ballooned from $37 billion in&#13;
1980 to $170 billion in 1986,&#13;
Moody explained. This year's&#13;
deficit may reach $190 billion.&#13;
"What this means," the&#13;
Congressman said, "is a massive&#13;
loss of U.S. jobs. For&#13;
every $40,000 you add to the&#13;
trade imbalance, you lose one&#13;
American job, on average. So&#13;
a $190 billion trade deficit&#13;
loses a range of 4 million U.S.&#13;
jobs per year."&#13;
U.S. trade imbalances&#13;
occur only in certain countries.&#13;
Moody cited seven&#13;
countries that are making&#13;
huge profits in America. Canada&#13;
exports 153 percent more&#13;
goods to the U.S. than it imports&#13;
from the U.S. The export-&#13;
import ratio for Japan is&#13;
318 percent; for Taiwan, 410&#13;
percent; for West Germany,&#13;
248 percent; for Italy, 235 percent;&#13;
for Hong Kong, 317 per-&#13;
Coming...&#13;
Friday, May 8th&#13;
PARTY ON&#13;
THE PAD&#13;
Live Band -&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Watch for it!&#13;
James Moody speaks in Main Place. photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
cent; and for Brazil, 187 percent.&#13;
"These are the kind of staggering&#13;
figures that are unsustainable,&#13;
politcally or economically,&#13;
for the United&#13;
States," said Moody.&#13;
He went on to explain that&#13;
the Gephard Amendment&#13;
classifies countries whose export-&#13;
import ratio is higher&#13;
than 150% as "excessive import&#13;
countries." Countries&#13;
that practice "a systematic&#13;
method of excluding American&#13;
imports" through tariff&#13;
or nontariff barriers, are&#13;
classified as "unwarranted&#13;
surplus." The Gephardt&#13;
Amendment applies only to&#13;
countries that are placed on&#13;
both excessive import and unwarranted&#13;
surplus lists.&#13;
"The Gephardt Amendment&#13;
says that if a country falls&#13;
under both those categories,&#13;
then the president of&#13;
United States must -&#13;
may, but must - engage m&#13;
negotiations with the country&#13;
in question to bring the surplus&#13;
down," Moody said.&#13;
Those negotiations have a&#13;
year to run. If at the end of&#13;
that year, nothing has happened&#13;
to remedy either the&#13;
excessive surplus or the unsAurPlus&#13;
situation,&#13;
the president must take certain&#13;
action to reduce the sur-&#13;
P1® Pe of action he&#13;
takes is not specified in the&#13;
amendment, or in the bill&#13;
that would be up to&#13;
president.&#13;
''So if a country is using unfair&#13;
trading practices/® he&#13;
continued, ••but less thin 175 SntorVXP°rtS o ver ^ ports, or if a country has a&#13;
large trade surplus over 175&#13;
more of its exports to&#13;
imports, but it's not pursuing&#13;
unfair trade practices ®&#13;
Gephardt Amendment&#13;
not come into play.&#13;
the&#13;
not&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
the&#13;
does&#13;
4. — Bouutt iift&#13;
they are doing both, then it&#13;
does. And if it does, then the&#13;
president has a finite period&#13;
to achieve results or must&#13;
take final action."&#13;
In the past, Moody said,&#13;
"What we have had before us&#13;
in Congress has been a series&#13;
of sector-specific proposals,&#13;
on shoes, on glassware, on&#13;
leather goods, on textiles, on&#13;
copper, to either enforce&#13;
trade agreements that have&#13;
been not very well kept, or&#13;
even go beyond those trade&#13;
agreements to insure American&#13;
jobs and American exports,&#13;
or to bar imports. The&#13;
problem with those is that&#13;
they are truly protectionistic,&#13;
and they do reduce the total&#13;
amount of goods and services&#13;
that are traded. I think they&#13;
are unwarranted and I am&#13;
opposed to them, except perhaps&#13;
as a bargaining technique.&#13;
"In my judgment, the Gephardt&#13;
Amendment is very&#13;
subjective," he continued. "It&#13;
is, more than anything, a bargaining&#13;
technique. I don't&#13;
think that year's time will&#13;
ever be needed. I think it is&#13;
only because there are real,&#13;
live, breathing, red-blooded&#13;
sanctions that lie at the end&#13;
of the trail of the Gephardt&#13;
Amendment - that those&#13;
sanctions are real - is the&#13;
very reason they will never&#13;
be invoked. The philosophy of&#13;
the Gephardt Amendment is&#13;
that it is results-oriented.&#13;
"I think we are overdue in&#13;
taking international trade seriously&#13;
in America," Moody&#13;
concluded. "We need to think&#13;
in terms of international&#13;
trade. Our future depends on&#13;
changing our basic philosophy&#13;
of foreign trade. We have&#13;
to take it seriously and we&#13;
have to demand equal fair&#13;
trade. All the Gephardt&#13;
Amendment does, and the&#13;
rest of the bill, is to try to&#13;
level the playing field."&#13;
4 Thursday, April 29, 1987&#13;
- NEWS BRIEFS -&#13;
Deposit on admission required&#13;
New freshmen must pay $100 d po lt wh n applying&#13;
at Stev na Point to confirm thelr Intent to attend the coll&#13;
ge, reported th tevena Polnt Journal.&#13;
Chancellor PhWlp Marshall told members of the Faculty&#13;
Senat that the d po lts are being used to help determine&#13;
how many students will lnd ed attend Stevens Polnt&#13;
in th fall. The deposita will be applied toward the Individual's&#13;
tuition.&#13;
The d po it requirement has b n tn effect for nearly&#13;
thre we ka. Nearly 700 pro p ctlv student have paid,&#13;
while nineteen others requested waivers, citing need for&#13;
flnanclal aid.&#13;
hall and his dmtn tratJv staff ha.ve decided that&#13;
th new r shman cl this fall sh uld be Umlt d to about&#13;
1,700 students, own nearly 122 from one year earlier.&#13;
f hall said that if ppl cations continue to be received&#13;
so lckly, It wt1l be ne s ry to "close or greaUy curtail'&#13;
admt slona aa has been done several limes before.&#13;
Student cred t more valu ble&#13;
Obtalnlng credit card ecome easier for students&#13;
over the p t few yea as credit card companies compete&#13;
for sale , r ported th National On- mpu Report.&#13;
Mo t er dlt card companies only handle bllllng and ettlement&#13;
guide s, J a lng th bank , er dit unions and&#13;
ving and loans to determine recipients of cards.&#13;
Although students are usually considered rlaks because&#13;
most have unstabl employment records and no established&#13;
credit rating, competition between credit cardcompanlee&#13;
drlven them to accept tudents.&#13;
Ho ev r, some companies are lessening the rlsk of&#13;
mon tary oss by requesting a parent to co-slgn appllcatlon&#13;
forms. Professor oel Capon or Columbia feels that&#13;
th companies a.r ta.king more rlsks because "students&#13;
graduate and become real people. The companies are attempting&#13;
to m e people loyal to them early on ln their&#13;
Uv and hope that th y'll hold on to the cards ov r&#13;
Ume."&#13;
Valparaiso has complaint man&#13;
tud nta t Valparasio ar ncouraged to compl.ain - to&#13;
H nry Prahl, head of a r t nuon committee aimed at&#13;
ally Ustenlng to atu nta' concerns, reported th National&#13;
On-Campu Report&#13;
Prahl makes himself a target for school complaints, 1nv1tlng&#13;
angry students to t ll him about th tr frustrations.&#13;
He di c specific compl lnts to the appropriate officials&#13;
and follows up on how th compl lnts are being handled.&#13;
••comp led by Kelly McKlsalck&#13;
FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
KENOSHA'S ONLY INDEPENDENT&#13;
COM UNllY BANK&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Main Office - Auto Bank - TYME&#13;
NORTH BRANCH - TYME&#13;
SOUTH BRANCH - TYME&#13;
BRISTOL .&#13;
PLEASANT PRA RIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
MEMBER F.0.1.C. PHONE: 658-2331&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Trade bill means ''massive job loss''&#13;
by Amy Ritter&#13;
Th U.S. Hou e of RepresentaUves&#13;
began debate Tuesday&#13;
on a sweeping trade bill&#13;
and the controversial Gephardt&#13;
Amendment. Parkside&#13;
tudenta Monday were&#13;
treated to a preview of the&#13;
c:U.acusalon when congreuman&#13;
Jim oody, a member of the&#13;
house Way and Means Committee,&#13;
spoke in Main Place.&#13;
Moody discussed free trade&#13;
and protectionism, the two&#13;
extremes arowid which d •&#13;
bate la expected to centralize.&#13;
'' s a professional economl&#13;
t," he d, "l tart wtth a&#13;
strong blas ln favor of tree&#13;
trade. Trad without barriers,&#13;
trade without tarlffa&#13;
does benefit both partte . But&#13;
we do not live 1n a world of&#13;
fre trade. We live in a world&#13;
where there Ja a vast array of&#13;
complex, an sometime not&#13;
so complex, hidden, and&#13;
sometimes not so hidden, direct,&#13;
and aometlmes not so direct,&#13;
barriers to free trade.&#13;
• 'Over the course of o r history,"&#13;
Moody continued,&#13;
"trad with foreign COWltries&#13;
has not been a very signlf1-&#13;
cant element. It hasn't made&#13;
much of a dent tn our economy.&#13;
It has never been controveraial.&#13;
But it has become&#13;
very controversial (now) be·&#13;
cause of the staggering volume&#13;
of the trade imbalance.,.&#13;
The U.S. trade deficit haa&#13;
ballooned from $87 bllllon ln&#13;
1980 to $170 blllion 1n 1986,&#13;
Moody explained. Thia year's&#13;
deficit may reach $100 bll11on.&#13;
.,What th1s means," the&#13;
O)ngresaman said, "is a maaatve&#13;
loss of U.S. jobs. For&#13;
every $40,000 you dd to the&#13;
trade imbalance, you lose one&#13;
American job, on average. So&#13;
a $100 billion trade deficit&#13;
loses a range ot 4. m111lon U.S.&#13;
jobs per year."&#13;
U.S. trade imbalances&#13;
occur only ln certa.ln countries.&#13;
Moody cited !!even&#13;
countries that are making&#13;
huge profits 1n Amerlca. Canada&#13;
exports 1~ percent more&#13;
goods to the U.S. than It im•&#13;
ports from the U.S. The export-&#13;
import ratio for Japan 1&#13;
S18 percent: for Taiwan, UO&#13;
percent; for West Germany,&#13;
2"8 percent: for Italy, 286 percent;&#13;
for Hong Kong, 817 per-&#13;
Coming •••&#13;
Friday, May 8th&#13;
PARTY ON&#13;
THE PAD&#13;
Live Band•&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Watch for it!&#13;
cent; and for Brazil, 187 percent.&#13;
"These are the 1nd of taggertng&#13;
ttgure that are unsustainable,&#13;
polltcally or eco.&#13;
nomlcally, for the United&#13;
States," saJd Moody.&#13;
He wen on to explain that&#13;
the Gephard Amendment&#13;
elaaslfles countries whose export-&#13;
import raUo is higher&#13;
than IGO% as · 'excessive import&#13;
countries." Countries&#13;
that pracUce "a sy tematic&#13;
method of excluding Amertcan&#13;
imports" through tariff&#13;
or nontarlff barriers, are&#13;
class1fled aa "unwarranted&#13;
surplus." The Gephardt&#13;
Amendment applies only to&#13;
countries that are placed on&#13;
both exce slve lmport and unwarranted&#13;
surplus lists.&#13;
"The Gephardt Amendment&#13;
says that lf country falls&#13;
under both those categorles,&#13;
then the president of th&#13;
United States must - not&#13;
may, but mu t . engage tn&#13;
negotiations with the country&#13;
1n question to bring the urplus&#13;
down," Moody said.&#13;
"Those negotiations have a&#13;
year to run. If at the end of&#13;
that year, nothing has happened&#13;
to remedy either the&#13;
excessive surplus or the unwarranted&#13;
surplu situation,&#13;
the president mu t take certain&#13;
acUon to reduce the surplus.&#13;
The type of acUon he&#13;
takes ls not speclf1 d ln the&#13;
amendment, or tn the blll .&#13;
that would be up to the&#13;
presld nt.&#13;
"So lf a country l u lng unfair&#13;
trading practices." he&#13;
continued, "but less than 17~&#13;
percen of exports over lmports,&#13;
or 1f a country has a&#13;
large trade surplus over 17?5&#13;
percent more of 1 exports to&#13;
imports, but it's not pursuing&#13;
unfair trade practice , th&#13;
Gephardt Amendment does&#13;
not co e Into play. But 11&#13;
they re doln both, th lt&#13;
photo by oaw 11(:ffoJ aln Place.&#13;
doe . And if t , then the&#13;
president finite period&#13;
to achieve results or must&#13;
tak Hnat action."&#13;
In th pa.st, oody said,&#13;
"What we hav bad before us&#13;
ln Congress haa been series&#13;
of sector-apeclftc proposal.I,&#13;
on shoes, on glassware, on&#13;
leather goods, on textiles, on&#13;
copper, to either enforce&#13;
trade agreements that have&#13;
been not very well k pt, or&#13;
e en go b yond those trade&#13;
gr emen to Insure Amerl•&#13;
can jobs and Americ n exports.&#13;
or to bar imports. The&#13;
problem with those la that&#13;
they are truly protectlonlBUc,&#13;
and they do r duce the total&#13;
amount of goodS and services&#13;
that a.re traded. I think they&#13;
are Wlwarranted and I am&#13;
oppo d to them, exc pt per•&#13;
hap as a bargaining tech•&#13;
nlque.&#13;
"In my judgment, the Gephardt&#13;
Amendment ts very&#13;
subjective," he conttnu d. ''It&#13;
la. more than anything. a bar·&#13;
galnlng technique. I don't&#13;
think that year's tlme wU1&#13;
ever be n eded. I think lt ls&#13;
only because there are real,&#13;
ll e, br athing, red.blooded&#13;
sanctions that lie at the end&#13;
of the trail of the Gephardt&#13;
Amendment - that those&#13;
sancUon are real • ls the&#13;
very reason they wlll never&#13;
be invoked. The philosophy of&#13;
the Gephardt Amendment is&#13;
that tt results-oriented.&#13;
''I think w are overdue In&#13;
taking 1nt ma onal trade seriously&#13;
1n Amerlca,'' oodY&#13;
conclud d. "We need to thlnknal&#13;
1n term of Int rnatio&#13;
trade. r future d pends on&#13;
changing our basic phlloSO•&#13;
phy of foreign trad . We have&#13;
to tak it ertou ly and we&#13;
hav to d mand equal fall'&#13;
tr d . All the Gephardt&#13;
Am ndm nt o , and the&#13;
t of th blll, l to try to&#13;
1 ln&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, April 29,1987 5&#13;
lie president&#13;
Tolefree reflects on year&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It has been an honor and&#13;
pleasure to serve as United&#13;
Council President.&#13;
During the organization's&#13;
27-year existence, there have&#13;
been several dramatic&#13;
changes in the way students&#13;
interact and relay important&#13;
issues to policy makers.&#13;
There were periods where&#13;
students set the agenda. In&#13;
the 60's, the student involvement&#13;
in the political process&#13;
was at an all-time high. During&#13;
the past several years, we&#13;
have also dealt with a decline&#13;
in student participation. The&#13;
presence of apathy on our&#13;
campuses has caused frustrations&#13;
for student activists and&#13;
policy makers alike.&#13;
During my tenure as president,&#13;
I have been committed&#13;
to setting's new direction for&#13;
United Council (UC). Over&#13;
the years, UC has reacted to&#13;
changes only after the final&#13;
decisions have been made,&#13;
rather than proposing viable&#13;
solutions to the many complicated&#13;
issues facing students. I&#13;
have felt it is important for&#13;
our organization to become&#13;
pro-active, thereby increasing&#13;
our involvement in the process.&#13;
Today's students are different&#13;
from those who crowded&#13;
campuses twenty years ago.&#13;
Today's students are aggressive,&#13;
competitive, independent,&#13;
moderate, older and a little&#13;
selfish. These are changes&#13;
that UC must deal with if we&#13;
hope to continue to effectively&#13;
represent students in Wisconsin.&#13;
I am very pleased with our&#13;
achievements this year. However,&#13;
without the combined&#13;
efforts of the staff, the General&#13;
Assembly and, of course,&#13;
the students, none of these&#13;
goals could have realistically&#13;
been obtained. We must&#13;
always remember that UC&#13;
isn't the president, the staff&#13;
or an individual campus or&#13;
unit. UC is a union of students&#13;
working together to achieve&#13;
common goals.&#13;
This year, that goal has focused&#13;
on maintaining an affordable,&#13;
accessible University&#13;
System for all Wisconsin&#13;
citizens. We have expanded&#13;
and clarified students' rights&#13;
by developing new language&#13;
(under Section 36.00(5) of the&#13;
State Statutes) to help student,&#13;
administrators and the&#13;
Regents better understand&#13;
the role the students play in&#13;
The Old&#13;
Book Corner&#13;
the governing process of our&#13;
instutitions. We have heightened&#13;
the intent of the Statute&#13;
by becoming more responsible&#13;
for upholding the provision&#13;
prescribed under&#13;
36.09(5). This can be illustated&#13;
by the level of dialogue exchanged&#13;
between UC, the&#13;
Board of Regents and the&#13;
System Administration concerning&#13;
the future of the System,&#13;
segregated fee policies,&#13;
students rights, financial aid,&#13;
tuition and a number of other&#13;
issues that directly affect student&#13;
life, services and interest.&#13;
We have also become more&#13;
visible by inundating the&#13;
media with information and&#13;
maintaining continuous contact&#13;
with relevant agencies&#13;
that interface with the system.&#13;
We have extended our&#13;
outreach program to organizations&#13;
like the AFL-CIO, the&#13;
Wisconsin Action Coalition&#13;
and the Association of University&#13;
of Wisconsin Faculties.&#13;
Finally, we have&#13;
strengthened our efforts to inform&#13;
our student members of&#13;
our activities and of the important&#13;
role they play in influencing&#13;
policy decisions.&#13;
I have dedicated over five&#13;
years of my life to the student&#13;
movement and I am proud to&#13;
say that student activism is&#13;
alive and well in Wisconsin.&#13;
Bryce Tolefree&#13;
Class assignment leads to TV&#13;
by Amy H. Hitter&#13;
with&#13;
Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
What began as a simple&#13;
class assignment to find and&#13;
investigate a social problem&#13;
has become a "once-in-a-decade&#13;
kind of experience," for&#13;
senior Jennie Tunkieicz, according&#13;
to the professor who&#13;
made that assignment.&#13;
Tunkieicz, a 22-year-old&#13;
communications major, received&#13;
the assignment in&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffioti's Technical&#13;
Writing course last fall. Interested&#13;
in a career in journalism,&#13;
Tunkieicz decided to research&#13;
the nearby Zion nuclear&#13;
power plant and how&#13;
the media informs the public&#13;
about the facility.&#13;
"I chose to look into the&#13;
Zion plant and discover how&#13;
the public learns about it,"&#13;
she explained of the project.&#13;
"How they get their information,&#13;
what role the media&#13;
plays in educating, what kind&#13;
of relationship the media&#13;
have with the plant."&#13;
What she discovered not&#13;
only helped her get an "A" in&#13;
the class, it also helped her&#13;
get on television.&#13;
Soon after Tunkieicz submitted&#13;
her project, Saffioti -&#13;
who produces and hosts&#13;
"Space: The Final Frontier"&#13;
for Kenosha's Jones Intercable&#13;
- was asked if she'd like&#13;
to produce an installment of&#13;
"Kenosha Today," another&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Jones local access series,&#13;
which spotlighted the Zion&#13;
plant.&#13;
"She immediately called&#13;
me," Tunkieicz recalls, "and&#13;
said that since I'd done some&#13;
research already on the&#13;
plant, she felt it would really&#13;
be educational for me - and&#13;
helpful to her - for me to get&#13;
involved in the program."&#13;
Get involved she did, serving&#13;
as an assistant to the producer&#13;
(Saffioti) and also appearing&#13;
as an interviewer on the&#13;
program, which airs Friday,&#13;
May 1 at 6 p.m. and Saturday,&#13;
May 2 at 11 a.m. on&#13;
Kenosha Cable Channel 21.&#13;
The show, which was&#13;
filmed in two half-hour segments,&#13;
looks at radiation&#13;
leaks and what concerns&#13;
would arise if Kenosha had to&#13;
be evacuated. "The first half&#13;
of our discussion centers&#13;
around how the plant operates&#13;
and a little bit about how&#13;
people can get information&#13;
about it," Tunkieicz explained.&#13;
"Hie next half-hour&#13;
focuses on a federal test&#13;
that's coming up this summer,&#13;
how it's going to work,&#13;
how it's going to afffect the&#13;
plant and whether or not the&#13;
public will be involved."&#13;
Of Tunkieicz's involvement,&#13;
Saffioti says, "It's a good experience&#13;
for her, whether it's&#13;
for credit or whether it's for&#13;
the experience because she&#13;
can say that she was able to&#13;
do something that went from&#13;
classroom research to abroader&#13;
audience.&#13;
While she acknowledges the&#13;
professional benefits of her&#13;
stint at TV production assist-,&#13;
ant and on-camera talent,&#13;
Tunkieicz was more intrigued&#13;
by the experience of just&#13;
being on television for the&#13;
first time.&#13;
"What was interesting for&#13;
me as a writer was that I feel&#13;
I'm very writing-oriented, so&#13;
I wasn't prepared for being&#13;
on camera," she commented.&#13;
"All the while I was thinking,&#13;
'How do I look? Is my dress&#13;
straight?' And because of&#13;
that, it was really hard to&#13;
think of more questions or to&#13;
concentrate on how they answered&#13;
them.&#13;
"It was an exciting educational&#13;
experience," she went&#13;
on, in conclusion. "I hope&#13;
more students can try to get&#13;
this kind of experience.&#13;
312 - 6th Street, Racine&#13;
RANGER Thul'9day, Aprif29, 1987 5&#13;
~president&#13;
Tolefree reflects on year Class assignment leads to TV.&#13;
by AmJ H. Bitter ates and a little blt about how&#13;
people can get information&#13;
about tt." Tunklelcz explained.&#13;
"''1'1\e next half-hour&#13;
focuses on a federal test&#13;
that'• comlng up th1a aumm&#13;
r, how it's golng to work,&#13;
how it's going to aff1 ct th&#13;
plant and whether or not th&#13;
public w11l be involved."&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
It h b n an honor and&#13;
pleasure to serve as Unit d&#13;
ncu re ldenL&#13;
During the organlzat1on's&#13;
27-ye r exJ tenc , there have&#13;
b en v ral dramatic&#13;
chan ln the way tudenta&#13;
inter ct and re y important&#13;
lssu s to policy makera.&#13;
Ther were periods where&#13;
tud nta set the agenda. In&#13;
th 60's, th tudent lnvolv&#13;
m nt 1n th poUUcal proc&#13;
at an all-time high. During&#13;
th paal V ral yea.rs, we&#13;
hav al d alt with a decline&#13;
ln tu nt pa.rttclpaUon. Th&#13;
pres nc of apathy on our&#13;
campu ha.a caused rn.tstrat.&#13;
lon. for tudent actlviata and&#13;
policy makers allke.&#13;
During my tenur as pre 1-&#13;
dent, I h v been committed&#13;
to ttln · n w dire Uon for&#13;
nite Council (UC). Over&#13;
th y • bu react d to&#13;
chang s only after th final&#13;
d c ton hav be n made,&#13;
r th r than propo lng vlable&#13;
solution to th many compllcated&#13;
ls u a faclng students. I&#13;
h ve felt lt ls important for&#13;
our organization to become&#13;
pro-acllv , thereby tncrea.sing&#13;
our Involvement ln th pro-&#13;
Tod y·s students are d1ffernt&#13;
from tho who crowd d&#13;
c mpuses twenty ye rs ago.&#13;
Today' students are aggreslve.&#13;
competitlv , independnt.&#13;
mod rate, old r and a llt•&#13;
tle elfish. These are chang&#13;
that UC mu t deal With lf we&#13;
hope to continue to effectively&#13;
represent tud nts ln Wlaconln.&#13;
I am v ry pleaaed with our&#13;
achle em nts th.la year. Howv&#13;
r, without th combined&#13;
efforts of th ata.tt, the General&#13;
Assembly and, of coune,&#13;
th stud nta, non of th&#13;
goal could have reallaUcally&#13;
b en obtained. We must&#13;
alw y r member that UC&#13;
l n't th president. the staff&#13;
or an individual campus or&#13;
unlt. C 1 a union of students&#13;
working together to achieve&#13;
common goals.&#13;
Thi year, that goal has focu&#13;
d on malntalnlng an af.&#13;
fordabl , accessible University&#13;
System for all Wlsconsln&#13;
clUzen . we have xpanded&#13;
and clartfled students' rights&#13;
by v loping n w language&#13;
(un r cUon 36.09(15) of the&#13;
Stat t tut ~&gt; to help tu•&#13;
d nt, dmlnlstr tors and the&#13;
g n better understand&#13;
th rol the students play in&#13;
The Old&#13;
Book Corner&#13;
)&#13;
312 - 6th Street, Racine&#13;
the governing process or our&#13;
tnstutlttons. We have heightened&#13;
the Intent ol the Statute&#13;
by becoming more responsible&#13;
for upholding the provlalon&#13;
prescribed under&#13;
S6.09(G). This can be Ulustated&#13;
by th level of dialogue exChanged&#13;
between UC, the&#13;
Board of Regents and the&#13;
System Admln18tratlon concerning&#13;
the future of the Byatem.&#13;
segregated tee policies.&#13;
students rights, flnanclal ald,&#13;
tuition and a number of other&#13;
tau a that dlrecUy af.fect student&#13;
life, services and interest.&#13;
We have also become more&#13;
vlaible by Inundating the&#13;
medla w1th information and&#13;
malnta.lnlng continuous contact&#13;
with rel va.nt agencies&#13;
that interface with the sys.&#13;
tem. W have extended our&#13;
outreach program to organlzaUons&#13;
like th AFL-CIO, the&#13;
Wisconsin Action Coalltion&#13;
and the Association of University&#13;
of Wlsconsln Faculties.&#13;
Flnally, w have&#13;
strengthened our efforts to inform&#13;
our l!lludent members of&#13;
our actlvlties and of the important&#13;
role they play in innuenclng&#13;
pollcy d ctslons.&#13;
I have dedicated over five&#13;
y a.rs of my life to the student&#13;
movement and I am proud to&#13;
say that student actlvlsm is&#13;
alive and well in Wf consin.&#13;
Hryce Tolefree&#13;
with&#13;
Gary L. Scbneeberpr&#13;
What began as a slmple&#13;
class assignment to flnd and&#13;
investigate a social problem&#13;
has become a "once-in-a-decade&#13;
kind of experience," for&#13;
aenlor Jennie Tunklelcz, accol"&#13;
d!ng to the professor who&#13;
made that assignment.&#13;
Tunklelez, a 22-year-old&#13;
communications major, re- '----,.a.. __ ..._ __ _&#13;
celved the aastgrunent tn&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffloti's Technical&#13;
Writing course last fall. Inter•&#13;
ested in a career 1n ,Oumal·&#13;
lsm, Tunklelcz decided to re•&#13;
search the nearby Zlon nuclear&#13;
power plant and how&#13;
the media Informs the public&#13;
about the faclllty.&#13;
"I chose to look into the&#13;
Zion plant and discover how&#13;
the publlc learns about tt,"&#13;
she explained of the project.&#13;
"How they get their lnfonnaUon,&#13;
what role the medla&#13;
plays in educating, what kind&#13;
or relationship the media&#13;
have with the plant."&#13;
What she discovered not&#13;
only helped her get an "A" 1n&#13;
the class, it also helped her&#13;
get on televtalon.&#13;
Soon arter Tunkielez ubmitted&#13;
her project, Safflotl •&#13;
who produces and hosts&#13;
"Space: The Final FronUer"&#13;
for Kenosha's Jones Intercable&#13;
• was asked 1f she'd like&#13;
to produce an installment of&#13;
..Kenosha Today," another&#13;
Jennie Tunklelcz&#13;
Jones local access rtea.&#13;
which spoWgbted the Zion&#13;
plant.&#13;
"She Immediately called&#13;
me,'' Tunkielcz recalls, '•and&#13;
sald that since I'd done some&#13;
reaea.rch already on th&#13;
plant. she felt lt would really&#13;
be educattonal tor me • and&#13;
helpful to her - for me to get&#13;
Involved ln the program."&#13;
Get Involved she did. serving&#13;
aa an assistant to the producer&#13;
(sattlotl) and also appearing&#13;
as an Interviewer on th&#13;
program, which airs Friday,&#13;
May 1 at 6 p.m. and Saturday,&#13;
May 2 at 11 a.m. on&#13;
Kenosha Cable Channel 21.&#13;
The how. which was&#13;
filmed in two half-hour segments,&#13;
look.a at radiation&#13;
leaka and what concems&#13;
would arise if Kenosha had to&#13;
be evacuated. "The first half&#13;
of our dlecu lon centers&#13;
around how the plant oper-&#13;
Of Tunklelct's involvement,&#13;
Saffiot1 says, "It's a good experience&#13;
for her, whether it's&#13;
for credit or whether Lt'a for&#13;
the expen C8 becPJlN lbe&#13;
can ., that Ille WU able to&#13;
do aomethlng that went trom&#13;
clasaroom research to a·&#13;
broader audience.&#13;
While she acknoWledgea the&#13;
profeatonal benefits of her&#13;
stint at TV producUon asslst.&#13;
ant and on-camera talent,&#13;
Tunldelcs waa more intrigued&#13;
by the experience of just·&#13;
being on televlston for the&#13;
first tune.&#13;
"What was interesting for&#13;
me as a writer was that I feel&#13;
I'm very wrltlng-orlented, 80&#13;
I waan't prepared for being&#13;
on camera.'' she commented.&#13;
"All the while I was thinking,&#13;
'How do 1 look? Is my dress&#13;
straight?' And because of&#13;
that, tt was really ha.rd to&#13;
th.Ink of more questlona or to&#13;
concentrate on how they answered&#13;
them.&#13;
"It was an exciting educational&#13;
experience," she went&#13;
on, 1n conclusion. • 'I hope&#13;
more atudenta can try to get&#13;
tb1a kind of experience.&#13;
COMING ••• MONDAY, MAY 4th, NOON to 2:00&#13;
C&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
Featuring: UW-Parkside Jazz Band&#13;
ALSO APPEARING AT 4 P.M.: C&#13;
FREE ADMISSION -&#13;
6 Thursday, April 29, 1987&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Nobody asked me. hut&#13;
Record reviewing not a simple task&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
In the recent wake of mail&#13;
our record review section has&#13;
managed to dredge up, I figured&#13;
it was finally time to explain&#13;
our method of operation.&#13;
First of all, we do not buy&#13;
these records, they are sent&#13;
to us by the record companies.&#13;
These free promo LPs&#13;
are sent by most of the major&#13;
labels (we have made attempts&#13;
to obtain material&#13;
from underground labels to&#13;
little avail), and we rarely&#13;
have any choice as to what&#13;
we're sent. It all depends&#13;
what the respective companies&#13;
deem appropriate for a&#13;
college audience.&#13;
As entertaiment editor, I&#13;
decide, with my assistant&#13;
Tyson Wilda, who among our&#13;
staff reviews what album. It&#13;
generally comes down to&#13;
which writers are most familiar&#13;
with the body of a particular&#13;
artist's work and have no&#13;
bias. In the case of the Prince&#13;
album, that was given to&#13;
Gary Schneeberger to do because,&#13;
ironically, he is not&#13;
biased against this performer&#13;
(his most recent review notwithstanding).&#13;
Gary is familiar&#13;
with Prince's past work&#13;
and likes some of it (he gave&#13;
"Parade," the previous effort,&#13;
a good review in an&#13;
issue last year).&#13;
Otherwise, we distribute according&#13;
to type. I do blues,,&#13;
heavy metal and oldies reissues.&#13;
Tyson does new wave&#13;
and punk. Bernie Doll, an entertainment&#13;
staff writer, also&#13;
does much of the new wave&#13;
product (there is probably&#13;
more of that than anything&#13;
else). Pop, country, and other&#13;
musical styles not mentioned&#13;
are given to staff members&#13;
who like that style and can&#13;
give an unbiased review of&#13;
the LP's contents.&#13;
I will admit our having little&#13;
in the way of urban contemporary&#13;
music, or music&#13;
that is performed predominantly&#13;
by Black artists. My&#13;
reason is that we are basically&#13;
unqualifed. The few records&#13;
we do get in by such&#13;
artists are given to writers&#13;
who have at least a modicum&#13;
of understanding of this type&#13;
of music.&#13;
I, personally, do not dislike&#13;
this musical style, per se, but&#13;
don't feel I know it well&#13;
enough to analyze it even&#13;
journalistically. For instance&#13;
a recent letter to the editor&#13;
labeled Prince as one of the&#13;
greatest Black musical entertainers.&#13;
I can't in any way&#13;
see how Prince would rank&#13;
along side Marvin Gaye&#13;
Count Basie, Billie Holliday&#13;
Bessie Smith, Ray Charles&#13;
Jackie Wilson, Duke Elling&#13;
ton, Art Tatum, Sam Cooke&#13;
or any of the other black en&#13;
tertainers whose music was&#13;
powerful enough to influence&#13;
virtually any musical style. If&#13;
Prince is indeed the contemporary&#13;
example of these&#13;
great black musical entertainers,&#13;
then I must say I am&#13;
not qualified to review this&#13;
style of music.&#13;
What we try to present in&#13;
the entertainment section is&#13;
an example of what film and&#13;
music has to offer the college&#13;
student. We are coming off as&#13;
other students describing&#13;
what we heard or saw. As far&#13;
as our credentials are concerned,&#13;
we have at least a&#13;
general understanding of the&#13;
material we cover, some of&#13;
us a bit more versed on certain&#13;
subjects than others.&#13;
We welcome writers with a&#13;
good knowledge of any musical&#13;
styles especially in the&#13;
categories we are weak on,&#13;
and thus review little of. The&#13;
one fringe benefit of reviewing&#13;
record for The Ranger is&#13;
that the reviewer is allowed&#13;
to keep the record he or she&#13;
is asked to review.&#13;
I hope this editorial helps&#13;
you to understand how we do&#13;
things as far as record reviews&#13;
are concerned. Your&#13;
comments and suggestions&#13;
are always welcome. If you&#13;
have any interest in contributing,&#13;
please arrange to see&#13;
either myself or Tyson in the&#13;
Ranger office. This year is&#13;
over, but there is always next&#13;
year. Thanks for reading.&#13;
Art gallery announces upcoming show&#13;
TT hheo RRoanciirni Ae AA »r*tf AA ssociation i i . it i . . .&#13;
(RAA) of the Charles A. Wustum&#13;
Museum of Fine Arts,&#13;
2519 Northwestern Avenue,&#13;
Racine, announces that it will&#13;
hold its annual jurying of a rtists'&#13;
work for its Art Sales&#13;
and Rental Gallery on Saturday,&#13;
May 2, 1987.&#13;
Each year the Gallery re-&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS PARKSIDE&#13;
GRADUATES! APPLY FOR THE NEW&#13;
COLLEGE GRADUATE PLAN TODAY!&#13;
YOUR DOWN PAYMENT CAN BE&#13;
LOW AS 5°/o!&#13;
• 1.8 liter fuel-injected engine&#13;
• Power front disc brakes&#13;
• Steel belted radial tires&#13;
• Halogen headlamps&#13;
• Tinted glss&#13;
• Electric rear window defogger&#13;
• Intermittent wipers&#13;
• Remote controlled mirror&#13;
All standard equipment&#13;
IT'S HERE&#13;
The 1987 Volkswagen FOX!&#13;
AH AUTOMOBILE FOR ALL MAJORS...&#13;
s ?s mai°rs Wl" a 9r®ftt deal at an investment of&#13;
$6310.*&#13;
• Engineering majors will appreciate its fine German engineering&#13;
utilizing a 1.8 liter fuel-injected engine and front wheel drive&#13;
• Art majors will also appreciate its Geirgio Givgiaro design, the&#13;
same designer who has inspired Ferrari s&#13;
* Fox 2 door only.&#13;
©Racine&#13;
8100 Washington Ave. 886-2886&#13;
Hwy. 20 West of Hwy. 31 on the Frontage Road&#13;
views actual pieces submitted&#13;
by Midwestern artists who&#13;
wish to have their work represented&#13;
for sale and for rent&#13;
at the Wustum. Artists may&#13;
deliver up to five framed&#13;
pieces to the Wustum on&#13;
Thursday, April 30 from 1:00-&#13;
9:00 pm, Friday, May 1 from&#13;
1:00-5:00 pm and on Saturday,&#13;
May 2 from 9:00-11:00&#13;
am. '&#13;
Pettit's PSGA update&#13;
I have nothing but good news for this week's column. I&#13;
hope to continue this for the rest of t he year.&#13;
Frist of all, I will run the questionnaire for another&#13;
week, as I don't feel 27 returns is a good number to draw&#13;
conclusions upon. I intend to print the results in next&#13;
week's column.&#13;
United Council met last weekend. I would like to thank&#13;
the delegation who volunteered to go up with me. I will&#13;
print their names as soon as the Senate approves them as&#13;
our delegation for the next year. We also agreed to allow&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee a stronger voice when deciding&#13;
issues of budget and platform. This will hopefully bring&#13;
Madison back into UC.&#13;
The Senate (as I'm sure you've read) approved SOC for&#13;
major status. I would like to thank Adrian Serrano for his&#13;
help in guiding the Senate as to what was needed to be&#13;
done to pass this.&#13;
The Information Resource Committee (my computer&#13;
project) will have met by the time this is printed. I will&#13;
print the results of the meeting in the next column. I am&#13;
looking forward to a successful meeting.&#13;
PSGA Questionnaire&#13;
Drop off in PSGA Office, WLLC&#13;
Would you use a skating pond if one were available on&#13;
campus?&#13;
YES-NO-UNDECIDED&#13;
Comments&#13;
on°campus?liSten l° 3 radi° Station if we were to run one&#13;
YES-NO-UNDECIDED&#13;
Comments&#13;
Would you participate—support&#13;
were one on campus?&#13;
YES-NO-UNDECIDED&#13;
Comments ___&#13;
a football club if there&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Limited Space is&#13;
Available for fall, 1987&#13;
in the Residence Hall.&#13;
F°r aPcLii^tS.n«tnCft°ntraCt informa»ion&#13;
Call 553-8900 or 553-2320 "source."&#13;
•••&#13;
6 Thursday, April 29, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Nobody asked me, but ...&#13;
Record reviewing not a simple task Pettit's PSGA update&#13;
I have nothing but good news for this week' column. I&#13;
hope to continue this for the rest of the year.&#13;
by Jim Nelbaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
In the recent wake of mall&#13;
our record revlew secUon has&#13;
managed to dredge up, I fig.&#13;
ured it waa flnally time to explain&#13;
our method of operation.&#13;
FlrlJt of all, we do not buy&#13;
the r cords, they a.re sent&#13;
to us by the record companies.&#13;
These free promo LPs&#13;
are sent by most of the major&#13;
l belS (we have made attempts&#13;
to obtain mater1al&#13;
from underground labels to&#13;
little avail), and we rarely&#13;
have any choice as to what&#13;
we're s nt. It all depend&#13;
what the respective compa.&#13;
rues deem appropriate for a&#13;
college audience.&#13;
Aa entertatment editor, I&#13;
decide, with my assistant&#13;
Ty n Wilda, who among our&#13;
staff reviews what album. It&#13;
generally comes down to&#13;
which writ rs are mo t famUlar&#13;
with the body of a particular&#13;
a.rtlat's work and have no&#13;
blas. In the case of the Prine&#13;
album, that was given to&#13;
Gary chneeberger to do be·&#13;
cause, ironically, he Is not&#13;
biased against this performer&#13;
(his mo t recent revlew not.&#13;
withstanding). Gary ls familiar&#13;
with Prince' p t wor&#13;
and like some or It (he gav&#13;
"Parade,•' the prevlous ef.&#13;
fort, a good revlew In an&#13;
1 el t year).&#13;
Otherwise, we distribute according&#13;
to type. I do blues,,&#13;
heavy metal and oldies re-&#13;
1ssues. Tyson does new wave&#13;
and punk. Bernie Doll, an entertainment&#13;
staff writer, also&#13;
does much of the new wave&#13;
product (there Is probably&#13;
more of that than anything&#13;
else). Pop, country, and other&#13;
musical styles not menUoned&#13;
are given to staff members&#13;
who like th.at style and can&#13;
give an unbiased review of&#13;
the LP's contents.&#13;
I will admit our having little&#13;
In the way of urban contemporary&#13;
music, or music&#13;
that is performed predoml•&#13;
nanUy by Black artists. My&#13;
reason is that we are basically&#13;
unquallfed. The few records&#13;
we do get in by such&#13;
a.rtlats are given to writers&#13;
who have at least a modicum&#13;
of understanding of thls type&#13;
of music.&#13;
I, personally, do not dlsllke&#13;
this' musical style, per se, but&#13;
don't feel I know lt well&#13;
enough to analyze it even&#13;
journallstlcaJly. For instance&#13;
a recent letter to the editor&#13;
labeled Prince as one of the&#13;
greatest Black musical entertainers.&#13;
I can't 1n any way&#13;
see how Prince would I'8Jl.k&#13;
along side Marvin Gaye,&#13;
Count Basie, B1ll1e Holllday,&#13;
Bessie Smith, Ray Charle ,&#13;
Jackie Wilson, Duke Ellington,&#13;
Art Tatum, Sam Cooke,&#13;
or any of the other black en•&#13;
tertainers whose music was&#13;
powerful enough to Influence&#13;
Virtually any musical style. If&#13;
Prince ls indeed the contemporary&#13;
example of these&#13;
great black musical entertainers,&#13;
then I must say I am&#13;
not qualified to review this&#13;
style of music.&#13;
What we try to present In&#13;
the entertainment section ls&#13;
an example of what fUm and&#13;
music has to offer the college&#13;
student. We are coming oft as&#13;
other students describing&#13;
what we heard or saw. As far&#13;
as our credentials are concerned,&#13;
we have at least a&#13;
general understanding of the&#13;
material we cover, some of&#13;
us a bit more versed on certain&#13;
subjects than others.&#13;
We welcome writers with a&#13;
good knowledge of any musical&#13;
styles especially in the&#13;
categories we a.re weak on,&#13;
and thus review little of. The&#13;
one fringe benefit of reviewing&#13;
record for The Ranger ls&#13;
that the reviewer is allowed&#13;
to keep the record he or she&#13;
ls asked to review.&#13;
I hope th1s editorlal helps&#13;
you to understand how we do&#13;
things as far as record reViews&#13;
are concerned. Your&#13;
comments and suggestions&#13;
are always welcome. If you&#13;
have any interest In contributing,&#13;
please arrange to see&#13;
either myself or Tyson In the&#13;
Ranger office. This year ls&#13;
over. but there 1 always next&#13;
year. Thanks for reading.&#13;
Frist of all, I will run the quesUoMaire for another&#13;
week, as I don't feel 27 returns is a good number to draw&#13;
conclusions upon. I intend to print the results ln next&#13;
week's column.&#13;
United Council met last weekend. I would like to thank&#13;
the delegation who volunteered to go up with me. I will&#13;
print their names as soon as the Senate approves them as&#13;
our delegation for the next year. We also agreed to allow&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee a stronger voice when deciding&#13;
issues of budget and platform. This will hopefully bring&#13;
Madison back into UC.&#13;
The Senate (as I'm sure you've read) approved SOC for&#13;
major status. I would like to thank Adrian S rrano for h1&#13;
help 1n guiding the Senate as to what was needed to be&#13;
done to pass this.&#13;
The Information Resource Committee my computer&#13;
project) will have met by the tlme this I print d. I wlll&#13;
print the results of the meeting 1n th next column. l am&#13;
looking forward to a succe sful meeting.&#13;
-&#13;
PSGA Questionnaire&#13;
Drop off in PSGA Office, WLLC&#13;
Would Y.OU use a skating · pond it one were available on&#13;
cafr!pus?&#13;
YES-NO-UNDECIDED&#13;
Comments&#13;
Would you listen to a radio station if we were to run one&#13;
on campus?&#13;
YES-NO-UNDE IDED&#13;
Comments&#13;
Art 9allery announces upcoming show&#13;
Would you partici~te-support a football club if th re&#13;
were one on campus? The Racln Art s oclatlon hold Its annual jurying of art-&#13;
( A) of the les A. Wus- ists' work for lts Art Sales&#13;
tum u um of Fin Arts, and Rental G Uery on atur-&#13;
25 9 orthwestern Avenue, day, May 2, 1987.&#13;
cine, announces that 1t will Each year the Gallery re-&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS PARKSIDE&#13;
GRADUATES! APPLY FOR THE NEW&#13;
COLLEGE GRADUATE PLAN TODAY!&#13;
YOUR DOWN PAYMENT CAN BE&#13;
LOW AS 5o/o!&#13;
• 1.8 I ter fuel-Injected ang ne&#13;
• Power front dllC brake&#13;
• St I belted r8dl81 tlr&#13;
• Halogen headlamps&#13;
• Tinted g&#13;
• Electric rear wlndOw defogger&#13;
• Intermittent wipers&#13;
• Remote controlled mirror&#13;
AH •tandard fHIU/pmtml&#13;
IT'S HERE&#13;
FOX!&#13;
AN AUTOMOBILE FOR ALL MAJORS ...&#13;
• Business majors will find a great deal at an investment of&#13;
$6310.·&#13;
• En9lneerlng majo(s will appreciate its fine German engineering&#13;
utihzing a 1.8 liter fuel-injected engine and front wheel drive.&#13;
• Art majors will also appreciate its Geirgio Givgiaro design, the&#13;
same designer who has inspired Ferrari s.&#13;
• Fox 2 door only. ~Racine -=- rnazoa&#13;
8100 Washington Ave. 886-2886&#13;
Hwy. 20 We t of Hwy. 31 on the Frontage Road&#13;
vtews actual pieces submitted&#13;
by Midwestern artists who&#13;
wish to have thelr work represented&#13;
for sale and for rent&#13;
at the Wustum. Artists may&#13;
deliver up to five framed&#13;
pieces to the Wustum on&#13;
Thursday, Aprll so from 1:00-&#13;
9: 00 pm, Friday, May 1 from&#13;
1:00-6:00 pm and on Saturday,&#13;
May 2 from 9:00-11:00&#13;
am.&#13;
YES- 0-U DECIDED&#13;
Comments&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Limited Space is&#13;
Available for fall, 1987&#13;
in the Residence Hall.&#13;
For . application &amp; contract information&#13;
C~II 553-8900 or 553-2320&#13;
There's&#13;
no&#13;
''alternative''&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
It's&#13;
the only&#13;
"source.''&#13;
.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Students travel to Missouri&#13;
Participate as mock members of the NSC&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
Richard Marshall, Kay&#13;
Rouse, Cindy Hoffmann and&#13;
Anne Peacock are Parkside&#13;
students, but on April 16-18&#13;
they were also members of&#13;
the National Security Council.&#13;
Sort of.&#13;
All four international&#13;
studies students attended a&#13;
public affairs conference at&#13;
Principia College in St. Louis,&#13;
Missouri, where they roleplayed&#13;
policymakers drafting&#13;
United States foreign policy&#13;
in the Middle East. Designed&#13;
to resemble the American&#13;
NSC, the conference group&#13;
(consisting of about 60 students&#13;
from across the country)&#13;
reached general agreements&#13;
in three broad areas&#13;
and offered participants insight&#13;
into the problems and&#13;
pressures of policymaking.&#13;
"You walk in and you butt&#13;
heads with everybody," explained&#13;
Marshall of the experience.&#13;
"Trying to get a concise&#13;
policy is almost impossible,&#13;
since everyone is arguing&#13;
for their own viewpoint and&#13;
you're all operating against a&#13;
deadline."&#13;
Students were originally&#13;
divided, based on their interests,&#13;
into nine small groups of&#13;
3-10 members to discuss&#13;
aspects of Middle East policy&#13;
such as U.S. economic interests,&#13;
U.S.-Israeli relations&#13;
and Islamic resurgence and&#13;
the Palestine situation. Following&#13;
initial debate, three of&#13;
these small groups were combined&#13;
into "mini plenaries,"&#13;
where further discussion&#13;
ensued. In the end, all participants&#13;
met in final session and&#13;
recommended a general policy.&#13;
Among the agreements&#13;
reached were provision to&#13;
recognize Yassi Arafat as the&#13;
spokesperson of the Palestinians&#13;
and to establish dialogue&#13;
between between Israeli and&#13;
Arab nations.&#13;
More important than what&#13;
the policy stated, however,&#13;
was what the students&#13;
learned about formulating&#13;
that policy. "What came&#13;
through loud and clear in my&#13;
group," Rouse said, "was the&#13;
extreme imporatance of lobbying&#13;
(in policy decisions).&#13;
Special interest groups, I&#13;
found out, don't just influence&#13;
policy, they can formulate&#13;
it."&#13;
Marshall discovered in his&#13;
sessions that humanitarianism&#13;
has little place in the&#13;
realistic world of public policy.&#13;
"I guess a lot of people in&#13;
my group had never been out&#13;
in the real world," he said,&#13;
"because they were speaking&#13;
idealistically rather than&#13;
realistically. They kept saying&#13;
that everything had to be&#13;
for the people - that the individual&#13;
was more important&#13;
than the state.&#13;
"But looking at it realistically,"&#13;
he went on, "you can't&#13;
sit there and say, 'These poor&#13;
little people; we might kill&#13;
three or four. Oh, my heart&#13;
bleeds.' At this level, the individual&#13;
isn't important at all."&#13;
Hoffman agreed partly with&#13;
Marshall, noting that in her&#13;
group there was "a constant&#13;
struggle to balance a feeling&#13;
of humanity with the very&#13;
real feelings of a government&#13;
(like Israel) struggling to&#13;
maintain itself and its national&#13;
security. It (the issue of&#13;
humanitarianism) kept coming&#13;
up in discussion, and we&#13;
found that realistically it&#13;
couldn't be a top priority."&#13;
Honors concert final one in series&#13;
The final concert in the&#13;
Wednesday 1 o'clock Concert&#13;
Series will be preented Wednesday,&#13;
May 4 in Communication&#13;
Arts D-118.&#13;
The concert, an honors concert,&#13;
will be followed by a reception&#13;
given by the Music&#13;
Department for its graduating&#13;
music majors.&#13;
From the Exiting&#13;
Ed.&#13;
to the&#13;
Redheaded Ed.&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
You'll do great!&#13;
Concert performers include&#13;
Randy Rovik, trumpet, recent&#13;
winner of the Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Youth Scholarship&#13;
Auditions. Accompanied by&#13;
music professor James&#13;
McKeever, he will perform&#13;
Hummel's Trumpet Concerto.&#13;
William Nelson, clarinet,&#13;
will perform a suite by&#13;
Darius Milhaud, with Tersa&#13;
Naidicz, violin and McKeever,&#13;
piano. Nelson was named&#13;
outstanding soloist in the recent&#13;
Elmhurst College Jazz&#13;
Festival for his performance&#13;
on tenor saxophone.&#13;
Denise Barrett, classical&#13;
guitar, will perform five Estudios&#13;
Sencillos by Leo&#13;
Brower.&#13;
Graduating seniors who will&#13;
be honored include Sandra&#13;
Saladis, William Nelson, Rick&#13;
Soens, Vivian Rodriguez, Denise&#13;
Barrett, Karen Newell,&#13;
Katherine Martin and Cheryl&#13;
Brown.&#13;
The concert and reception&#13;
are open to the public.&#13;
THE OLD BOOK CORNER&#13;
312-6th St. Racine&#13;
Gently Used Books&#13;
on all subjects.&#13;
Racine's only&#13;
used Bookstore.&#13;
MARTHA MERRELLS&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
We Call It&#13;
Special Checking&#13;
• Free Printed Checks&#13;
• Unlimited Checkwriting&#13;
• Safekeeping of Checks&#13;
• No Minimum Balance&#13;
• Nominal Flat Monthly Fee&#13;
• 24 Hour Access with TYME&#13;
© Bank of Elmwood&#13;
• Moior Bank&#13;
Durand at Kentucky&#13;
&amp;«/ (birjbef &lt; lerrttce&#13;
554-5321&#13;
• Main Office&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine. WI 53405&#13;
• Green Acre Office&#13;
Hwys. 31 &amp; 38&#13;
FDIC&#13;
Conference participants (l-r): Richard Marshall,&#13;
Kay Rouse, Cindy Hoffmann and Anne&#13;
Peacock.&#13;
Peacock found the conference&#13;
educational because it&#13;
allowed her to see the Middle&#13;
East issue from a different&#13;
vantage point. "Everything in&#13;
this country is oriented toward&#13;
Israel," she commented.&#13;
"I think we get a really&#13;
one-sided view of this issue.&#13;
There were two speakers&#13;
about Arab concerns, and I&#13;
thought they were most interesting.&#13;
They talked about how&#13;
we perceive them, and how&#13;
they perceive us, and how&#13;
those perceptions aren't&#13;
always accurate."&#13;
Summing up the experience,&#13;
Hoffman admitted that&#13;
the conference was "very tiring.&#13;
We were exhausted at&#13;
the end."&#13;
The experience&#13;
of a lifetime&#13;
For people who want more than a paycheck.&#13;
It* not your ordinary Job.&#13;
If you're looking for more than a regular summer job, try Six&#13;
Flags Great America. Here you'll deal with literally&#13;
thousands of Guests of all types, and learn the real meaning&#13;
of responsibility Because It 's more than a summer Job.&#13;
It* not your ordinary fun.&#13;
Keep the fun going after the work Is done I Along with a&#13;
great experience, you'll receive a regular wage, free&#13;
admission, and complimentary passes for family and friends.&#13;
Plus, there are special employee activities Including movies,&#13;
dances, and sports activities.&#13;
Apply In person for following seasonal&#13;
positions.&#13;
• Food Jervlcei • Merchandise • Rides/front gate/area&#13;
• Clerical • Show operations •Games and arcades&#13;
• Electronic technicians&#13;
Apply 7 days a week. 9:00 am - 5:00 pm at:&#13;
Employment Office: Route 21 (Between Grand Ave. &amp;&#13;
U&amp;shlngton St) • Gurnee, IL 60031 *13121249-2045&#13;
an equal opportunity employer&#13;
WORK AT&#13;
HAVING FUN I&#13;
• ^&#13;
E&#13;
pIX FLAGS •Riitf AMixiea i A $ i%Xorfipany&#13;
•-*' tm A&#13;
RANGER Thureday, April 29, 1987 7&#13;
Students travel to Missouri&#13;
Participate as mock members of the NSC&#13;
LSchn&#13;
dltor&#13;
1 four lnternaUonal&#13;
tudl s students tten d a&#13;
public affalra conferenc at&#13;
rlnclpla College ln t. Lou18,&#13;
Ussourt, where they rolepl&#13;
yed pollcymakers drafting&#13;
Unit d tales foreign poll y&#13;
ln the Middle East. Designed&#13;
to res mble the American&#13;
NSC, the conference group&#13;
( on lstlng of about 60 student&#13;
from across the country)&#13;
reached general agree.&#13;
men~ 1n three broad areas&#13;
and off r d participants ln·&#13;
sight into the problem and&#13;
pr ssur s of poUcymaking.&#13;
"You walk 1n and you butt&#13;
h ads wlth everybody,'' explain&#13;
d M hall of the experlenc&#13;
. ''Trying to get a con.&#13;
els policy ls almost trnposslble,&#13;
since everyon i arguing&#13;
for thelr own viewpoint and&#13;
you'r nil operating against a&#13;
d adlln ."&#13;
Stud n w re orlglnally&#13;
divid d, bas d on their Interests,&#13;
lnto nine small groups of&#13;
8-10 members to dlscuss&#13;
aspects of Middle East poUcy&#13;
BUCh .s. economic tnteresta,&#13;
U. .-Israeu relations&#13;
and I l mlc _re urgenc and&#13;
th Palesttne situation. Following&#13;
lnltlal debate, three of&#13;
these small group were combined&#13;
into "mlnl plen rles,''&#13;
wh further d1 cusslon&#13;
ensued. In the end, 11 participants&#13;
met ln final session and&#13;
recommended general policy.&#13;
Among the agreements&#13;
reached were provision to&#13;
recognlz l Arafat as the&#13;
spokesperson of the Palestinians&#13;
and to establish cllalogue&#13;
between between Israeli and&#13;
Arab nations.&#13;
More Important than what&#13;
the poUcy stated, however,&#13;
was what the students&#13;
learned about formulating&#13;
that policy. "What came&#13;
through loud and clear in my&#13;
group," Rouse said, "was the&#13;
extreme imporatance of lobbying&#13;
(in policy decisions).&#13;
S clal interest groups, I&#13;
found out. don't just influence&#13;
policy, they can formulate&#13;
it ...&#13;
Marshall discovered 1n his&#13;
sessions that humanitarianism&#13;
has little place ln the&#13;
reallBtic world of public pollcy.&#13;
"I gu a lot of people in&#13;
my group had never been out&#13;
In the real world,•' he said,&#13;
• 'because they were speakJJlg&#13;
ideallstlcally rather than&#13;
realistically. They kept aay.&#13;
lng that everyth,lng ha.d to be&#13;
for the people - that the incllvtdual&#13;
was more important&#13;
than the tate.&#13;
"But looking at it reausttcally,"&#13;
he went on, "you can't&#13;
sit there and say, 'These poor&#13;
litUe people; we might kill&#13;
three or four. Oh, my heart&#13;
bleeds.' At thl level, the individual&#13;
Isn't Important at all."&#13;
Hoffman agre d partly with&#13;
Marshe.11, noting that 1n her&#13;
group there was "a constant&#13;
struggle to balance a feeling&#13;
of humanity with the very&#13;
real feelings of a government&#13;
(like Israel} struggling to&#13;
maintain ttselt and Its national&#13;
security. It (the lsBUe of&#13;
humanitarianism) kept coming&#13;
up ln cllscusslon, and we&#13;
found that reallstically tt&#13;
couldn't be a top priority."&#13;
Honors concert final one in series&#13;
Th !lnal concert 1n the&#13;
W dn day 1 o'clock Concert&#13;
rl wlll be preented Wedn&#13;
d· y. May 4 1n Communication&#13;
Arts D-118.&#13;
h concert, an hono concert.&#13;
will be followed by a reception&#13;
given by the Music&#13;
Department for lt.s gradualin&#13;
mu le majors.&#13;
-&#13;
From the Exiting&#13;
Ed.&#13;
to the&#13;
Redheaded Ed.&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
You'U do great!&#13;
THE OLD BOOK CORNER&#13;
312 -1111 St. Racine&#13;
Gently Used Books&#13;
on all subjects.&#13;
Racine's only&#13;
used Bookstore.&#13;
MARTHA MERRELLS&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
Concert performers lnclude&#13;
Randy Rovlk. trumpet, recent&#13;
w1nn r of the Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Youth Scholarship&#13;
Auclltlons. Accompanied by&#13;
music professor James&#13;
McKeever, he wlll perform&#13;
Humm l's Trumpet Concerto.&#13;
Wllllam Nelson, clarinet,&#13;
will perform a suite by&#13;
Darius Mllhaud, wlth Tersa&#13;
Naldlcz, violin and McKeever,&#13;
piano. NelSon wa named&#13;
outstanding soloist in the recent&#13;
Elmhurst College Jazz&#13;
Festival for his performance&#13;
on tenor saxophone.&#13;
Denise Barrett, classical&#13;
guitar, wlll perform five Estucllos&#13;
Senclllo by Leo&#13;
Brower.&#13;
Gradua.tlng seniors who will&#13;
be honored include 8andra&#13;
Saladts, William Nelson, Rick&#13;
Soens, Vivian Rodriguez, Denlse&#13;
Ba.rrett, Karen Newell,&#13;
Katherine Martin and Cheryl&#13;
Brown.&#13;
The concert and reception&#13;
are open to the public.&#13;
We Call It&#13;
Special Checking&#13;
• Free Printed Checks&#13;
• Unlimited Checkwriting&#13;
• Safekeeping of Checks&#13;
• No Minimum Balance&#13;
• Nominal Flat Monthly Fee&#13;
• 24 Hour Access with TYME&#13;
_(D_&#13;
Bank of Elmwood&#13;
~l?t·,I a,~, , 1~"'H"'&#13;
554-5311&#13;
• M tl'lf Banlt • Mam om«&#13;
Durand I keniuck)' 27()4 Lathrop A.,t.&#13;
kacmt. Y. I ,3-401&#13;
. ' ....&#13;
• Orn:11 A~re Omct&#13;
H"Y' ll &amp; 3&#13;
Conference participants . (l•n~ Richard Marshall,&#13;
Kay Rou , Cindy Ho ann and Anne&#13;
Peacock.&#13;
Peacock found the conference&#13;
educational because tt&#13;
allowed her to see the Middle&#13;
East issue from a dltferent&#13;
vantage point. ''Everything in&#13;
this country is oriented toward&#13;
Israel,'' she commented.&#13;
"I think we get a really&#13;
one-slded view of this issue.&#13;
There w re two speakers&#13;
about Arab concerns, and I&#13;
thought they were most interesting.&#13;
They talked about how&#13;
we perceive them, and how&#13;
they perceive us, and how&#13;
those perceptions aren't&#13;
always accurate."&#13;
Summing up the xperlence,&#13;
Hottman admitted that&#13;
the conference was "very tiring.&#13;
We were exhausted at&#13;
the end,"&#13;
The e~erience&#13;
of a lifetime&#13;
For people who want more than a paycheck.,,__ __&#13;
lt"s not your ordinary Job.&#13;
If y04/1'9 tooktng for more than • regular unmer Job, try SIX&#13;
Flags Great America. Here y04III deaf with literally&#13;
thousands of Guests of II t;ypes. and learn the l'HI meaning&#13;
ot responslbtllty. Because 10 mo,e than • summer Jab.&#13;
'"not your ordinary tun.&#13;
Keep the fun going after the work Is donel Along with a&#13;
great uperieta. yau'N f'Kefw a regular wage, free&#13;
admission. and compltmentay paaes for famlly and friends.&#13;
Plus. there .. speda emplOyN acttvttle, lndudlng fflOYta,&#13;
danCes. -,,cl spo,u actMtles.&#13;
=r!:.~forfollowlng semi&#13;
• food servb1 • Mltchandlse • Rldetlfnlnt gall{ ...&#13;
• Clerical • Showap..akllw • GIINI anda'Cldls&#13;
• Eiedronlc tectndanl&#13;
Apply 7 days a wieek. 9!00 am • 5!00 pn a:&#13;
~It Offlce: Route 21 (Between GrandAve. &amp;&#13;
~igtcn St.f • Gurnee. IL 60031 • 13121249-2045&#13;
... .qaa ~...,,.&#13;
WORK/IG'&#13;
HAVINGFUNI&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, April 29,1987 7&#13;
Students travel to Missnnri&#13;
Participate as mock members of the NSC&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
Richard Marshall, Kay&#13;
Rouse, Cindy Hoffmann and&#13;
Anne Peacock are Parkside&#13;
students, but on April 16-18&#13;
they were also members of&#13;
the National Security Council&#13;
Sort of.&#13;
All four international&#13;
studies students attended a&#13;
public affairs conference at&#13;
Principia College in St. Louis,&#13;
Missouri, where they roleplayed&#13;
policymakers drafting&#13;
United States foreign policy&#13;
in the Middle East. Designed&#13;
resemble the American&#13;
NbC, the conference group&#13;
(consisting of about 60 students&#13;
from across the country)&#13;
reached general agreements&#13;
in three broad areas&#13;
and offered participants insight&#13;
into the problems and&#13;
pressures of policymaking.&#13;
"You walk in and you butt&#13;
neads with everybody," explained&#13;
Marshall of the experience.&#13;
"Trying to get a concise&#13;
policy is almost impossible,&#13;
since everyone is arguing&#13;
for their own viewpoint and&#13;
you're all operating against a&#13;
deadline."&#13;
Students were originally&#13;
divided, based on their interests,&#13;
into nine small groups of&#13;
3-10 members to discuss&#13;
aspects of Middle East policy&#13;
such as U.S. economic interests,&#13;
U.S.-Israeli relations&#13;
and Islamic resurgence and&#13;
the Palestine situation. Following&#13;
initial debate, three of&#13;
these small groups were combined&#13;
into "mini plenaries,"&#13;
where further discussion&#13;
ensued. In the end, all participants&#13;
met in final session and&#13;
recommended a general policy.&#13;
Among the agreements&#13;
reached were provision to&#13;
recognize Yassi Arafat as the&#13;
spokesperson of the Palestinians&#13;
and to establish dialogue&#13;
between between Israeli and&#13;
Arab nations.&#13;
More important than what&#13;
the policy stated, however&#13;
was what the students&#13;
learned about formulating&#13;
that policy. "What came&#13;
through loud and clear in my&#13;
group," Rouse said, "was the&#13;
extreme imporatance of lobbying&#13;
(in policy decisions).&#13;
Special interest groups, I&#13;
found out, don't just influence&#13;
policy, they can formulate&#13;
Marshall discovered in his&#13;
sessions that humanitarianism&#13;
has little place in the&#13;
realistic world of public policy-&#13;
"I guess a lot of people in&#13;
my group had never been out&#13;
in the real world," he said,&#13;
"because they were speaking&#13;
idealistically rather than&#13;
realistically. They kept saying&#13;
that everything had to be&#13;
for the people - that the individual&#13;
was more important&#13;
than the state.&#13;
"But looking at it realistically,"&#13;
he went on, "you can't&#13;
sit there and say, 'These poor&#13;
little people; we might kill&#13;
three or four. Oh, my heart&#13;
bleeds.' At this level, the individual&#13;
isn't important at all."&#13;
Hoffman agreed partly with&#13;
Marshall, noting that in her&#13;
group there was "a constant&#13;
struggle to balance a feeling&#13;
of humanity with the very&#13;
real feelings of a government&#13;
(like Israel) struggling to&#13;
maintain itself and its national&#13;
security. It (the issue of&#13;
humanitarianism) kept coming&#13;
up in discussion, and we&#13;
found that realistically it&#13;
couldn't be a top priority."&#13;
Honors concert final one in series&#13;
«/ ?e al concert in the&#13;
Wednesday l o'clock Concert&#13;
Series will be preented Wednesday,&#13;
May 4 in Communication&#13;
Arts D-118.&#13;
The concert, an honors concert,&#13;
will be followed by a reception&#13;
given by the Music&#13;
Department for its graduating&#13;
music majors.&#13;
From the Exiting&#13;
Ed.&#13;
to the&#13;
Redheaded Ed.&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
You'll do great!&#13;
Concert performers include&#13;
Randy Rovik, trumpet, recent&#13;
winner of the Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Youth Scholarship&#13;
Auditions. Accompanied by&#13;
music professor James&#13;
McKeever, he will perform&#13;
Hummel's Trumpet Concerto.&#13;
William Nelson, clarinet,&#13;
will perform a suite by&#13;
Darius Milhaud, with Tersa&#13;
Naidicz, violin and McKeever,&#13;
piano. Nelson was named&#13;
outstanding soloist in the recent&#13;
Elmhurst College Jazz&#13;
Festival for his performance&#13;
on tenor saxophone.&#13;
Denise Barrett, classical&#13;
guitar, will perform five Estudios&#13;
Sencillos by Leo&#13;
Brower.&#13;
Graduating seniors who will&#13;
be honored include Sandra&#13;
Saladis, William Nelson, Rick&#13;
Soens, Vivian Rodriguez, Denise&#13;
Barrett, Karen Newell,&#13;
Katherine Martin and Cheryl&#13;
Brown.&#13;
The concert and reception&#13;
are open to the public.&#13;
r&#13;
We Call It&#13;
Special Checking&#13;
• Free Printed Checks&#13;
• Unlimited Checkwriting&#13;
• Safekeeping of Checks&#13;
• No Minimum Balance&#13;
• Nominal Flat Monthly Fee&#13;
• 24 Hour Access with TYME&#13;
© Bank of Elmwood&#13;
1 M otor Bank&#13;
Durand at Kentucky&#13;
da/pef &lt; iervtce&#13;
554-5321&#13;
• Main Office&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine. WI 53405&#13;
• Green Acre Office&#13;
Hwys. 31 &amp; 38&#13;
FDIC&#13;
Conference participants (l-r): Richard Marshall,&#13;
Kay Rouse, Cindy Hoffmann and Anne&#13;
Peacock.&#13;
Peacock found the conference&#13;
educational because it&#13;
allowed her to see the Middle&#13;
East issue from a different&#13;
vantage point. "Everything in&#13;
this country is oriented toward&#13;
Israel," she commented.&#13;
"I think we get a really&#13;
one-sided view of this issue&#13;
There were two speakers&#13;
about Arab concerns, and I&#13;
thought they were most interesting.&#13;
They talked about how&#13;
we perceive them, and how&#13;
they perceive us, and how&#13;
those perceptions aren't&#13;
always accurate."&#13;
Summing up the experience,&#13;
Hoffman admitted that&#13;
the conference was "very tiring.&#13;
We were exhausted at&#13;
the end."&#13;
The experience&#13;
of a lifetime&#13;
For people who want more than a paycheck.&#13;
It* not your ordinary Job.&#13;
If you re looking for more than a regular summer Job, try Six&#13;
Flags Great America. Here you'll deal with literally&#13;
thousands of Guests of all types, and learn the real meaning&#13;
of responsibility Because It 's more than a summer Job.&#13;
It* not your ordinary fun.&#13;
Keep the fun going after the work Is done I Along with a&#13;
great experience, you'll receive a regular wage , free&#13;
admission, and complimentary passes for family and friends.&#13;
Plus, there are special employee activities Including movies,&#13;
dances, and sports activities.&#13;
Apply In person for following seasonal&#13;
positions.&#13;
• Food services • Merchandise • Rides/front gate/ area&#13;
• Clerical • Show operations • Games and arcades&#13;
• Electronic technicians&#13;
Apply 7 days a week, 9:00 am - 5:00 pm at:&#13;
Employment Office: Route 21 (Between Grand Ave. &amp;&#13;
wasnington St.) • Gumee. II60031 &gt; 13121249-2045&#13;
an equal opportunity employer ' —&#13;
WORK AT&#13;
HAVING FUNI ©Warner Bros. Inc. IS76&#13;
SIX FLAGS&#13;
GREAT AMERICA&#13;
A Company&#13;
RANGER Thuraday, Aprll 29, 1987 7&#13;
Students travel to Missouri&#13;
Partic i pate as mock members of the NSC&#13;
b ry L. Scbn berg r&#13;
dltor&#13;
Rlch rd Marshall, Kay&#13;
Rou , Cindy Hoffmann and&#13;
Ann P acock are Parkside&#13;
students, but on April 16-18&#13;
they wer ala&lt;&gt; members of&#13;
th a tlonal S curtly Council.&#13;
Sort of.&#13;
All four lntemaUonal&#13;
tudl s student&amp; atten ed&#13;
pubHc affairs confer n t&#13;
rlnclpla ollege 1n t . LoulB,&#13;
Ml url, where they role•&#13;
played policymakers drafting&#13;
Unl d tates foreign poll y&#13;
ln the • fiddle East. Deslgned&#13;
to r s mble the American&#13;
N C, the conference group&#13;
( on lsllng of about 60 students&#13;
from across the country&#13;
) reached general agreements&#13;
ln three broad areas&#13;
and offered participants fn.&#13;
lght Into the problems and&#13;
pressur s of policymaking.&#13;
"You walk in and you butt&#13;
head with everybody," explaln&#13;
d Marshall of the experience.&#13;
"Trying to get a conctse&#13;
poUcy ls almost impossible,&#13;
slnce everyone ls arguing&#13;
for th Ir own viewpoint and&#13;
you're all operating against a&#13;
deadlin ."&#13;
Students w re originally&#13;
dlvld d, b ed on their interests,&#13;
into nine small groups of&#13;
S-10 memb rs to discuss&#13;
aspects of Middle East policy&#13;
such as .S. economic lnterta,&#13;
U .S.-Israell relations&#13;
and Islamic r surgence and&#13;
th Palestine sttuaUon. Foltowtng&#13;
lnlttal debate, three of&#13;
these smaU groups were combined&#13;
Into "ml.ni plenaries,"&#13;
whel'e further dlscusslon&#13;
nsu d . In the end, all partlclpants&#13;
met 1n flnal session and&#13;
recommend d a general policy.&#13;
Among the agreements&#13;
reached were provision to&#13;
recognize Ya l Ara.fat as the&#13;
spokesperson of the Palestinian&#13;
and to establlsh dialogue&#13;
between between Israeli and&#13;
Arab nations.&#13;
More Important than what&#13;
the policy stated, however,&#13;
was what the students&#13;
learned about formulating&#13;
that pollcy. "What came&#13;
through loud and clear In my&#13;
group," Rouse said, "was the&#13;
extreme imporatance of lobbying&#13;
(ln pollcy decisions).&#13;
Special Interest groups, I&#13;
found out, don't just lnfluence&#13;
policy, they can formulate&#13;
lt."&#13;
Marshall discovered 1n his&#13;
sessions that humanltartantsm&#13;
has llttle place in the&#13;
realistic world of public policy.&#13;
"I gues a lot of people 1n&#13;
my group had never been out&#13;
1n the real world," he said,&#13;
"because they were speaking&#13;
ideallstlcally rather than&#13;
real! tically. They kept aaylng&#13;
that everything had to b&#13;
for the peopl . that the indt'&#13;
ridual was more important&#13;
than the state.&#13;
"Bttt looking at it rea1tst1-&#13;
cally," he went on, "you can't&#13;
slt there and say. 'These poor&#13;
UtUe people; we might klll&#13;
three or four. Oh, my heart&#13;
bleeds. ' At th1B level, the individual&#13;
isn't important at all."&#13;
Hoffman agreed partly wtth&#13;
Marshall, noting that 1n her&#13;
group there was "a constant&#13;
struggle to balance a feellng&#13;
of humanity with the very&#13;
real feelings of a government&#13;
(Uke Israel) struggling to&#13;
maintain ltsel.t' and its national&#13;
security. It (the issue of&#13;
humanltarlantsm) kept comIng&#13;
up in dlscusslon, and we&#13;
found that realistically 1t&#13;
couldn't be a top priority."&#13;
Honors concert final one in series&#13;
The final concert 1n the&#13;
N dn day 1 o'clock Concert&#13;
erle wUI b preented Wedn&#13;
sday, y t 1n Communication&#13;
Arts 0-118.&#13;
Th concert, an honors cone&#13;
rt, will b followed by a reception&#13;
given by the MusJc&#13;
partment for lts graduating&#13;
mu le majors.&#13;
- From the Exiting&#13;
Ed .&#13;
to the&#13;
Re dheaded Ed.&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
You 'U do great!&#13;
Concert performers Include&#13;
Randy Rovik, trumpet, recent&#13;
winner of the Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Youth Scholarship&#13;
Auditions. Accompanied by&#13;
muslc professor James&#13;
McKeever, he will perform&#13;
Hummel's Trumpet Concerto.&#13;
William Nelson, clarinet,&#13;
wUl perform a suite by&#13;
Darius Mllhaud, with Tersa&#13;
Naldlcz, vtolln and McKeever,&#13;
piano. Nelson waa named&#13;
outstanding soloist 1n the recent&#13;
Elmhurst College Jazz&#13;
Festival tor his performance&#13;
on tenor axophone.&#13;
Denise Barrett, classical&#13;
guitar, wlll perform five Estudlos&#13;
Senclllos by Leo&#13;
Brower.&#13;
Graduating seniors who will&#13;
be honored include Sandra&#13;
Saladis, Wllllam Nelson, Rick&#13;
Soens, Vlvlan Rodriguez, Denise&#13;
Barrett, Karen Newell,&#13;
Katherine Martin and Cheryl&#13;
Brown.&#13;
The concert and reception&#13;
are open to the public.&#13;
We Call It&#13;
Special Checking&#13;
1 l&#13;
• Free Printed Checks&#13;
• Unlimited Checkwriting&#13;
• Safekeeping of Checks&#13;
• No M inimu m Balance&#13;
• Nominal Flat Monthly Fee&#13;
• 24 Hour Access wit h TYME&#13;
- ~ -. - Bank of Elmwood&#13;
~Jful a,rpel &lt; fel'fJtU&#13;
554-5321&#13;
• fotOf Bank • Mam Office • Grttn re Office&#13;
Our nd t Kcntud,y 2704 La1hrop A,c. H"'} )I &amp; 3&#13;
Racine, WI S340S FOIC&#13;
Conference participants (1-r): Richard Marshall,&#13;
Kay Rouse, Cindy Hoffmann and Anne&#13;
Peacock.&#13;
Peacock found the conference&#13;
educational because It&#13;
allowed her to see the Middle&#13;
East issue from a dillerent&#13;
vantage point. • 'Everything 1n&#13;
th18 country Is oriented toward&#13;
Israel,'' she commented.&#13;
"I think we get a really&#13;
one-sided view of this issue.&#13;
There were two peakers&#13;
about Arab concems, and I&#13;
thought they were most lnterestlng.&#13;
They talked about how&#13;
we perceive them, and how&#13;
they perceive us, a.nd how&#13;
those perceptions aren't&#13;
always accurate.''&#13;
Summing up the experience,&#13;
Hoffman admitted that&#13;
the conference wa "very tiring.&#13;
We were exhausted at&#13;
the end."&#13;
The e~erience&#13;
of a lifetime&#13;
For people who want more than a paycheck.,...,_,..&#13;
lt"I not your ordinary Job.&#13;
tr )'OU'N looklng for more than a regular summer Job, try Six&#13;
Flags GrNt America. Here you'll deal with ltteratty&#13;
1housa1ds of Guests of an t;ypes. and team the ru1 meaning&#13;
of respomlblllt)( BecaM It's more than• summer Job.&#13;
It's not your ordinary tun.&#13;
KNp the bl going after the W0fk Is donel Along wtth a&#13;
great expe,1etice, you'I recelw a regular wage , free&#13;
admlsSlon. and compllment• y passes for fanlly and friends.&#13;
Plus. there .. spedal employee actMt1a lndudlng mcwla,&#13;
dances. and spon:s actMtles.&#13;
Apply In person few folloWlng seasonal&#13;
poiltlons •&#13;
• Food serYk:es • Meff:handltll • Rldesl9ronC gata1a,u&#13;
• Oerkal • ShawCfl"atiol• • Gaw and .cactes&#13;
• £1ectronk tCChnldanl&#13;
Apply 7 days a week. 9:00 am • 5:00 pm at:&#13;
EmpkJyment Office: Route 21 (Between Grand Ave. &amp;&#13;
Wilshkigton St.) • Gurnee, IL 60031 • 13121249-2045 an.....,~..,,_&#13;
WORKAr&#13;
HAVING FUNI&#13;
Solidarity Coalition works to end war in El Salvador&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
The Racine/Kenosha Central&#13;
American Solidarity&#13;
Coalition (CASC) be sponsor&#13;
a station on May 6-7 from 10&#13;
a.m. to 2 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
The station will provide information&#13;
on the events in Central&#13;
America and ballots for&#13;
the "National Referendum to&#13;
End the War in Central&#13;
America."&#13;
Elaine Kinch, organizer of&#13;
the Campaign to Stop the&#13;
Human Rights Abuses in El&#13;
Salvador and member of&#13;
CASC, explained that CASC&#13;
"is a voluntary organization&#13;
seeking justice for the people&#13;
of Central America and a&#13;
more just relationship between&#13;
the U.S. government&#13;
and the governments of the&#13;
Central American nations."&#13;
The "National Referendum"&#13;
is the most recent project&#13;
of CASC. In February the&#13;
organization sponsored fundraising&#13;
for the re-population&#13;
of El Salvador. In March it&#13;
sponsored the refugee caravans&#13;
across the country.&#13;
CASC is a country-wide organization&#13;
of nearly 100 cities&#13;
and over 100 sponsors. It attempts&#13;
to reach as many&#13;
Americans as possible to inform&#13;
them of the military actions&#13;
in . Central America. It&#13;
also helps refugees in Central&#13;
America through visits to the&#13;
Central American countries,&#13;
letter-writing to Central&#13;
American and American&#13;
political leaders and relief aid&#13;
for victims of bombings.&#13;
Kinch explained the reason&#13;
for directing the "National&#13;
Referendum" at colleges.&#13;
"We want to reach a new&#13;
audience. Two-thirds of the&#13;
American people are against&#13;
the Reagan Administration's&#13;
policy in Central America.&#13;
We want to give them an opportunity&#13;
to come out and&#13;
vote for peace," she said.&#13;
CASC is gathering referendum&#13;
ballots now in the hope&#13;
that a bill will soon come up&#13;
before Congress. Having a&#13;
number of ballots to give to&#13;
officials immediately "is&#13;
much better than scrambling&#13;
around after the bill is announced.&#13;
We want to be&#13;
ready,'"' Kinch commented.&#13;
Kinch feels "Congress isn't&#13;
really looking at our foreign&#13;
policy from the standpoint of&#13;
whether or not it is a moral&#13;
policy. They're not even looking&#13;
at the suffering the U.S.&#13;
government is causing in&#13;
Central America."&#13;
David Castaneda, senior,&#13;
feels the same way. "I guess&#13;
no one can relate to hundreds&#13;
of thousands of Nicaraguan&#13;
refugees dying, yet they can&#13;
definitely relate to a few&#13;
Americans dying," he said.&#13;
"We just want people to come&#13;
by to get an idea of what is&#13;
going on in Central America&#13;
and what the U.S. policy is&#13;
there. We want people to ex&#13;
press their feelings about&#13;
Central American just bv&#13;
marking 'YES' or 'NO' on the&#13;
ballot. ne&#13;
He also stressed the impor&#13;
tance of hearing college students'&#13;
opinions, "it's important&#13;
for 18 and 19 year old&#13;
students to realize that thev&#13;
soon may be drafted again 1&#13;
doubt staying in college win&#13;
help this time. People need to&#13;
take personal responsible&#13;
for just filling out a simple&#13;
referendum baUot."&#13;
Students are encouraged to&#13;
stop by the station and fill out&#13;
a ballot on May 5 and 6.&#13;
Committee okays undergraduate tuition caps&#13;
April 22 aPPr°Ved a ™&lt;™™nda- cent&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
UWP&#13;
EMPLOYEES&#13;
Save while&#13;
you borrow&#13;
with a ECU&#13;
Loan:&#13;
• Car Loans&#13;
• Mortgages&#13;
• Line of Credit&#13;
• Home Improvement&#13;
• Any Purpose&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
Serving four other locations&#13;
Racine Waukesha&#13;
Burlington Milwaukee&#13;
approved recommendation&#13;
by United Council of UW&#13;
Student Governments to cap&#13;
resident undergraduate tuition&#13;
at 33.4 percent of instructional&#13;
costs.&#13;
The recommendation to the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee&#13;
would still allow for Governor&#13;
Thompson's proposed 12 percent&#13;
tuition increase. Rep&#13;
Bill Berndt (R-River Falls)&#13;
proposed the cap, effective&#13;
through the 1988-89 school&#13;
year. It passed by a 7-1 vote.&#13;
"For years, the state has&#13;
looked upon tuition as a blank&#13;
check," said UC President&#13;
Bryce Tolefree. "The committee's&#13;
recommendation&#13;
MKSH&amp;e r I&#13;
activiti**/&#13;
50AR&amp;^&#13;
MAY 16 AND 17&#13;
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
2:00 pm Road Rally&#13;
&lt;6:30 Tent opens&#13;
7:00 pm Mind if I Smoke?&#13;
10:00 pm Bad Boy&#13;
1:00 am Ruthless People&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
6:30 pm Tent opens&#13;
7:00 pm Pat McCurdy &amp;&#13;
the Confidentials&#13;
10:00 pm The Cheeters&#13;
1:00 am Pee Wee's Big Adventure&#13;
Advance tickets are available at the Union Information Center&#13;
Students, faculty, staff, alumni $3.00 per day $5.00 per weekend&#13;
Guest $4.00 per day $7.00 per weekend&#13;
H!!i9«?mts milst be.StA,,e?st 18 years old. Limit of 3 guests per&#13;
UW-P ID per d ay. AH tickets will be $5.00 per day at the door.&#13;
would once again inject&#13;
stability into the state's tuition&#13;
policy."&#13;
During the 1970's, resident&#13;
undergraduate tution was&#13;
frozen at 25 percent of instructional&#13;
costs. Since 1980,&#13;
however, the resident undergraduate&#13;
portion has increased&#13;
to 31.4 percent.&#13;
Under Gov. Thompson's proposed&#13;
12 percent increase, it&#13;
would be 33.4 percent.&#13;
Tolefree said that while he&#13;
is pleased with the proposed&#13;
cap, UC will seek to cut&#13;
Thompson's tuition hike. "A&#13;
$172 tuition increase would&#13;
still hurt needy students. In&#13;
the last six years, state and&#13;
federal financial aid appropriations&#13;
have not kept up&#13;
S&amp;,. increased student&#13;
Tolefree is optimistic about&#13;
a tuition cap passing the&#13;
legislature. "There appears&#13;
to be substantial support&#13;
among legislators for controlling&#13;
tuition increases. Legislators&#13;
are rightfully concerned&#13;
that a large number of&#13;
low- and middle-income students&#13;
are being priced out of&#13;
the university."&#13;
Those voting in favor of the&#13;
tuition cap were: Berndt,&#13;
Stan Gruszynski (D-Stevens&#13;
Point), Sue Magnuson (DMadison),&#13;
John Medinger (DLaCrosse),&#13;
Spencer Coggs&#13;
(D-Milwaukee), Barbara Linton&#13;
(D-Highbridge) and Ben&#13;
Brancel (R-Endeavor).&#13;
Rep. Margaret Lewis (RJefferson)&#13;
voted against the&#13;
cap.&#13;
the far side By GARY LARSON&#13;
x—Mnv take th;s gram+e^&#13;
bowl- It Up not far&#13;
from here and probably dates&#13;
to... Oh, Td say early July.&#13;
5- 5&#13;
Early archaeologists&#13;
I • a• • I la .. • • • ' • • .. • • • , f • . .. 1•41 ., • • ,, . ' . ' • • , . ' . ' •• • I -., I , ,&#13;
8 Thursday• April 29, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Solidarity Coalition works to end war in El Salvador&#13;
by Kelly McKt lck&#13;
Ant. Newa Edl1or&#13;
The Racine/Kenosha Cen•&#13;
tra1 America.n Sollda.rity&#13;
Coalltton (CASC) be aponsor&#13;
a station on May ~-'l from 10&#13;
a.m. to 2 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
The station w1ll provide infor.&#13;
mation on the events in Central&#13;
America and ballots for&#13;
the "National Referendum to&#13;
End the War 1n Central&#13;
America."&#13;
Ela.lne Kinch, organizer of&#13;
the Campaign to Stop the&#13;
Human Rlghts Abuse in El&#13;
Salvador and member of&#13;
ASC, explained that CASC&#13;
"ilJ a voluntary organization&#13;
seeking justice for the people&#13;
of Central America and a&#13;
more Just relationship between&#13;
the U.S. government&#13;
and the governments of the&#13;
Central merican nations.''&#13;
The "National Referendum"&#13;
ts the moot recent project&#13;
of CASC. In February the&#13;
organimtion sponsored fundraising&#13;
for the re-population&#13;
of El Salvador. In March it&#13;
sponsored the refugee caravans&#13;
across the country.&#13;
CASC ls a country-Wide organization&#13;
of nearly 100 cities&#13;
&amp;11d over 100 sponsors. It attempts&#13;
to reach as many&#13;
Americans as possible to inform&#13;
them of the rnilltary actions&#13;
1n Central America. It&#13;
also helps· refugees 1n Central&#13;
America through visits to the&#13;
Central American countries,&#13;
letter-writing to Central&#13;
American and American&#13;
poliUca.l leaders and relief aid&#13;
for victims of bombings.&#13;
Kinch explained the reason&#13;
for dlrectlng the "National&#13;
Referendum" at colleges.&#13;
"We want to reach a new&#13;
audience. Two-thirds of the&#13;
American people are against&#13;
the Reagan Admlnlstration's&#13;
policy in Central America.&#13;
We want to give them an opportunity&#13;
to come out and&#13;
vote for peace," she sald.&#13;
CASC 1s gathering referendum&#13;
ballots now 1n the hope&#13;
that a bill wlll soon come up&#13;
before Congress. Having a&#13;
number of ballots to give to&#13;
officials immediately "ls&#13;
much better than scrambllng&#13;
around after the blll 1s announced.&#13;
We want to be&#13;
ready,,., Kinch comment~d-&#13;
Klnch feels "Congress lsn 't&#13;
really looking at our foreign&#13;
policy from the standpoint of&#13;
whether or not It ls a moral&#13;
policy. They're not even look•&#13;
Ing at the suffering the U.S.&#13;
government ls causing in&#13;
Central America."&#13;
David Castaneda, senior,&#13;
feels the same way. "I guess&#13;
no one can relate to hundreds&#13;
of thousands of Nicaraguan&#13;
refugees dying, yet they can&#13;
definitely relate to a few&#13;
Americans dying," he aald.&#13;
"We just want people to come&#13;
by to get an ldea of what ls&#13;
going on in Central America&#13;
and what the U.S. policy is&#13;
there. We want people to ex.&#13;
press their feelings about&#13;
Central American ju t b&#13;
marklng 'YES' or 'NO' on th!&#13;
ballot.&#13;
He also stressed the impor.&#13;
tance of hearing college stu.&#13;
dents' oplnfons. "It's impor.&#13;
tant for 18 and 19 ye r old&#13;
students to realize that they&#13;
soon may be drafted again. r&#13;
doubt staying In college wUJ&#13;
help this time. People need to&#13;
take per onal responsibllty&#13;
for just fllltng out a simple&#13;
r ferendum ballot"&#13;
Students are encouraged to&#13;
stop by the station and fill out&#13;
a ballot on May 5 and 6.&#13;
Committee okays undergraduate tuition caps&#13;
The Ass mbly Colleges ancl&#13;
Unlventties Committee April&#13;
.(~Utis)&#13;
~i•D1~~,o .&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
UWP&#13;
E PLOYEES&#13;
Save while&#13;
you borrow&#13;
withaECU&#13;
Loan:&#13;
• Car Loan&#13;
• Mortgage&#13;
• Lin of Credit&#13;
• Home lmprov ment&#13;
• Any Purpo e&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
on.-Fr". 10-3&#13;
ning four oth,•r (O&lt;' lion&#13;
R in W uke ha&#13;
Burlin on tilwnukt'&#13;
22 approved a recommendation&#13;
by United Council of UW&#13;
Student Governments to cap&#13;
resident undergraduate tuition&#13;
at ss., percent of Instructional&#13;
costs.&#13;
The recommendation to the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee&#13;
would still allow for Governor&#13;
Thompson's proposed 12 percent&#13;
tuition increase. Rep.&#13;
Bill Berndt (R·Rlver Falls)&#13;
propo ed the cap, effective&#13;
through the 1988-89 school&#13;
year. It passed by a 7-1 vote.&#13;
..For years, the late has&#13;
looked upon tuition as a blank&#13;
check,'' said UC President&#13;
Bryce Tolefree. "The committee's&#13;
recommendation&#13;
MAY 16 AND 17&#13;
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS&#13;
SUNDAY .&#13;
1:30 Pill T opens&#13;
'7:00 pa Pat McCunly &amp;&#13;
tlttConfldefttlals&#13;
10:00 nae Cbeeters&#13;
1:00 • Pee Wee's A ture&#13;
avalilabl11 at Ill Unlo I nnaUon Center.&#13;
mnl $3.00 per dar $5.00 per weekend&#13;
$4.00 per day $7 .00 per weeke d&#13;
All guests tnust be at least 18 years old. UmH of 3 gusts per&#13;
uw;:p ID day. All tickets WIii bl $5.00 per day at the door.&#13;
would once again inject&#13;
tabllity into the state's tuition&#13;
policy."&#13;
During the 1970' resident&#13;
undergraduate tution was&#13;
frozen at .2ti percent of instructional&#13;
costs. Since 1980,&#13;
however, the resident undergraduate&#13;
portion has increased&#13;
to a1 .• percent.&#13;
Under Gov. Thompson's proposed&#13;
12 percent Increase, It&#13;
would be 38.4 percent.&#13;
Tolefree said that whlle he&#13;
ls pleased Wlth the proposed&#13;
cap, UC will seek to cut&#13;
Thompson's tuition hike. " A&#13;
$172 tuition Increase would&#13;
still hurt needy students. In&#13;
the last six years, state and&#13;
federal financial aid appropriations&#13;
have not ke pt up&#13;
with increased student&#13;
costs.''&#13;
THI FAR SIDI&#13;
5- 5&#13;
Tolefree ls opttmlstlc about&#13;
a tuition cap pas Ing the&#13;
legtslatur . "There appears&#13;
to be sub tantial support&#13;
among legislators for controlllng&#13;
tultion lncreas s . Leg! •&#13;
lators are rightfully con•&#13;
cemed that a large number or&#13;
low- and middle-income students&#13;
are being priced out of&#13;
the unlve rslty. "&#13;
Those voting 1n favor of the&#13;
tulUon cap were: B rndt,&#13;
Stan Gruszynskl (D-Stevens&#13;
P oint l. Sue Magnuson CD·&#13;
Madison), John Medinger {D·&#13;
Lacrosse) , Spencer Coggs&#13;
CD -Milwaukee), Barbara Linton&#13;
(D-Hlghbridge) and Ben&#13;
Brancel CR-Endeavor .&#13;
Rep. Margaret Lewis IR•&#13;
Jefferson, voted again t th&#13;
cap .&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
1&#13;
Early archaeolog~ lst=•=-------------&#13;
Historically, higher&#13;
by Kimberlie Kranich Because wnmon I..A« education access limited&#13;
Table 1 Enrollment at Parkside (Spring, 1987)&#13;
by Heritage and Sex&#13;
Male Female&#13;
American Indian&#13;
Black&#13;
Oriental&#13;
Latin or Latin American&#13;
White&#13;
Foreign&#13;
Barbara Shade&#13;
data collected on these contrasts.&#13;
"In many instances we can&#13;
only reliably describe the experiences&#13;
of Black Americans&#13;
because the most detailed&#13;
and complete educational record&#13;
exists for this category&#13;
of people," according to Marrett&#13;
and Matthews.&#13;
It has only been in the last&#13;
decade that enrollment statistics&#13;
have been broken down&#13;
by both heritage or race and&#13;
gender.&#13;
Barbara Shade, chair of the&#13;
Education Division and associate&#13;
professor of education,&#13;
talked about the importance&#13;
of looking at many factors&#13;
when considering women&#13;
of color and higher education.&#13;
"When you talk to Black&#13;
women," Shade explained,&#13;
"you have to look at them&#13;
from where they came up and&#13;
at the whole social strata&#13;
around them and what they&#13;
plan to use education for and&#13;
their age."&#13;
Shade attended college in&#13;
the early 1950's and had an&#13;
experience different from&#13;
what Black women college&#13;
racism sexism&#13;
Feminist women of color&#13;
have spoken of the need to be&#13;
heard. The book, "This&#13;
Bridge Called My Back: Writings&#13;
By Radical Women of&#13;
Color," by Cherrie Moraga&#13;
and Gloria Anzaldua for example,&#13;
is a collection of writings&#13;
that address issues of&#13;
race, class, ethnicity, gender&#13;
and sexuality.&#13;
Feminists of color have&#13;
stressed the need for an understanding&#13;
of their unique&#13;
struggles which are a result&#13;
of race, ethnicity, class and&#13;
gender.&#13;
There are some hurdles&#13;
that women of color, by virtue&#13;
of being women and nonwhite,&#13;
have had to overcome&#13;
'Ranger Special&#13;
Women Of Color&#13;
Historically, higher education access l(mited&#13;
by Klmberlle Kranich Because women were -~~- ..,.,__~ Table 1 Enrollment at Parkside (Spring, 1987)&#13;
Feature Editor dented access to most male ~~~ by Heritage and Sex&#13;
There are 178 women of&#13;
color currently attending&#13;
Parkside (see table 1) out of&#13;
a total student enrollment of&#13;
4,M6. In 1978 when enrollment&#13;
figures totalled 4,624 atudenta,&#13;
there were lM women of&#13;
color. This increa.Re Is indicative&#13;
of the trend across the&#13;
nation .&#13;
In the early 1960'1, far&#13;
more men than women attended&#13;
college: during the&#13;
1970's, the education level of&#13;
women 1n the United States&#13;
rose . In the population as a&#13;
whole. more women than men&#13;
entered lnstitutiona of higher&#13;
educo.tlon. For Black, Hlspan.&#13;
lc, Aslan, and American Indian&#13;
women, college enrollments&#13;
rose more than for&#13;
men of the same race or ethnicity.&#13;
Women have not always&#13;
had access to institutions of&#13;
higher education.&#13;
"There were no advanced&#13;
educational opportunJtiea for&#13;
women unW Emma Wlllard&#13;
opened a seminary for females&#13;
in Troy, N.Y. in 1821,"&#13;
according to Catherine Clinton,&#13;
author of the book, "The&#13;
Other Civil War."&#13;
Women's access to higher&#13;
education waa llmited by the&#13;
attitudes held by men.&#13;
··Argument&amp; against&#13;
women's education were that&#13;
the pathway to equality would&#13;
seriously undermine women's&#13;
health," according to Clinton.&#13;
"Male opponents also argued&#13;
that women were mentally inferior&#13;
and incapable of pursuing&#13;
an advanced degree."&#13;
Oberlln College became the&#13;
first co-educational institution&#13;
when ll opened lts doors to&#13;
both men and women in 1837.&#13;
unJversltles and colleges,&#13;
women started their own colleges,&#13;
Vassar, in 1861S, was&#13;
the flrst bonaflde women's&#13;
college.&#13;
"But not unW Smith and&#13;
Wellesley opened ln 1875,"&#13;
states Clinton, • 'were&#13;
women's colleges able to&#13;
clalm that thelr qualifications&#13;
for admission as well as their&#13;
curriculum matched that of&#13;
male instltuUoM.''&#13;
These separate women's&#13;
colleges had enrollments of&#13;
mainly white women. However,&#13;
organized efforts to educate&#13;
Black girls began u&#13;
early as 1838 when Prudence&#13;
Crandall instituted and attempted&#13;
to maintain a school&#13;
for Black girls in Connecticut.&#13;
Finally, in 1881, Spelman&#13;
College in Atlanta, Georgia&#13;
was founded as the first college&#13;
for Afro-American&#13;
women in the U.S.&#13;
Cora Bagley Marrett and&#13;
Westlna Matthews have examined&#13;
women of color in&#13;
higher education and polnt&#13;
out in their essay. "The Participation&#13;
of Minority Women&#13;
in Higher Education," the dif.&#13;
flculties ln doing so.&#13;
"Ideally. one should distinguish&#13;
between MexlcanAmericans,&#13;
Puerto Ricans&#13;
and persons from various&#13;
Latln American countries&#13;
when reporting on H.lspanlc&#13;
populations," wrote the two&#13;
authors. "However, the data&#13;
are not adequate for such distinctions."&#13;
Marrett and Matthews&#13;
point out that the experiences&#13;
of forelgn-bom Asian women,&#13;
for example, differ from&#13;
those of U .s. born A8lan&#13;
women. There has been little&#13;
Barbara Shade&#13;
data collected on these contrasts.&#13;
"In many lnstancea we can&#13;
only reliably describe the experiences&#13;
of Black Americans&#13;
because the most detailed&#13;
and complete educational record&#13;
exists for th18 category&#13;
of people," according to Marrett&#13;
and Matthews.&#13;
It has only been in the last&#13;
decade that enrollment atatistica&#13;
have been broken down&#13;
by both heritage or race and&#13;
gender.&#13;
Barbara Shade, chair of the&#13;
Education Division and associate&#13;
professor of education,&#13;
talked about the importance&#13;
of looking at many factors&#13;
when considering women&#13;
of color and higher education.&#13;
"When you talk to Black&#13;
women," Shade explalned,&#13;
"you have to look at them&#13;
from where they came up and&#13;
at the whole social strata&#13;
around them and what they&#13;
plan to use education for and&#13;
their age."&#13;
Shade attended college 1n&#13;
the early lOtiO's and had an&#13;
experience different from&#13;
what Black women college&#13;
Heritage&#13;
American Indian&#13;
Black&#13;
Oriental&#13;
Latin or Latin American&#13;
White&#13;
Foreign&#13;
atudenta experience today.&#13;
"When I entered school I&#13;
went in business because I&#13;
was in the early liro's, you&#13;
simply couldn't go on and fin.&#13;
lah off in bu.siness 80 I got&#13;
into teaching because that&#13;
was the way to do lt," said&#13;
Shade.&#13;
Generally. there are three&#13;
different cultural groups&#13;
within Blacka in the U.S.&#13;
"There were those who&#13;
grew up in the northeast and&#13;
even from the begtnnlng of&#13;
history they were free," explalned&#13;
Shade. "They started&#13;
1n education early because&#13;
they were pinpointed for&#13;
going into teaching. Most&#13;
women, up unW very recently,&#13;
started out 1n education.&#13;
''The young Black women&#13;
on campus hit education at a&#13;
time when lt ls a choice and&#13;
they are not necessarUy&#13;
majoring in teaching education.&#13;
They're in looking at a&#13;
whole broad perspective of&#13;
occupations.&#13;
''The second cultural&#13;
group," continued Shade, "la&#13;
in the South. In the South&#13;
they had real layers . not&#13;
only of skin color but of, high&#13;
statua and they therefore did&#13;
very different things.&#13;
"Spelman Oollege waa&#13;
almed, a.a near as I can tell,&#13;
for atartlng to Insure that&#13;
those of very high 11tatua had&#13;
Feminists of color speak about racism, sexism&#13;
by KJmberUe Kranich&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Feminist women of color&#13;
have spoken of the need to be&#13;
heard. The book, • 'Thls&#13;
Bridge Called My Back: Writings&#13;
By Radical Women of&#13;
Color," by Cherrie Moraga&#13;
and Gloria Anzaldua for example,&#13;
la a collection of writings&#13;
that address 1asuea of&#13;
race, class, ethnicity, gender&#13;
and sexuality.&#13;
Femlnlst.a of color have&#13;
stressed the need for an understanding&#13;
of thelr unique&#13;
struggles which are a result&#13;
of race, ethnicity, class and&#13;
gender.&#13;
There are some hurdles&#13;
that women of color, by virtue&#13;
of being women and nonwhite.&#13;
have had to overcome&#13;
what white women and all&#13;
men do not face.&#13;
The phrase, women of&#13;
color, in the book, "The&#13;
Feminist Dictionary" by&#13;
Cherts Kramerae and Paula&#13;
A. Treichler, la defined a.a "a&#13;
posltlve term designating&#13;
women of many different ethnic&#13;
and racial heritages (in•&#13;
eluding Black, Native American,&#13;
Chicano, Puerto Rican,&#13;
Filipino, Hlspanic and A81an)&#13;
and emph.aslzlng commonalities,&#13;
sisterhood, and shared&#13;
expressions.••&#13;
Sexism, according to the&#13;
"Femlnlst Dictionary," ta&#13;
"behavior, policy, language,&#13;
or other action of men or&#13;
women which expresses the&#13;
in.stltutlonallzed, systematic,&#13;
comprehensive, or constatent&#13;
view that women are inferior.&#13;
"Sexism and racism define&#13;
indivtduala as inferior, llmlt&#13;
their options and subject&#13;
them to exploitation and demeaning&#13;
treatment on the&#13;
baala of their membership ln&#13;
some general claaa ( e.g.&#13;
women or blacks)," writes&#13;
Mary Anne Warren.&#13;
Black writer Angela y.&#13;
Davla wama that sex.tam&#13;
"can never be seen in isolation.&#13;
It has to be placed in the&#13;
context of ita intercoMectiona&#13;
with raclam, and especially&#13;
with claaa exploitation."&#13;
Raclam ls defined as "lnstltuUonallzed&#13;
dlacrimlnaUon,&#13;
prejudice and oppression&#13;
baaed on race; specifically&#13;
oppreaston by white people of&#13;
people of color."&#13;
Black lesbian femln18t poet&#13;
Audre Lorde writes that rac-&#13;
1am 1a "the belief in the inherent&#13;
superiority of one race&#13;
over all others and thereby&#13;
the right to dominance, manifest&#13;
and Implied."&#13;
Raetam 1a also an ideology.&#13;
"Everyone ta capable of&#13;
being ractat whatever their&#13;
color and condition," writes&#13;
Puerto Rican femlnlat Rourlo&#13;
Morales. "Only some of us&#13;
are liable to racist attack."&#13;
Angela Davia believes all&#13;
white people should have a&#13;
, vested interest ln eradicating&#13;
ractam.&#13;
"White people, white&#13;
women In particular," Davia&#13;
writes, "should not tight ractam&#13;
almply because they&#13;
want to help those ot us who&#13;
are hurt by lt. The v~ ma-&#13;
Femln!m ... ,,.,_ 3&#13;
Male&#13;
7&#13;
66&#13;
38&#13;
47&#13;
2,0M&#13;
H&#13;
Female&#13;
6&#13;
106&#13;
21&#13;
89&#13;
1,982&#13;
g&#13;
the culture and the manners&#13;
as well as the education. In&#13;
the Black community lt waa&#13;
always asaumed that the&#13;
women would be educated because&#13;
that'• how to keep her&#13;
out ot the kitchen and a prey&#13;
of white malea. They forced&#13;
her (Black women) into&#13;
education but they didn •t&#13;
force the men.&#13;
"There la the third group of&#13;
the West," Shade continued,&#13;
"which 1a a much more integrated&#13;
soclety. Therefore,&#13;
their orientation was very dlf.&#13;
ferenl''&#13;
The trend 18 for Black&#13;
women to enter lnatltutions of&#13;
higher education on a greater&#13;
scale than Black men. 'nlere&#13;
are 106 Black fem.ales attendIng&#13;
Parkside compared to 66&#13;
Black malea.&#13;
"Becaw,e of th1a trend,"&#13;
said Shade, "young Black&#13;
women 1n college now are&#13;
staring to rethink whether&#13;
they should go on for a muter'•&#13;
and PhD. because they&#13;
are perceiving that 1t may&#13;
llmlt their abllity to marry,&#13;
and that's really important to&#13;
them."&#13;
Shade related an example&#13;
of her daughter's friend who&#13;
stopped going to school because&#13;
of pressure from her&#13;
husband.&#13;
"Thia young woman graduated&#13;
from the Univeralty of&#13;
Shade ... page2&#13;
Editor's note&#13;
Th.la four-page special section&#13;
focuses on women of&#13;
color at Parkside. The inter-'&#13;
views are of Native American.&#13;
Hispanic, Asian, Black&#13;
and Indian women who are&#13;
part of the 178 women of color&#13;
on campus. We also spoke to&#13;
all of the Black women on&#13;
campus who teach or hold&#13;
staff positions (a total of&#13;
three).&#13;
'nle word.a of these women&#13;
have been left as cloeely as&#13;
poaatble to the or1glnal&#13;
spoken interviews, illustrating&#13;
the diversity of Engllah&#13;
language speakers.&#13;
All stories were written and&#13;
edited by Klmberlle Kranich&#13;
except for the two atorlea by&#13;
Mary Woods, special guest&#13;
Writer to the Ranger.&#13;
Native American Ramnna Powell&#13;
'Echo' tells of nationality, stereotypes BBoorrnn oonn nann ITnndHiiaann reservaa&#13;
n. . . .&#13;
tion in northern Wisconsin to&#13;
a young Native American&#13;
woman of 16 who was too&#13;
young to care for her, Echo&#13;
was removed from the reservation&#13;
at six months old and&#13;
at three was legally adopted.&#13;
Echo's real name is Ramona&#13;
Powell but she doesn't go&#13;
by it very often. She has identified&#13;
herself with Indian&#13;
names from the time she was&#13;
little.&#13;
"When I grew up," Echo&#13;
explained, "my best friend&#13;
was an Indian and we gave&#13;
each other Indian names. I&#13;
was Shy Fox because I was&#13;
shy and because a fox is&#13;
clever."&#13;
Echo wanted to know more&#13;
about her family history, but&#13;
since she was adopted, obtaining&#13;
information is very&#13;
difficult. She knows that her&#13;
biological mother was a&#13;
member of the Chippewa&#13;
tribe and that her biological&#13;
father was German.&#13;
"I was brought up knowing&#13;
my nationality," said Echo.&#13;
"When people are asked what&#13;
are they and they say, 'I'm&#13;
German, I'm Italian,' their&#13;
descendants go back overseas.&#13;
But with me, at least&#13;
the Indian part, my ancestors&#13;
are here."&#13;
Echo has lived in both Wisconsin&#13;
and California. People&#13;
in both places seldom recognize&#13;
her as Native American.&#13;
"Here, a lot of people think&#13;
I'm Italian, Spanish, or Indian.&#13;
I lived in California and&#13;
there they didn't even think&#13;
of Indian right away, they&#13;
just assumed I was from&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
"Of course, people can tell&#13;
I'm something," continued&#13;
Echo. "A lot of people generalize&#13;
that whole kind of look -&#13;
being a little darker. Indians&#13;
have high cheek bones, that's&#13;
how I know. I've been mistaken&#13;
a lot."&#13;
As a child in school, Echo&#13;
was aware of the images people&#13;
have in their heads about&#13;
Native Americans.&#13;
"Growing up, when kids in&#13;
school knew I was Indian,&#13;
they thought I could run really&#13;
fast," Echo explained.&#13;
While in high school, Echo&#13;
took a history course on Native&#13;
Americans.&#13;
"In the books the male Indians&#13;
were always shown as&#13;
the ones who went out and&#13;
shot the buffalo and then&#13;
brought it home to the wife,"&#13;
Echo explained. "He was the&#13;
one who produced. The female&#13;
or wife, was just like&#13;
today; even though she did&#13;
work, she stayed home and&#13;
had to take care of the house&#13;
and kids and food. The book&#13;
mainly focused on how the&#13;
buffalos were skinned."&#13;
A different picture comes to&#13;
Echo's mind than that found&#13;
in the history books.&#13;
"I have a scene that comes&#13;
to mind," she said. "I have a&#13;
scene of a tepee, camping&#13;
(which is what I love) with a&#13;
family and cooking outdoors&#13;
with horses. No war paint,&#13;
just living out in nature and&#13;
Sandra Villarreal&#13;
Strong Hispanic community urged&#13;
"To me, being Hispanic&#13;
means coming from a Spanish&#13;
speaking background,"&#13;
said Sandra Villarreal, a&#13;
sophomore majoring in inter-&#13;
• national studies.&#13;
She explained the different&#13;
geographical regions included&#13;
in the term Hispanic.&#13;
"Hispanic is everybody&#13;
from Mexico, Central America&#13;
and South America, Spain,&#13;
Puerto Rico and American-&#13;
Mexican," she said.&#13;
"To me," Villarreal continued,&#13;
"Mexico is Indian, yet&#13;
the Spanish came so you&#13;
could say your roots go back&#13;
to Spain also. The European&#13;
and the Indian together is&#13;
called mestizo. In a way I&#13;
don't like the term Mexican&#13;
because I wasn't born in Mexico.&#13;
At the same time it's&#13;
hard to say that you're a&#13;
Spaniard. It's easier to say&#13;
Mexican heritage.''&#13;
Villarreal was a member of&#13;
the Hispanic club on campus&#13;
which is currently defunct.&#13;
"We can't get people involved.&#13;
Every time we do&#13;
Cinco De Mayo or National&#13;
Hispanic Heritage Week,&#13;
there's very few people involved,"&#13;
Villarreal explained.&#13;
"They say, 'I've got stuff outside&#13;
school or I have to work.'&#13;
It's Hispanics we're trying to&#13;
get in the club and that's&#13;
their excuses."&#13;
Villarreal knows only a few&#13;
of approximately 90 Hispanics&#13;
on campus. She would like&#13;
a stronger Hispanic community&#13;
to develop on campus but&#13;
there are difficulties.&#13;
"Sometimes I wonder&#13;
what's the matter," said Villarreal.&#13;
"I think it would be&#13;
so nice to experience Hispanic&#13;
culture the way Blacks are&#13;
getting into Black history. I&#13;
think it would be nice for Hispanics&#13;
to do the same.&#13;
"When we (Hispanics)&#13;
don't even know each other,&#13;
then we don't even have that&#13;
(a sense of culture) and we&#13;
can't move on to another&#13;
level," Villarreal continued.&#13;
Except for her family and&#13;
the few Hispanic friends she&#13;
has at school, Villarreal&#13;
knows few other Hispanics in&#13;
Racine where she lives. "I've&#13;
told people I'm not exactly&#13;
sure I know what the minority&#13;
experience is because I've&#13;
always lived in neighborhoods&#13;
where we were the one or two&#13;
minorities in that neighborhood,"&#13;
she explained. "I went&#13;
to a school and all my friends&#13;
were white."&#13;
Villarreal's experience as a&#13;
Hispanic student at Parkside&#13;
differs in a unique way from&#13;
what white students experience.&#13;
Her experience in a&#13;
Spanish class is an example.&#13;
Although both her parents are&#13;
Spanish-speakers, Spanish is&#13;
not spoken in Villarreal's&#13;
home.&#13;
"I took a Spanish class and&#13;
the students wondered why. A&#13;
friend was telling me what&#13;
the students were saying.&#13;
They'd say, 'She just wants&#13;
an easy A, that's all.' I felt&#13;
like I had to explain myself.&#13;
That's just one instance," Villarreal&#13;
explained.&#13;
"I don't like to be paranoid&#13;
about it but sometimes I feel&#13;
that when I walk into a class,&#13;
people look at me just a bit&#13;
differently. Here are all these&#13;
white people and then somebody&#13;
with darker colored skin&#13;
comes in. I noticed this a lot&#13;
in the classes; it's not just&#13;
Mexicans but Blacks too. The&#13;
Sandra Villarreal&#13;
proportion (of people of&#13;
color) is so smaU that you&#13;
kind of stick out.&#13;
"At the same time," Villarreal&#13;
continued, "I don't like&#13;
to say that people are looking&#13;
at me because I'm Hispanic,&#13;
because maybe they're looking&#13;
at me because of what&#13;
I'm wearing for example."&#13;
Villarreal believes that too&#13;
much worry over what people&#13;
are thinking about her builds&#13;
limitations to what she can&#13;
do.&#13;
"It limits people to be the&#13;
fullest person they can be.&#13;
People will say, 'I don't want&#13;
to do it because I don't want&#13;
to stick out.* So what they've&#13;
done is limited themselves&#13;
and then they don't grow in&#13;
the way that they could have.&#13;
"My parents have always&#13;
said, 'Be a person.' You're&#13;
not just Hispanic, you're not&#13;
just a woman, you're a person&#13;
and you do what you do&#13;
as a person," Villarreal concluded.&#13;
peace, not war. I have a view&#13;
of how great it must have&#13;
been to live back then."&#13;
There are thirteen Native&#13;
Americans on campus, some&#13;
of whom are interested in&#13;
starting an American Indian&#13;
club. Echo is interested in the&#13;
club.&#13;
"I thought it'd be interesting&#13;
to meet and become&#13;
friends with other people who&#13;
are Indian. I'd have somebody&#13;
to talk to about being Indian&#13;
instead of always being&#13;
'someone else,' " she explained.&#13;
Echo is pleased with the attention&#13;
given to people of&#13;
color and believes that it will&#13;
help secure needed jobs.&#13;
"Whatever I do, I always&#13;
do my best, but you've got to&#13;
be given the chance first.&#13;
That (attention to people of&#13;
color) might be a way for me&#13;
to be given a chance to prove&#13;
myself other than (an employer)&#13;
picking a white male&#13;
who looks the part.&#13;
"I'm not the typical female,"&#13;
Echo continued,&#13;
"where I put on a bunch of&#13;
make-up and wear little frilly&#13;
dresses. I like adventure."&#13;
Echo has gone scuba diving,&#13;
has jumped off cliffs in California&#13;
and plans to go hand&#13;
gliding this summer. "I could&#13;
do a job that some might not&#13;
be able to, but I might not be&#13;
given a job because I am female.&#13;
"Moving furniture is an example.&#13;
I'm pretty strong but&#13;
Education&#13;
Shade from page 1&#13;
Minnesota, got into medical&#13;
school, went to work for a lab&#13;
and married someone who&#13;
was a steamfitter," explained&#13;
Shade. "He put so much pressure&#13;
on her and she put so&#13;
much pressure on herself...he&#13;
couldn't tolerate her going&#13;
away or spending additional&#13;
time in school and as a result&#13;
she refused to go to medicai&#13;
school."&#13;
There are 202 persons holding&#13;
teaching positions at&#13;
Parkside; 153 are males and&#13;
49 are females. Out of the 153&#13;
males, all are white except&#13;
for 13 Asians, two Hispanics&#13;
and one Black. There are two&#13;
Asian and one Black among&#13;
the female faculty.&#13;
Being the only Black female&#13;
professor on campus&#13;
has some unique consequences&#13;
for Shade.&#13;
"When I taught in Madison,&#13;
I became involved with Black&#13;
females there. I have not&#13;
done that here and I think it&#13;
is a disadvantage for the&#13;
young people, but it gets to be&#13;
a disadvantage to me by&#13;
being the only one." explained&#13;
Shade. *&#13;
''Jf 1 indeed get caught in it&#13;
(being a mentor for 106 Black&#13;
women), then what I do is&#13;
spend so much time being a&#13;
tthhePmm t^hWatI rae nndd* au pm neont thoar vifnogr&#13;
Ramona Powell&#13;
I'll be helping someone move&#13;
a desk and some guy will say,&#13;
"Oh, don't do that, I'll do it."'&#13;
While in California a few&#13;
years ago, Echo auditioned&#13;
for an Indian role in a movie.&#13;
"The men producers,&#13;
writers and directors who&#13;
hire, after they hire you, you&#13;
don't know if it is just for the&#13;
job because they think you&#13;
can do it or because they&#13;
think you're cute. This&#13;
producer said I was right for&#13;
an Indian part. He came over&#13;
to my apartment and made&#13;
advances. Fortunately, I&#13;
never heard from him&#13;
again," Echo recalled.&#13;
Echo plans to study mass&#13;
communications at UW-Milwaukee&#13;
in the near future and&#13;
would like to make her own&#13;
film documentaries. She one&#13;
day envisions herself making&#13;
nature films with National&#13;
Geographic.&#13;
anyone to respond to myself&#13;
because I have no peers to&#13;
share it with.&#13;
"Secondly," . continued&#13;
Shade, "I end up getting flack&#13;
from my colleagues because&#13;
then when I get involved with&#13;
106 people, that means I don't&#13;
do research, I don't spend&#13;
time teaching, I don't spend&#13;
time doing the committee&#13;
work.&#13;
"If I spend so much time&#13;
with all of that (mentoring),&#13;
then they (colleagues) have&#13;
only one expectation for me -&#13;
that I ought to function in one&#13;
way and that may not be my&#13;
particular culture," concluded&#13;
Shade.&#13;
Hendricks from page 4&#13;
and the experiences that I&#13;
can bring in.&#13;
"The experiences that I've&#13;
had over time with people,&#13;
education, young people and&#13;
experiences that I've had in&#13;
my personal life, bring a certain&#13;
perspective. My reading&#13;
and understanding of the research&#13;
and seeing and knowing&#13;
what's happening with&#13;
young people in school everyday,&#13;
gives me a certain perspective.&#13;
So, I see my perspective&#13;
as the greatest thing&#13;
that I can bring to Parkside,"&#13;
Hendricks concluded.&#13;
Native American Ramona Powell&#13;
'Echo' tells of nationality, stereotypes&#13;
Bom on an Indian reservation&#13;
in northern Wisconsin to&#13;
a young Native American&#13;
woman of 16 who was too&#13;
young to care for her, Echo&#13;
wu removed from the reservation&#13;
at six months old and&#13;
at three was legally adopted.&#13;
Echo's real name ls Ramona&#13;
Powell but she doesn't go&#13;
by it very often. She baa idenWied&#13;
herself with Indian&#13;
names from the time she was&#13;
little.&#13;
"When I grew up," Echo&#13;
explained, "my best friend&#13;
was an Indian and we gave&#13;
each other Indian names. I&#13;
waa Shy Fox because I waa&#13;
shy and because a fox 11&#13;
clever."&#13;
Echo wanted to know more&#13;
about her family history, but&#13;
since ahe wu adopted, ob•&#13;
ta1nlng information ls very&#13;
difficult. She knows that her&#13;
biological mother waa a&#13;
member of the Chippewa&#13;
tribe and that her biological&#13;
father waa German.&#13;
• 'I waa brought up knowing&#13;
Sandra Villarreal&#13;
my nationality," said Echo.&#13;
'· When people are asked what&#13;
are they and they say, 'I'm&#13;
German, I'm Italian,' their&#13;
descendants go back overseas.&#13;
But wtth me, at least&#13;
the Indian part, my ancestors&#13;
are here.''&#13;
Echo has lived in both Wisconsin&#13;
and cautomia. People&#13;
in both places seldom recognize&#13;
her as Native American.&#13;
"Here, a lot of people think&#13;
I'm Italian, Spanish, or Indian.&#13;
I lived in C&amp;llfomia and&#13;
there they didn •t even think&#13;
of Indian right away, they&#13;
just assumed I wa.a from&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
"Of course, people can tell&#13;
I'm something," continued&#13;
Echo. "A lot of people generalize&#13;
that whole kind of look ·&#13;
being a little darker. Indians&#13;
have high cheek bones, that's&#13;
how I know. I've been mistaken&#13;
a lot."&#13;
As a child in school, Echo&#13;
wa.a aware of the Images people&#13;
have in their heads about&#13;
Native Americans.&#13;
"Growing up, when kids in&#13;
school knew I was Indian,&#13;
they thought I could run really&#13;
fast," Echo explained.&#13;
While tn high school, Echo&#13;
took a history course on Native&#13;
Americans.&#13;
"In the books the male In•&#13;
dlans were always shown as&#13;
the ones who went out and&#13;
shot the buffalo and then&#13;
brought it home to the wife,"&#13;
Echo explained. "He was the&#13;
one who produced. The female&#13;
or wife, was Just 11.ke&#13;
today; even though she did&#13;
work, she stayed home and&#13;
had to take care of the house&#13;
and kids and food. The book&#13;
mainly focused on how the&#13;
buffalos were skinned."&#13;
A different picture comes to&#13;
Echo's mind than that found&#13;
in the history books.&#13;
"I have a scene that comes&#13;
to mind," she said. " I have a&#13;
scene of a tepee, camping&#13;
(which ls what I love) wtth a&#13;
family and cooking outdoors&#13;
with horses. No war paint,&#13;
just llvlng out in nature and&#13;
Strong Hispanic community urged&#13;
"To me, being Hispanic&#13;
meana coming from a Span•&#13;
lsh speaking background,''&#13;
said Sandra Villarreal, a&#13;
sophomore majoring in international&#13;
studies.&#13;
She explained the different&#13;
geographical regions included&#13;
in the term Hispanic.&#13;
"Hi.span1c ls everybody&#13;
from Mexico, Central America&#13;
and South America, Spain,&#13;
Puerto Rico and AmericanMexican,"&#13;
ahe aald.&#13;
"To me," Vlllarreal continued,&#13;
"Mexico 11 Indian, yet&#13;
the Spanlah came 10 you&#13;
could say your root. go back&#13;
to Spain alao. The European&#13;
and the Indian together 11&#13;
called mestizo. In a way I&#13;
don •t 11.ke the term Mexican&#13;
ooeauae I wasn't bom in Mexico.&#13;
At the same time ll'a&#13;
hard to say that you're a&#13;
SpanJ&amp;rd. It's ea.aler to aay&#13;
Mexican heritage.''&#13;
Vlllarreal waa a member of&#13;
the HJ.lpanic club on campus&#13;
whlch 11 currenUy defUnet.&#13;
. "We can't get people in•&#13;
volved. Every time we do&#13;
Cinco De Mayo or National&#13;
Hispanic Heritage Week,&#13;
there'• very few people involved,''&#13;
Villarreal explained.&#13;
"They say, 'I've got stuff outside&#13;
school or I have to work.'&#13;
It's Hilpanics we're trying to&#13;
get in the club and that's&#13;
their excuses.•'&#13;
Villarreal knows only a few&#13;
of approximately 90 Hispanics&#13;
on campus. She would 11.ke&#13;
a stronger Hispanic community&#13;
to develop on campus but&#13;
there are difficulties.&#13;
"Sometimes I wonder&#13;
what's the matter," said Villarreal.&#13;
"I think it would be&#13;
so nlce to experience Hispanic&#13;
culture the way Blacks are&#13;
getting into Black history. I&#13;
think lt would be nice for Hispanics&#13;
to do the same.&#13;
"When we (Hispanics)&#13;
don't even know each other,&#13;
then we don't even have that&#13;
(a sense of culture) and we&#13;
can't move on to another&#13;
level," Villarreal continued.&#13;
Except for her family and&#13;
the few H!spanic friends she&#13;
has at school, Villarreal&#13;
knows few other Hispanics in&#13;
Racine where she lives. "I've&#13;
told people I'm not exacUy&#13;
sure I know what the minority&#13;
experience is because I've&#13;
always lived in neighborhoods&#13;
where we were the one or two&#13;
minorities in that neighborhood,"&#13;
she explained. "I went&#13;
to a school and all my friends&#13;
were white.''&#13;
Villarreal's experience aa a&#13;
Hispanic student at Parkside&#13;
differs in a unique way from&#13;
what white students experience.&#13;
Her experience in a&#13;
Spanish class 1s an example.&#13;
Although both her parents are&#13;
Spanl.sh•apeakers, Spanish ls&#13;
not spoken in Villarreal's&#13;
home.&#13;
"I took a Spanish class and&#13;
the students wondered why. A&#13;
friend was telling me what&#13;
the students were saying.&#13;
They'd say, 'She just wants&#13;
an easy A, that's all.' I felt&#13;
11.ke I had to explain myself.&#13;
That's just one instance," Villarreal&#13;
explained.&#13;
• "I don't llke to be paranoid&#13;
about it but sometimes I feel&#13;
that when I walk into a class,&#13;
people look at me Just a bit&#13;
differently. Here are all these&#13;
white people and then somebody&#13;
with darker colored skin&#13;
comes in. I noticed this a lot&#13;
in the classes; it's not Just&#13;
Mexicans but Blacks too. The&#13;
Sandra VIilarreai&#13;
proportion ( of people of&#13;
color) ls so small that you&#13;
kind of stick out.&#13;
"At the same tlme.'' Villarreal&#13;
continued, "I don't llke&#13;
to aay that people are looking&#13;
at me because I'm Hispanic,&#13;
because maybe they're looking&#13;
at me because of what&#13;
I'm wearing for example.••&#13;
Villarreal believes that too&#13;
much worry over what people&#13;
are thinking about her builds&#13;
limitations to what she can&#13;
do.&#13;
"It llmlts people to be the&#13;
fullest person they can be.&#13;
People wl11 aay, 'I don't want&#13;
to do it because I don •t want&#13;
to stick out.' So what they've&#13;
done ls llmited themselves&#13;
and then they don't grow in&#13;
the way that they could have.&#13;
"My parents have always&#13;
said, 'Be a person.' You're&#13;
not just Hispanic, you're not&#13;
just a woman, you're a person&#13;
and you do what you do&#13;
as a person," Villarreal eon.&#13;
eluded.&#13;
peace, not war. I have a view&#13;
of how great it must have&#13;
been to live back then.''&#13;
There are thirteen Native&#13;
Americans on campus, some&#13;
of whom are interested in&#13;
starting an American Indian&#13;
club. Echo ls interested in the&#13;
club.&#13;
"I thought it'd be interesting&#13;
to meet and become&#13;
friends wtth other people who&#13;
are Indian. I'd have somebody&#13;
to talk to about being Indian&#13;
instead of always being&#13;
•someone else,' " she explained.&#13;
Echo 11 pleased wtth the attention&#13;
given to people of&#13;
color and believes that it will&#13;
help secure needed jobs.&#13;
"Whatever I do, I always&#13;
do my best, but you've got to&#13;
be given the chance first.&#13;
That (attention to people of&#13;
color) might be a way for me&#13;
to be given a chance to prove&#13;
myaelf other than (an em•&#13;
ployer) picking a whlte male&#13;
who looks the part.&#13;
"I'm not the typical female,"&#13;
Echo continued,&#13;
• 'where I put on a bunch of&#13;
make-up and wear little frilly&#13;
dresses. I like adventure."&#13;
Echo has gone scuba diving,&#13;
has jumped off cliffs in Califomla&#13;
and plans to go hand&#13;
gliding this summer . " I could&#13;
do a job that some might not&#13;
be able to, but I might not be&#13;
given a job because I am female.&#13;
"Moving furniture is an example.&#13;
I'm pretty strong but&#13;
Education&#13;
Shade from page 1&#13;
Minnesota, got into medical&#13;
school, went to work for a lab&#13;
and married someone who&#13;
was a steamfitter," explained&#13;
Shade. "He put so much pressure&#13;
on her and she put so&#13;
much pressure on herself .. . he&#13;
couldn't tolerate her going&#13;
away or spending additional&#13;
Ume in school and as a result,&#13;
she refused to go to medical&#13;
school.''&#13;
There are 202 persons holding&#13;
teaching positions at&#13;
Parkside; 153 are males and&#13;
49 are females. Out of the 163&#13;
males, all are white except&#13;
for 18 Asians, two Hispanics&#13;
and one Black. There are two&#13;
Asian and one Black among&#13;
the female faculty.&#13;
Being the only Black female&#13;
professor on campus&#13;
has some unique consequences&#13;
for Shade.&#13;
"When I taught in Madlson&#13;
I became involved with Black&#13;
females there. I have not&#13;
done that here and I think it&#13;
ls a disadvantage for the&#13;
young people, but lt gets to be&#13;
a disadvantage to me by&#13;
being the only one," explained&#13;
Shade.&#13;
"If I indeed get caught in it&#13;
(being a mentor for 106 Black&#13;
women), then what I do ls&#13;
spend so much time being a&#13;
counselor and a mentor for&#13;
them that I end up not having&#13;
Ramona Powell&#13;
I'll be helping someone move&#13;
a desk and some guy will say,&#13;
"Oh, don't do that, I'll do lt."&#13;
While in Callfomla a few&#13;
years ago, Echo auditioned&#13;
for an Indian role in a movie.&#13;
"The men producera,&#13;
writers and directors who&#13;
hire, after they hire you, you&#13;
don't know it lt ls just for the&#13;
job because they think you&#13;
can do 1t or because they&#13;
think you're cute. Thia&#13;
producer said I waa right for&#13;
an Indian part. He came over&#13;
to my apartment and made&#13;
advances. Fortunately, I&#13;
neve r heard from him&#13;
again," Echo recalled.&#13;
E cho plans to study mass&#13;
communlcatlons at UW•Mll•&#13;
waukee in the near future and&#13;
would like to make her own&#13;
film documentaries. She one&#13;
day envisions herself making&#13;
nature films with National&#13;
Geographic.&#13;
anyone to respond to myself&#13;
because I have no peers to&#13;
share lt with.&#13;
"Secondly," . continued&#13;
Shade, "I end up getting nack&#13;
from my colleagues because&#13;
then when I get involved with&#13;
106 people, that means I don't&#13;
do research, I don't spend&#13;
tlme teaching, I don't spend&#13;
time doing the committee&#13;
work.&#13;
"If I spend so much Ume&#13;
with all of that (mentoring),&#13;
then they (colleagues) have&#13;
only one expectation for me •&#13;
that I ought to function in one&#13;
way and that may not be my&#13;
particular culture," conclud•&#13;
ed Shade.&#13;
Hendricks from pi,oe 4&#13;
and the experiences that I&#13;
can bring in.&#13;
"The experiences that I've&#13;
had over time with people,&#13;
education, young people and&#13;
experiences that I've had ln&#13;
my personal life, bring a certain&#13;
perspective. My reading&#13;
and understanding of the research&#13;
and seeing and know•&#13;
ing what's happening with&#13;
young people in school every•&#13;
day, gives me a certain per•&#13;
spectlve. So, I see my per•&#13;
spectlve as the greatest thing&#13;
that I can bring to Parkside,"&#13;
Hendricks concluded.&#13;
Suiata and Sunita Shah&#13;
Left India for education in United States&#13;
They heard from some relatives&#13;
in America that the U.S.&#13;
is the place to go to get good&#13;
education. That's why two&#13;
sisters from India, Sujata and&#13;
Sunita Shah, came here four&#13;
years ago.&#13;
The Shah family did not&#13;
leave India together, but left&#13;
months apart. The traumatic&#13;
experience of changing countries&#13;
and being separated&#13;
from their family is not easily&#13;
forgotten by either sister.&#13;
Sujata, now 19 years old,&#13;
came over with her father&#13;
and older brother leaving&#13;
Sunita, their mother and&#13;
younger brother behind for&#13;
six months.&#13;
"I came down here (America),&#13;
it was in the nighttime&#13;
and it was snowing," Sujata&#13;
recalled. "It was cold and I&#13;
feel like why did I come. It&#13;
was hard for me because I&#13;
did't know how to speak, read&#13;
and write."&#13;
Sunita, now 17, remembered&#13;
what it felt like to be in&#13;
a foreign country.&#13;
"It was real difficult," she&#13;
recalled. "I was like in jail&#13;
because I didn't know how to&#13;
speak English or write or&#13;
anything else. When I go to&#13;
school (at this time it was a&#13;
high school in Chicago) the&#13;
teacher talked to me and&#13;
gave me homework. I didn't&#13;
know how to do it and I come&#13;
home and cry."&#13;
It took the sisters two years&#13;
of liv ing in American to learn&#13;
English. They had taken an&#13;
English course in India but it&#13;
didn't teach them how to&#13;
speak English.&#13;
"There's a difference between&#13;
British pronunciation&#13;
and American pronunciation,"&#13;
Sujata explained.&#13;
."Sometimes American students&#13;
are talking to me and I&#13;
don't understand what they&#13;
are saying. If they write it&#13;
down we can understand."&#13;
Sunita had heard, prior to&#13;
coming to the U.S., that&#13;
"America is a free country."&#13;
When she moved here she&#13;
found out that the meaning of&#13;
freedom is subject to different&#13;
interpretations.&#13;
"They say that America is&#13;
a free country, but not really&#13;
to me," Sunita explained.&#13;
"Like here you could do anything&#13;
you want but you cannot&#13;
go to your friends' house.&#13;
You have to call them if they&#13;
are free or not. And you cannot&#13;
play through your neighbors*&#13;
ground. In India you&#13;
don't have to call, you can&#13;
just go over and talk and play&#13;
with them. Everybody knows&#13;
who is living next to each&#13;
other."&#13;
The Shah sisters are glad to&#13;
be women in America. They&#13;
say it is more difficult to be a&#13;
woman in India than in the&#13;
U.S.&#13;
"It's very difficult. They&#13;
treat you real differently,"&#13;
Sunita explained. "If you're a&#13;
girl, you have to be very&#13;
careful who you talk to. You&#13;
have to know how to respect&#13;
other people. I kind of like it&#13;
here. You can talk anyway&#13;
you want to anyone."&#13;
A sexual division of labor&#13;
exists in India.&#13;
"Women don't really work&#13;
outside the home," said Sunita.&#13;
"Men only work. Most of&#13;
them are farmers. Women&#13;
stay home and do the home&#13;
cooking and clean the&#13;
dishes."&#13;
Neither sister works outside&#13;
the home because they've&#13;
been unable to find work.&#13;
Since their mother works,&#13;
they cook an Indian dinner in&#13;
the evening.&#13;
"We eat mostly Indian food&#13;
- bread, rice, no meat," Sujata&#13;
explained. "It takes almost&#13;
one and one half hours to&#13;
make. In India and here, boys&#13;
have to eat only. They don't&#13;
do nothing."&#13;
In two years when Sujata is&#13;
21, she will be expected, according&#13;
to Indian custom, to&#13;
consider marriage.&#13;
"I like to pick my own but&#13;
they (parents) tell me we&#13;
have to do it Indian way, not&#13;
American way. In India we&#13;
don't have boyfriend or girlfriend,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
In India the parents pick a&#13;
male for their daughter and&#13;
then the prospective couple&#13;
meets and talks.&#13;
"First your mother and father&#13;
see the boy and if they&#13;
like the boy they tell me that&#13;
we like this boy so would you&#13;
like to get married. Then we&#13;
(she and the man) talk and&#13;
then afterward I say I like&#13;
you and if he say I like you&#13;
too, then we get married,"&#13;
photo by Klmbertlo Kranlch&#13;
Sunita Shah (I) and her sister Sujata, both originally from&#13;
working their degrees.&#13;
Sujata explained.&#13;
The wedding date is set by&#13;
the parents. Traditionally, the&#13;
woman moves into the husband's&#13;
house with his family&#13;
and must take on the household&#13;
responsibilities. Sujata's&#13;
marriage will deviate slightly&#13;
from custom.&#13;
"I will go after two years to&#13;
India but my mother and father&#13;
are going first. They go&#13;
to some of the relatives house&#13;
and they ask, 'Do you know&#13;
any boy for my girl?' If they&#13;
say yes, then they will give&#13;
me a call and I will go,"&#13;
Sujata explained.&#13;
Sujata's husband will come&#13;
back to the U.S. where the&#13;
two will live with her parents&#13;
for one year and then they&#13;
will move into their own&#13;
apartment. Sujata plans to&#13;
finish college and become a&#13;
travel agent. However, it is&#13;
expected of her to have children.&#13;
"If you don't have children,"&#13;
she explained, "they&#13;
call you bad names." After&#13;
two years of marriage she&#13;
will have a child and if it's a&#13;
boy "It's lucky for everyFlorence&#13;
Blends cultures for best of two worlds&#13;
A native of Hong Kong,&#13;
Florence Lo left her hometown&#13;
four years ago. Separated&#13;
from her parents and&#13;
friends, she and her younger&#13;
brother stayed with an uncle&#13;
in Kenosha, whom they had&#13;
never met before.&#13;
Lo began her studies at&#13;
Parkside in 1983 and was&#13;
joined in the United States by&#13;
her mother one year later. In&#13;
1985 while co-founding the&#13;
Parkside Asian Student Organization&#13;
(PASO), her father&#13;
came to America and the&#13;
family unit was completed.&#13;
According to Lo, PASO was&#13;
started because the Asian students&#13;
with whom she talked&#13;
felt it would be a good idea.&#13;
"We thought," Lo explained,&#13;
"might as well get&#13;
this started and have somebody&#13;
in school recognize us as&#13;
part of t he Oriental culture."&#13;
Lo, president of PASO, believes&#13;
that some club members&#13;
expressed concern with&#13;
her as president because she&#13;
is a woman.&#13;
"When I first started the&#13;
club," explained Lo, "I feel&#13;
that there are people that feel&#13;
it's a bit uncomfortable having&#13;
a girl run a club. This is&#13;
really true. They feel that a&#13;
girl shouldn't be doing something&#13;
really powerful. I&#13;
always try to give my first&#13;
image that I'm a woman, but&#13;
it doesn't mean I cannot do it.&#13;
"Just to give you an example,"&#13;
continued Lo, "I know&#13;
that there are a few guys in&#13;
the club that show some kind&#13;
of interest in me because I'm&#13;
different, yet one of the differences&#13;
is that I am pretty&#13;
much dominant when I do&#13;
things. I'm not the kind of&#13;
girl that's 'traditional.'&#13;
"This is particularly true&#13;
for these Asian guys since&#13;
most of them are not from&#13;
here and they do look at&#13;
'tradition' as a very important&#13;
component in a wife or&#13;
girlfriend. A woman might&#13;
want to go out and work even&#13;
as a wife, that's no problem,&#13;
but you aren't supposed to&#13;
achieve anything higher than&#13;
what you started out to work&#13;
Lots of guys think that a&#13;
woman shouldn't be sitting at&#13;
the top of the hierarchy and&#13;
be an executive person.&#13;
"Some guys in our club&#13;
think that I shouldn't be the&#13;
president because I'm a girl.&#13;
Some of them just look at&#13;
what I do as overdominant&#13;
but at the same time they go&#13;
along with what I've plannedthey&#13;
think it's great."&#13;
Lo has been learning English&#13;
since she was in first&#13;
grade. She is fluent in Chinese.&#13;
Even though she's studied&#13;
the English language extensively,&#13;
Lo has had some&#13;
difficulties while a student at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"I had been having a bit of&#13;
a hard time understanding&#13;
stuff when I first came. Ordinary&#13;
communicating I don't&#13;
have a lot of problems," explained&#13;
Lo. "When I was taking&#13;
my first semester, I&#13;
couldn't listen to the professor&#13;
as fast as he speak. He&#13;
speaks ordinary speech but to&#13;
me it's not ordinary, it's fast.&#13;
"Anytime I feel I need&#13;
some help in terms of something,&#13;
I go to the professor,"&#13;
continued Lo. "I think they do&#13;
try to help me. Sometimes I&#13;
will even be offering to tell&#13;
them that I come from another&#13;
country and I just&#13;
couldn't understand it as well&#13;
as other people do."&#13;
Lo believes she has the best&#13;
of both worlds because she,&#13;
can blend American and Chinese&#13;
culture together.&#13;
"I feel good about being in&#13;
America. I feel I'm different&#13;
but I can have something to&#13;
be proud of in my culture.&#13;
Orientals have some values&#13;
Florence Lo&#13;
that Americans think are&#13;
really good. I'm like one of&#13;
the products shipped from&#13;
Hong Kong over here.&#13;
"Don't hesitiate to be proud&#13;
of where you come from," advises&#13;
Lo. "I know there are&#13;
people who stay real quiet&#13;
about their own backgroundwhere&#13;
they came from and&#13;
what they do. I think you&#13;
should carry some of your&#13;
own culture. I can understand&#13;
people who blend the cultures&#13;
together, that's what I'm&#13;
doing. You have the advantage&#13;
of knowing two things."&#13;
"I think a woman shouldn't&#13;
be ashamed of being woman," concluded Lo.&#13;
body," Sujata explained. "If&#13;
she has girl people will say,&#13;
'Oh, gosh!' You have to spend&#13;
more money on the girl for&#13;
her marriage ceremony.'"&#13;
Sujata practices the Jain&#13;
religion, which dictates the&#13;
marriage process. A person is&#13;
only allowed to marry within&#13;
the same caste, which is indicated&#13;
by last names. Hence,&#13;
Sujata's mother and father&#13;
had the same last names before&#13;
they married.&#13;
Wedding ceremonies are&#13;
in India and&#13;
last for about two and one&#13;
half hours. The woman's father&#13;
hall gives gold, money and clothes&#13;
costs between&#13;
dollars and is attended by 400&#13;
500 man walk around a fire seven&#13;
times and thus become husband&#13;
If religion. Divorce in India is&#13;
Feminists&#13;
of c olor&#13;
Feminists from page 1&#13;
jority of people in this country,&#13;
and especially the&#13;
masses of women, stand to&#13;
benefit from the most militant,&#13;
the most assertive, challenge&#13;
to racism..."&#13;
bell hooks has written that&#13;
"while it is in no way racist&#13;
for any author to write a book&#13;
exclusively about white&#13;
women, it is fundamentally&#13;
racist for books to be published&#13;
that focus solely on the&#13;
American white woman's experience&#13;
in which that experience&#13;
is assumed to be the&#13;
American women's experience."&#13;
Racism is a joint responsibility.&#13;
"I do not hold any individual&#13;
American woman (or&#13;
man) responsible for the&#13;
roots of this ignorance about&#13;
other cultures (which is one&#13;
basis for racist oppression)..."&#13;
writes Judith Moschkovich,&#13;
"I do hold every&#13;
woman (or man) responsible&#13;
for the transformation of this&#13;
ignorance."&#13;
.&#13;
l&#13;
§JJjata relaUves&#13;
In 18 Inclla, and&#13;
Inclla ot 19 slx it 1n it snowing." "It llke hard 17, it In&#13;
"It "I 1n jail&#13;
(at In It It llvlng In Engllsh. ta.ken 1n Inclla Florence Lo&#13;
- -&#13;
. "I&#13;
If understand.'•&#13;
Suntta had ls Interpretations.&#13;
tree Suntta call lt are cannot&#13;
neighbors'&#13;
Indla call, ls In it in In diUicult. Suntta "If girl, it&#13;
.&#13;
A in Suntta.&#13;
dlahes."&#13;
thelr in&#13;
• half Indla ls&#13;
21, will Indian Indla girl•&#13;
friend," Inclla a&#13;
talks.&#13;
If so I if say llke Lo In Lo 1n 1983 In 1986 famlly Lo, 1t be Idea.&#13;
Lo In part the as isa "I ls&#13;
something&#13;
lt It.&#13;
In&#13;
Interest In I kind of&#13;
·traditional.•&#13;
''ts are In than&#13;
as. In I overdomlnant&#13;
plannedthey&#13;
in ls fiuent In Chinese.&#13;
extensively.&#13;
having blt hard I Lo. my fast 1n Lo. ''1t Lo "1 good in&#13;
photo_.,,, l(lfflbM1le Kranich&#13;
Suntta (1) 118te, India, are worldng on Sujata explained. The wedding date 1a set by baa a the parents. Traditionally, the goah!' woman moves Into the hus- girl band's house with hl8 family marrtage and must take on the house- hold responsibilities. Sujata's rellglon, marriage will deviate slightly 1a&#13;
from custom. "I will go after two years to 18 lndiInclla&#13;
but my mother and fa- cated laat ther are going first. They go Sujata•• to some of the relatives house laat beand&#13;
they ask, 'Do you know fore any boy for my girl?' If they say yes, then they will give very elaborate In Inclla me a call and I will go," Sujata explained. fa-&#13;
Sujata's husband will come ther arranges everything&#13;
back to the U.S. where the from the to the food and&#13;
two wlll live with her parenta givea for one year and then they to the marrriage.&#13;
will move Into their own The ceremony coats beapartment.&#13;
Sujata plans to tween three and five thousand&#13;
finish college and become a ls travel agent. However, it 18 or IIOO people. At the end of&#13;
expected of her to have chll- the wedding, the woman and&#13;
dren. f1re "If you don't have chll- husdren,"&#13;
she explained, "they band and wife. either&#13;
call you bad names." After spouse dies, the other cannot&#13;
two years ot marrtage she remarry, according to Jain&#13;
will have a child and lt it's a 1n ls&#13;
boy "It's lucky for every- not heard of.&#13;
good. hesttJate qulet&#13;
backgroundwhere&#13;
I I'm&#13;
shouldn •t&#13;
being a&#13;
ofcolor -~&#13;
from P""8 1&#13;
Jorlty 01 1n milltant,&#13;
racism ... "&#13;
baa ·it in is raclat be 1n is aasumed the&#13;
experience.••&#13;
Raclam ls responaibllity.&#13;
''I Individual&#13;
man) thls is oppression)&#13;
... " Moschkovlch,&#13;
tranaformation this&#13;
Pamela Smith&#13;
Accepts being a role model on campus, in community&#13;
by Mary Woods&#13;
Pamela Smith is a role&#13;
model at the Parkside&#13;
campus, as well as in the Racine&#13;
community at large. "I&#13;
accept the responsibilty of&#13;
being a role model," she said.&#13;
As one of only two Black&#13;
women on campus in a staff&#13;
position, Smith is sought out&#13;
for advice which she freely&#13;
gives so that others may&#13;
benefit from her knowledge.&#13;
As a minority professional,&#13;
she tries to pass on what she&#13;
knows to others.&#13;
"Each generation should&#13;
prepare the next," she said.&#13;
Smith realizes that not all&#13;
minority professionals have&#13;
interests that extend beyond&#13;
themselves.&#13;
"As different as minorities&#13;
are, as different as men are&#13;
from women, you'll find these&#13;
differences in terms of commitment&#13;
to one another."&#13;
Smith acknowledges that&#13;
her strong commitment to&#13;
helping others is a personal,&#13;
individual commitment. It is&#13;
this interest, the interest in&#13;
seeing others succeed, that is&#13;
one factor which accounts for&#13;
her effectiveness as an advisor/&#13;
educational outreach&#13;
counselor at EOC (Educational&#13;
Opportunity Center) where&#13;
she has worked since the program&#13;
began in October 1985.&#13;
In her position, she is responsible&#13;
for assisting adults&#13;
in exploring vocational/technical&#13;
or college programs.&#13;
EOC is funded by by the Department&#13;
of Education for the&#13;
purpose of aiding low-income&#13;
minorities, women, veterans&#13;
and the handicapped who&#13;
have fewer opportunities to&#13;
pursue information on post&#13;
secondary programs.&#13;
Smith realizes that being a&#13;
Black woman equips her with&#13;
the required empathy for&#13;
those with whom she works.&#13;
However, she adds, it is possible&#13;
for non-minorities to be&#13;
effective in such a position -&#13;
just not as likely. She points&#13;
to the effectiveness of missionaries&#13;
who freely gave of&#13;
themselves for humankind.&#13;
She realizes that the missionary&#13;
spirit lives in but a few.&#13;
Having trained in behavioral&#13;
psychology at Western&#13;
Michigan, Smith understands&#13;
incremental learning and is&#13;
able to transfer this to her&#13;
work by giving her clients appreciation&#13;
of the various&#13;
steps necessary for them to&#13;
realize their dreams. Her unquestionable&#13;
commitment to&#13;
others over the years gives&#13;
her respected stature in the&#13;
community and makes her a&#13;
most valuable staff member.&#13;
Smith views education as&#13;
"the most viable avenue of&#13;
achieving because it broadens&#13;
your thinking capabilities, analytical&#13;
abilities and self-introspection.&#13;
"It is a process," Smith&#13;
continued, "and ultimately&#13;
we'd like to think that the end&#13;
result is a degree and therefore&#13;
a marketable skill, but I&#13;
think there's something missing&#13;
when you forget about the&#13;
learning process itself. The&#13;
process itself is important."&#13;
When asked what she would&#13;
like minority students to gain&#13;
from higher education, she&#13;
responded by saying, "One of&#13;
the most important skills that&#13;
a minority person can have is&#13;
to be able to learn the system,&#13;
to learn systematic&#13;
ways of thinking, to learn the&#13;
process and to learn organizational&#13;
structure because all&#13;
of society and everything you&#13;
want to do is based on a&#13;
structure or a system.&#13;
"If we, as minorities, don't&#13;
have the confidence or are intimidated&#13;
by pursuing a phenomenon&#13;
from one step to the&#13;
next, we lose," Smith continued.&#13;
"We may start the process&#13;
and then there's a second&#13;
level or a third level or a&#13;
Debbie Hendricks&#13;
A woman with a beneficial view by Mary Woods&#13;
As Director of CHAMP&#13;
(Creating Higher Aspirations&#13;
and Motivations Program),&#13;
Debbie Hendricks tries to instill&#13;
within pre-college students&#13;
the idea that CHAMP&#13;
serves their motivation to&#13;
achieve whatever it is that&#13;
they deem important for their&#13;
fulfillment.&#13;
The CHAMP program&#13;
works with minority students&#13;
in eighth through twelfth&#13;
grades. The purpose of the&#13;
program is to motivate students&#13;
to attend and be prepared&#13;
for college.&#13;
Hendricks, though director&#13;
of CHAMP, has also served&#13;
as acting director of Minority&#13;
Student Services, much to the&#13;
delight of the students served&#13;
by that office. She has implemented&#13;
positive change while&#13;
serving in both capacities.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside&#13;
in July, 1986, she was the assistant&#13;
director of the Educational&#13;
Opportunity Program&#13;
at Marquette University&#13;
where she also received her&#13;
Master's degree.&#13;
In her work with CHAMP&#13;
students and Parkside students,&#13;
Hendricks tries to&#13;
show that having a sense of&#13;
responsibility of self is responsibility&#13;
to other people.&#13;
The CHAMP program,&#13;
under her direction, has&#13;
added a new course entitled,&#13;
"Ethnic History," to show the&#13;
results of others' sense of responsibility.&#13;
Contributions of&#13;
Blacks, Native Americans&#13;
and Hispanics will be presented&#13;
in this new course to show&#13;
that being responsible for&#13;
oneself has implications for&#13;
the lives of others.&#13;
As a Black woman at Parkside,&#13;
Hendricks would like to&#13;
see the day when she is "not&#13;
looked at as a Black woman&#13;
who works in the CHAMP&#13;
program, but as an individual&#13;
who can be helpful to anyone,"&#13;
Hendricks said.&#13;
"I would like for a visitor to&#13;
be able to come on campus&#13;
and not be told where the&#13;
Blacks are, where the Hispanics&#13;
are, where the International&#13;
students are," Hendricks&#13;
continued. "I'd like&#13;
them to feel while they are&#13;
here that Parkside encompasses&#13;
everybody. That's the&#13;
impact that I'd like to make.&#13;
That's what I'd like to see."&#13;
When asked how important&#13;
it is for minority students to&#13;
interact with the majority&#13;
population, she responded,&#13;
"It is critical for minority&#13;
students to interact.&#13;
"We must mix, mingle and&#13;
understand one another. Minorities&#13;
are bothered by&#13;
others' not understanding&#13;
them, so that's why it's so important&#13;
for minorities to mingle&#13;
with others. It's the way&#13;
that the majority will get to&#13;
know the minority. I resist&#13;
the idea of being separate but&#13;
equal. This is not to say that&#13;
the minorities at times may&#13;
not need outlets together, but&#13;
real understanding will only&#13;
come from interaction."&#13;
In her short time at Parkside,&#13;
Hendricks has been a&#13;
mover. She has worked&#13;
ceaselessly in helping the university&#13;
come to grips with its&#13;
understanding of the importance&#13;
of Minority Student&#13;
Services. Funds have been allocated&#13;
and a staff will be&#13;
coming in to further serve the&#13;
needs of minority students.&#13;
Hendricks is currently responsible&#13;
for proposal writing&#13;
and the day-to-day operations&#13;
of both CHAMP and Minority&#13;
Student Services.&#13;
Hendricks comes from a&#13;
family that has high regard&#13;
for education. Both of her&#13;
parents have college degrees.&#13;
One of her grandfathers was&#13;
a horse shoer in Mississippi&#13;
where he worked and sent all&#13;
of his children through college.&#13;
Hendricks is dedicated to&#13;
seeing more minorities attend&#13;
and be prepared for college.&#13;
She is very proud that at this&#13;
time, CHAMP has its highest&#13;
enrollment of Spanish students.&#13;
When asked how she sees&#13;
herslf in the university she&#13;
responded, "The only difference&#13;
between myself and anyone&#13;
else here is perspective,&#13;
Hendricks see page 2&#13;
fourth level and before we&#13;
can make it through the hierarchy,&#13;
we've gotten wiped&#13;
out. So once we've mastered&#13;
the thinking, once we've&#13;
adapted our thinking to a systematic&#13;
way, then it's harder&#13;
to eliminate us from the process."&#13;
Her mother and grandmother&#13;
(who is now 80 years&#13;
old) instilled within her a&#13;
strong desire to help others.&#13;
She was taught at an early&#13;
age that her responsibilities&#13;
go beyond herself. As a single&#13;
mother who finds parenting&#13;
rewarding, she is instilling&#13;
these same qualities in her&#13;
daughter.&#13;
Smith is the eldest daughter&#13;
and one of seven children, six&#13;
of whom have obtained colege&#13;
educations. For this, she&#13;
credits her mother, who&#13;
values education.&#13;
Smith feels that Parkside&#13;
could have a positive impact&#13;
on the community and is&#13;
somewhat optimistic of this&#13;
end because of the broader&#13;
educational concept of the&#13;
present administration.&#13;
When asked if being a minority&#13;
places extra responsibilities&#13;
and additional expectations&#13;
upon her, she said&#13;
that if and when that is the&#13;
case, she uses it as an oppor-&#13;
Pamela Smith&#13;
tunity to educate others. She&#13;
feels that minorities have an&#13;
obligation to educate non-minorities&#13;
about the minority&#13;
experience since the majority&#13;
population seldom has the&#13;
cause to look beyond their&#13;
own experience.&#13;
If there is a message that&#13;
Smith would deliver to the&#13;
Parkside community, it&#13;
would be to "be receptive to&#13;
new ideas, to new ways of&#13;
looking at the same thing."&#13;
To minority students, she&#13;
would say, "Develop a sense&#13;
of self, a security, a confidence.&#13;
If you take that with&#13;
you, you can make it."&#13;
'We share same problems differently&#13;
"We all go through the&#13;
same problems whether&#13;
you're Black, white, Hispanic&#13;
or whatever. It's just that we i&#13;
share it differently."&#13;
That is the belief of Sophia&#13;
Tina Miller, one of 106 Black&#13;
female students on campus.&#13;
Miller is a sophomore who&#13;
has been attending Parkside&#13;
for four years.&#13;
"The first two years I was&#13;
doing real good, but the peer&#13;
pressure groups I hung&#13;
around with, I lost confidence&#13;
in what I really wanted to do&#13;
at Parkside," Miller explained.&#13;
The peer groups Miller associated&#13;
with gave her advice&#13;
but not the kind that she&#13;
would now give to a student.&#13;
"Put your facts in order,"&#13;
suggested Miller. "Is this a&#13;
good place for you to be?&#13;
What are the requirements?&#13;
No one ever told me this&#13;
They (peer groups) told me&#13;
what teacher not to take and&#13;
what teacher to take. But&#13;
sometimes if you get the&#13;
teacher by yourself and you&#13;
open up to them, they can see&#13;
where you come from."&#13;
Lack of positive encouragement&#13;
from peer groups also&#13;
didn't help Miller in her academic&#13;
career.&#13;
"Some people don't like to&#13;
see you put forth an effort&#13;
and try to put you down," explained&#13;
Miller. "I found the&#13;
majority of them was my own&#13;
race, which was a shock.&#13;
"To me, the majority of&#13;
Black women have the worst&#13;
attitude problem about one&#13;
another. They judge you on&#13;
the outside, how you dress up,&#13;
and not normally on what you&#13;
really are on the inside.&#13;
"You got to know how to&#13;
take criticism. That's what&#13;
Black women have to learn to&#13;
do with themselves in order&#13;
to relate to others. They criticize&#13;
with each other but when&#13;
somebody criticizes them,&#13;
they hold a grudge on each&#13;
other," Miller explained.&#13;
In addition to being a student,&#13;
Miller is very active in&#13;
church. She wishes more professors&#13;
would understand why&#13;
she sometimes takes time off&#13;
from her classes to engage in&#13;
various church activities.&#13;
Miller believes that professors&#13;
are more understanding&#13;
of the time involved in athletics&#13;
than other activities.&#13;
"Athletes get away with it&#13;
(being excused from classes).&#13;
With me, my church activities&#13;
are more important (than&#13;
school) and they (professors)&#13;
can't accept that. I have a lot&#13;
of church and prayer service&#13;
that I'm trying to get into,"&#13;
explained Miller. "I would&#13;
like to sometimes go to&#13;
prayer service but the teacher&#13;
would tell you, 'Well, you&#13;
have to work it out and if you&#13;
don't, I don't care.' "»&#13;
Faith in God is a major&#13;
positive force in Miller's life.&#13;
"I'm trying to let God lead&#13;
"JY w»y that I can accomplish&#13;
my goal. There's a lot of&#13;
stuff that I can do and I don't&#13;
even have to have the educa-&#13;
**or ^ because I have&#13;
faith in myself," said Miller.&#13;
' I&#13;
. \&#13;
...&#13;
Pamela Smith&#13;
Accepts being a role model on campus, in community&#13;
by Mary Woods&#13;
Pamela Smith ls a role&#13;
model at the Parkside&#13;
campus, aa well as in the Racin&#13;
community at large. "I&#13;
ccept th re.8pons1bllty of&#13;
being a role model,•· she said.&#13;
As one of only two Black&#13;
women on campus in a staff&#13;
po ltion, Smith 1s sought out&#13;
for advice which she freely&#13;
gtv so that others may&#13;
benefit from her knowledge.&#13;
As a minority professional,&#13;
h tries to pass on what she&#13;
know to others.&#13;
"Each generation should&#13;
prepare the next," sh said.&#13;
Smith realizes that not all&#13;
minority professionals have&#13;
interests that extend beyond&#13;
themselves.&#13;
••As diff rent as mlnoritl s&#13;
are, a.a dllferent as men are.&#13;
from women, you '11 find these&#13;
differences in terms of commitment&#13;
to one another."&#13;
Smith acknowledges that&#13;
her strong commitment to&#13;
h lping others ls a personal,&#13;
individual commitment. It 1a&#13;
this interest, the interest In&#13;
eing others succeed, that ls&#13;
on fact.or which accounts for&#13;
her effectlvene s as an advisor/&#13;
educational outreach&#13;
counselor at EOC (Education-&#13;
1 Opportunity Center) where&#13;
she has worked since the program&#13;
began in October 1986.&#13;
In her position, she ls responsible&#13;
tor aastatlng adults&#13;
in exploring vocational/techn1cal&#13;
or college programs.&#13;
EOC is funded by by the Department&#13;
of Education for the&#13;
purpos of aiding low-Income&#13;
minorities, women, veterans&#13;
and the handicapped who&#13;
have f wer opportunities to&#13;
pursue lnformaUon on post&#13;
secondary programs.&#13;
Smith realizes that being a&#13;
Black woman equips her with&#13;
the r quired empathy for&#13;
those with whom she works.&#13;
However, she adds, 1t ls possible&#13;
for non-minorities to be&#13;
effecUve in such a posttlon -&#13;
just not as likely. She points&#13;
to the effectiveness of missionaries&#13;
who freely gave of&#13;
themselves for humankind.&#13;
She reall.zes that the missionary&#13;
splrtt lives in but a f.ew.&#13;
Having trained in behavioral&#13;
psychology at Westem&#13;
Michigan, Smith understands&#13;
incremental leamtng and ls&#13;
able to transfer this to her&#13;
work by giving her clients ap.&#13;
preclation of the various&#13;
step necessary for them to&#13;
reallze thelr dreams. Her unquestionable&#13;
commitment to&#13;
others over the yea.rs gives&#13;
her respected tature 1n the&#13;
Debbie Hendricks&#13;
community and makes her a&#13;
most valuable staff member.&#13;
Smith views education as&#13;
"the most viable avenue of&#13;
achieving because it broadens&#13;
your thinking capabilities, analytical&#13;
abillties and el!-introspectlon.&#13;
"It ls a process," Smith&#13;
continued, "and ultimately&#13;
we'd like to think that the end&#13;
result ls a degree and therefore&#13;
a marketable skill, but I&#13;
think there's something missing&#13;
when you forget about th&#13;
leamlng process itself. The&#13;
process itself is important.••&#13;
When asked what sh would&#13;
ll.ke minority students to gain&#13;
from higher education, she&#13;
responded by saying, "One of&#13;
the most important skills that&#13;
a minority person can have is&#13;
to be able to learn the system,&#13;
to learn systematic&#13;
ways of thinking, to learn the&#13;
process and to learn organizational&#13;
structure because all&#13;
of society and everything you&#13;
want to do 1 based on a&#13;
structure or a system.&#13;
"If we, as minorities, don't&#13;
have the confidence or are intimidated&#13;
by pursuing a phenomenon&#13;
from one step to the&#13;
next, we lose," Smith continued.&#13;
"We may start the pro.,&#13;
cess and then there's a second&#13;
level or a third level or a&#13;
A woman with a beneficial view&#13;
by Mary Woods&#13;
As Director of CHAMP&#13;
(Creating Higher Aspirations&#13;
and Motivations Program),&#13;
Debbie Hendricks tries to instill&#13;
within pre-college students&#13;
the idea that CHAMP&#13;
serves their motivation to&#13;
acht ve whatever it ls that&#13;
th y d em Important for th ir&#13;
fulfillment.&#13;
The CHAMP program&#13;
work with minority stud nta&#13;
1n lghth through twelfth&#13;
grad s. Th purpo of th&#13;
program ls to motivate stud&#13;
nts to attend and be prepared&#13;
for coll g .&#13;
H ndrlcka, though director&#13;
of CHAMP, ha.a also served&#13;
acting director of Minority&#13;
Stud nt services, much to th&#13;
d light of th students served&#13;
by that offlc . Sh baa implemented&#13;
posltlv change while&#13;
serving tn both capacltlea.&#13;
B fore coming to Parkaide&#13;
ln July, 1986, she was the a.&#13;
aiatant director of the Educational&#13;
Opportunity Program&#13;
at Marquette University&#13;
where she al80 received her&#13;
Master'• degree.&#13;
In her work wtth CHAMP&#13;
students and Parkside atuden&#13;
, Hendrlcka trte1 to&#13;
ahow that having a senae of&#13;
responstbUlty of self la responsibility&#13;
to other people.&#13;
Th CHAMP program,&#13;
under her direction, ha.a&#13;
added a new course entitled,&#13;
"Ethnic Hlatory," to show the&#13;
results of others' sense of re-&#13;
1ponsibility. Contributions of&#13;
Blacks, Nativ Americana&#13;
and Hispanics will be presented&#13;
in this new eourae to show&#13;
that being responsible for&#13;
onesel1 has lmplicatlons for&#13;
the lives of others.&#13;
&gt;J a Black woman at Parkllde,&#13;
Hendricks would like to&#13;
see the day when she is "not&#13;
looked at as a Black woman&#13;
who works in the CHAMP&#13;
program, but an individual&#13;
who can be helpful to anyone,"&#13;
H ndrtcks said.&#13;
"l would Uke for a visitor to&#13;
be able to come on campus&#13;
and not be told where the&#13;
Blacks are, where the Hispanics&#13;
are, where the International&#13;
students are," Hendricks&#13;
continued. "I'd like&#13;
them to f l while they are&#13;
here that Parkside encompasses&#13;
everybody. That's the&#13;
impact that I'd l1k to make.&#13;
That's what I'd like to see."&#13;
When asked how important&#13;
it 1B for minority students to&#13;
interact with the majority&#13;
population, she responded,&#13;
"It ls critical for minority&#13;
students to interact.&#13;
"We must mlx, mingle and&#13;
understand one another. Minorities&#13;
are bothered by&#13;
others' not understanding&#13;
them, 80 that's why it'• so important&#13;
for minorities to mingle&#13;
with others. It's the way&#13;
that the majority wUl get to&#13;
know the minority. I reslat&#13;
the Idea of betng separate but&#13;
equal. This ls not to say that&#13;
the minorities at tlmes may&#13;
not need outlets together, but&#13;
real understandJng will only&#13;
come from interaction."&#13;
In her short time at Park•&#13;
side, Hendricks has been a&#13;
mover. She has worked&#13;
ceaselessly tn helping the university&#13;
come to grips with lta&#13;
understanding of the importance&#13;
of Minority Student&#13;
Services. Funds have been allocated&#13;
and a staff will be&#13;
coming ln to further serve the&#13;
n eds of minority students.&#13;
Hendricks ls currently responsible&#13;
for proposal writing&#13;
and the day-to-day operations&#13;
of both CHAMP and :Minority&#13;
Student Services.&#13;
Hendricks comes from a&#13;
family that has high regard&#13;
for education. Both of her&#13;
pa.nmts have college degrees.&#13;
One of her grandfathers wu&#13;
a horse shoer in Misalssippl&#13;
where he worked and sent all&#13;
of hl8 children through college.&#13;
Hendricks ts dedicated to&#13;
seeing more mlnoritles attend&#13;
and be prepared for college.&#13;
She ls very proud that at this&#13;
tlme, CHAMP has lts highest&#13;
enrollment of Spanlah students.&#13;
When asked how she aeelJ&#13;
henlf in the un1vemty she&#13;
reaponded, ''The only dlffer4&#13;
ence between myself and anyone&#13;
else here la perspective,&#13;
tMndrick91ffP-,.2&#13;
fourth level and before we&#13;
can make it through the hierarchy,&#13;
we've gotten wiped&#13;
out. So once we've mastered&#13;
the thlnldng, once we've&#13;
adapted our thinking to a systematic&#13;
way, then it's harder&#13;
to eliminate us from the process."&#13;
Her mother and grandmother&#13;
( who 1s now 80 years&#13;
old) lnStllled within her a&#13;
strong desire to help others.&#13;
She waa taught at an early&#13;
age that her responslbllltles&#13;
go beyond herself. Aa a single&#13;
mother who finds parenting&#13;
rewarding, she 1s lnSttlltng&#13;
these sam qualltl ln h r&#13;
daughter.&#13;
Smith ls the eldest daughter&#13;
and one of seven children, slx&#13;
of whom have obtained colege&#13;
educations. For this, she&#13;
credits her mother, who&#13;
values education.&#13;
Smith feel that Parkside&#13;
could have a positive impact&#13;
on the community and is&#13;
somewhat optimlsUc of th.ta&#13;
end because of the broader&#13;
educational concept of the&#13;
present admlnistratlon.&#13;
When aaked if. being a minority&#13;
places extra responsibilities&#13;
and additional expectations&#13;
upon her, she said&#13;
that if and when that 1s the&#13;
case, she uses lt as an oppor-&#13;
Pamela Smith&#13;
tun1ty to educate others. She&#13;
feels that minorities have an&#13;
obligation to ducate non-mJ.&#13;
norittes about the minority&#13;
experience since the majority&#13;
population seldom has the&#13;
cause to look beyond thelr&#13;
own experience.&#13;
If there ls a message that&#13;
Smith would deliver to the&#13;
Parkside community, tl&#13;
would be to ''be receptive to&#13;
new Ideas, to new ways of&#13;
looking at the same thing."&#13;
To minority students, she&#13;
would say, "Develop sense&#13;
of self, a security, a confidence.&#13;
If you take that with&#13;
you, you can make lt."&#13;
'We share same problems differently'&#13;
"We all go through the&#13;
same problem whether&#13;
you're Black, white, Hispanic&#13;
or whatever. It's Just that we 1&#13;
share it dlfferenUy."&#13;
That 1s the belief of Sophia&#13;
Tina Miller, one of 106 Black&#13;
female students on campus.&#13;
Miller is a sophomore who&#13;
has been attending Parkside&#13;
for four years.&#13;
• 'The first two yea.rs I was&#13;
doing real good, but the peer&#13;
pressure groups I hung&#13;
around with, I lost confidence&#13;
in what I really wanted to do&#13;
at Parkside," Miller explained.&#13;
The peer groups Miller associated&#13;
with gave her advice&#13;
but not the kind that she&#13;
would now gtve to a student.&#13;
"Put your facts 1n order,"&#13;
suggested Miller. "la thla a&#13;
good place for you to be?&#13;
What are the requlrements?&#13;
No one ever told me th.ta.&#13;
They (peer groups) told me&#13;
what teacher not to take and&#13;
what teacher to take. But&#13;
sometimes if. you get the&#13;
teacher by yourself and you&#13;
open up to them, they can see&#13;
where you come from."&#13;
Lack of poaitlve encourage.&#13;
ment from peer groups also&#13;
didn't help Miller in her academic&#13;
career.&#13;
"SOme people don't l1k to&#13;
see you put forth an effort&#13;
and try to put you down," explained&#13;
Miller. "I found the&#13;
majority of them was my own&#13;
race, which was a shock.&#13;
"To me, the ma:,Orlty of&#13;
Black women have the worst&#13;
attitude problem about one&#13;
another. They judge you on&#13;
the outside, how you dre up,&#13;
and not normally on what you&#13;
really are on the inside.&#13;
"You got to know how to&#13;
take criticlsm. That's what&#13;
Black women have to learn to&#13;
do with themselves ln order&#13;
to relate to others. They criticize&#13;
with ach other but when&#13;
somebody criticizes them,&#13;
they hold a grudge on each&#13;
other," Miller explained.&#13;
In addition to being a student,&#13;
Miller ls very active ln&#13;
church. She wishes more profe$&#13;
80rs would understand why&#13;
she sometimes takes time off&#13;
from her classes to engage in&#13;
various church activities.&#13;
Miller believes that professors&#13;
are more understanding&#13;
of the time involved in athletic&#13;
than other activities.&#13;
"Athletes get away with lt&#13;
(being excused from classes}.&#13;
With me, my church activl•&#13;
ties are more important (than&#13;
school) and they (professors)&#13;
can't accept that. I have a lot&#13;
of church and prayer service&#13;
that I'm trying to get into,"&#13;
explained Miller. "I would&#13;
like to sometimes go to&#13;
prayer service but the teacher&#13;
would tell you, 'Well, you&#13;
have to work lt out and if you&#13;
don't, I don't care.· •~&#13;
Faith 1n God ls a major&#13;
positive force in Miller's llte.&#13;
"I'm trying to let Ood lead&#13;
my way that I can accompllsh&#13;
my goat. There's a lot of&#13;
stuff that I can do and I don't&#13;
even have to have the education&#13;
for 1t because t have&#13;
faith in myself," said Miller.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29,1987 9 park's dept.&#13;
Thursday, April 30&#13;
VIDEO: "Shoah" will be&#13;
shown continuously all day&#13;
starting at 8:30 a.m. in Union&#13;
104. This film is about the destruction&#13;
of Jews during&#13;
World War II. The showing is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, May 1&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
cinema. Admission is free for&#13;
Parkside/Carthage students&#13;
and $2 for others. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
A Week at the Park•&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Hock" starts at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Tickets will be available at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Saturday, May 2&#13;
WORKSHOPS: "Successful&#13;
Parenting of Teenagers" and&#13;
"Advanced Lotus 1-2-3" both&#13;
start at 9 a.m. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for further details.&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" will be repeated at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Sunday, May 3&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: "Shoah"&#13;
(part one of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, May 4&#13;
CONCERT: "Pizza, Pasta&#13;
and all that Jazz" featuring&#13;
the Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
from 12 noon to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. All are welcome.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be shown at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: "Shoah"&#13;
(part two of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The film is open to&#13;
the public at no charge.&#13;
Tuesday, May 5&#13;
CONCERT: featuring the&#13;
Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
starting at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
will be charged at the&#13;
door.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
Wednesday, May 6&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Marketing in&#13;
a Non-Profit Organization"&#13;
starts at 9 a.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE: featuring&#13;
Steve Mullin from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6-8 p.m. in&#13;
Main Place. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be repeated at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
16. The rally will be a road&#13;
race/scavenger hunt and will&#13;
begin at 2 p.m. A $5 entry fee&#13;
will be charged, but all entrants&#13;
will have the opportunity&#13;
to win a $100 cash prize&#13;
for the best time. There will&#13;
be a post-rally celebration&#13;
with food and beverages. The&#13;
rally winner will be announced&#13;
at The End Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
— ThFeil es —&#13;
One Year Ago&#13;
May 1, 1986&#13;
Residence director dies&#13;
The recently-named residence director for Parkside's&#13;
new housing project died this weekend in a seven-car accident&#13;
near Oklahoma City, OK.&#13;
Craig A. Hall and his wife Jill were killed when a semitruck&#13;
veered across the highway median strip and hit&#13;
seven cars, according to Jenny Price, director of student&#13;
life.&#13;
Hall, who was chosen for the position last month, was to&#13;
begin work at Parkside next week.&#13;
Price said she is uncertain what will happen to fill the&#13;
position. She speclated another candidate from the final&#13;
pool will be selected to fill the vacancy.&#13;
Five Years Ago&#13;
April 29, 1982&#13;
"Save the Library Day" set&#13;
Members of student organizations - PAB, PSGA,&#13;
Ranger and SOC - are organizing "Save the Library Day"&#13;
on Wednesday, May 12 in an effort to raise funds for the&#13;
library, which has been seriously hurt by state mandated&#13;
budget cuts.&#13;
The library is also receiving attention from the PSGA&#13;
Senate and the Science Division Ad Hoc Library Crisis&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The student organization leaders have arranged for&#13;
more than 30 items to be donated to a raffle to raise funds&#13;
for the library. The prizes include a semester's books and&#13;
a white parking sticker.&#13;
They also have sought and received several donations&#13;
from the business communities in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Ten Years Ago&#13;
April 27, 1977&#13;
Balsano receives unisexual grant&#13;
Life science professor Joseph Balsano has been awarded&#13;
a $35,000 grant from the National Science Foundation&#13;
to continue his studies of an evolutionary biology of an&#13;
unusual species of small unisexual fish in which all offspring&#13;
are female.&#13;
Balsano, who has been studying the various aspects of&#13;
the Poecilia formosa since the mid-1960's, points out that&#13;
the research is particularly valuable for genetic research.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The Pi Sigma Epsilon Co-&#13;
Ed Marketing Fraternity will&#13;
hold meetings every Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Molinaro 116.&#13;
PAB&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board will be sponsoring a&#13;
road rally on Saturday, May&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Geology Club&#13;
Mr. Bart Adrian of the&#13;
Weather Department of&#13;
WITI-Channel 6 in Milwaukee&#13;
will speak on "Tornadoes and&#13;
Severe Thunderstorms" on&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. The&#13;
talk is scheduled for Greenquist&#13;
113 but may be moved&#13;
to a larger room if interest&#13;
dictates. Everyone is welcome.&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Symposium&#13;
Sheila Kaplan will be&#13;
speaking on "State Colleges&#13;
and Universities: Their Role&#13;
in the Future" on Sunday,&#13;
May 3 at 7:30 p.m. The symposium&#13;
will be held at 4601&#13;
Edgewater Drive in Racine.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
English Club&#13;
Students interested in forming&#13;
an English club will meet&#13;
Monday, May 4 in CA 233 at&#13;
12:15 p.m. The winner of the&#13;
English scholarship will be&#13;
announced at the meeting and&#13;
organizational strategies will&#13;
be discussed. All interested&#13;
students are encouraged to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon will be&#13;
sponsoring the Loop 500 on&#13;
SOC&#13;
SOC from page 1&#13;
major status, it doesn't mean another organization has to&#13;
lose major status. There is no guideline stating that there&#13;
can only be four major status organizations on campus.&#13;
"Our goals for the next year are to continue club involvement&#13;
on campus and continue the worthwhile activities&#13;
SOC has been doing all along. Hopefully we'll be able&#13;
to set up new clubs on campus, we've also got several&#13;
new committees that are going to keep us busy," Harmeyer&#13;
stated.&#13;
"I hope that as a result of SOC gaining major status, we&#13;
don't have a break from PSGA. Although we're not going&#13;
to be a standing committee of PSGA anymore, I would&#13;
hope that the president and vice-president would continue&#13;
to work with SOC as well as the other organizations on&#13;
campus. Just because we're leaving PSGA, it doesn't&#13;
mean we have to stop doing all the important things we&#13;
do together," he added.&#13;
Harmeyer summarized his feelings about SOC by saying,&#13;
"The whole thing with SOC could never have been&#13;
done without the help of people like Bill Serpe, Dan Galbraith,&#13;
Buddy Couvion, Kay Rouse and many others. I'm&#13;
really thankful for the help all those people have given me&#13;
this past semester. I hope they continue in their support&#13;
for SOC.&#13;
"This is what SOC deserves. We've worked long and&#13;
hard to gain major status. I don't see any problems with&#13;
SOC keeping major status. We're a vital part of Parkside&#13;
and will continue to be for years to come," Harmeyer&#13;
concluded.&#13;
In other Senate business, Senators and Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee (SUFAC) members&#13;
were elected.&#13;
Kay Rouse and Sue Walborn were elected senators of&#13;
PSGA. Dan Vogt was re-elected assistant pro-tempore of&#13;
PSGA. The three spring SUFAC seats were filled by Senators&#13;
Kevin Zirkelbach, Blake Topel and Sue Walborn. The&#13;
two fall seats were filled by Chief Justice of PSGA Scott&#13;
Peterson and Peer Support member Ralph Abagian.&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. in the&#13;
Inner Loop Road. Team fees&#13;
are $12 and price includes a&#13;
Loop 500 t-shirt for each&#13;
member. Prizes will be&#13;
awarded for winners. Sign-up&#13;
will be held through May 1 in&#13;
the Alcove.&#13;
Remember,&#13;
no issue&#13;
after next&#13;
week.&#13;
Get your club&#13;
events in by&#13;
Monday&#13;
at&#13;
noon&#13;
GOOD EXPERIENCE&#13;
GREAT EARNINGS&#13;
Telecable of Ra cine has need of&#13;
part-time direct sales people&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
• paid training&#13;
• evenings and weekend hours&#13;
• average income $200-$300&#13;
per week&#13;
WE NEED PEOPLE WITH:&#13;
• professional appearance&#13;
• professional attitude&#13;
• dependable transportation&#13;
CALL TELECABLE AT 637 6977&#13;
ASK FOR FRED&#13;
eoe - M/F&#13;
RANGER Thursday , April 29, 1987 9 park's dept&#13;
- --------A Week at the Park--------&#13;
Thursday, April 80&#13;
\1DEO: "Shoah" wlll be&#13;
shown continuously all day&#13;
starting at 8:30 a .m. ln Union&#13;
104. ThJs film ls about the destruction&#13;
of Jews during&#13;
World War II. The showing Ls&#13;
free and open to the publlc.&#13;
Friday, May 1&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky'' (R)&#13;
will be shown at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
cLnema. Admission ls free for&#13;
Parkside/Carthage students&#13;
and $2 for other . Sponsored&#13;
byPAB.&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" starts at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Tickets will be available at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Saturday, May 2&#13;
WORKSHOPS: ''Successful&#13;
Parenting of Teenagers" and&#13;
"Advanced Lotus 1-2-3" both&#13;
start at 9 a.m. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for further details.&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" will be repeated at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Sunday, May S&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: ''Shoah''&#13;
(part one of part two) wlll be&#13;
shown at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be repeat d at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Uruon Cinema.&#13;
Monday, May 4:&#13;
CONCERT: "Pizza, Pasta&#13;
and all that Jazz'' featuring&#13;
the Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
from 12 noon to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. All are welcome.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be shown at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: ''Shoah''&#13;
(part two of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The ftlm is open to&#13;
the public at no charge.&#13;
Tuesday, May cs&#13;
CONCERT: featuring the&#13;
Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
starting at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatr . Admission&#13;
w111 be charged at the&#13;
door.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon'' will&#13;
be reoeated at 8 p.m. ln&#13;
Unton Square.&#13;
Wecln y, Ma&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Mark ting in&#13;
a Non-Profit Organlzation"&#13;
tarts at 9 a.m. in nton 207.&#13;
Sponsor d by the Continuing&#13;
Education Offlc .&#13;
OOFFEEHOU E: featuring&#13;
Steve Mullln from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6-8 p.m. ln&#13;
Main Place. The v nt l fr e&#13;
and open to th public. ponsored&#13;
by p AB.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" wlll&#13;
be repeat d at 3:SO p.m. in&#13;
Uruon Squ r .&#13;
- - --------Club Events----------&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon 16 . The rally will be a road&#13;
race/ scavenger hunt and will&#13;
begin at 2 p.m. A $IS entry fee&#13;
will be charged, but all entrants&#13;
will have the opportunity&#13;
to win a 100 cash prize&#13;
for the best time. There will&#13;
be a post-rally celebration&#13;
with food and beverages. The&#13;
rally winner will be announced&#13;
at The End Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
The Pl Sigma Epsilon CoEd&#13;
arketing Fraternity will&#13;
hold meetings every Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Molinaro 116.&#13;
PAB&#13;
Th Park ide Activities&#13;
Board will be sponsoring a&#13;
road rally on Saturday, May - The Files&#13;
On Year Ago&#13;
May 1.1986&#13;
Rettld n dlr tor di&#13;
-&#13;
The recently-named residence director for Parkside's&#13;
new housing project died this weekend in a seven-car accident&#13;
near Oklahoma City, OK.&#13;
Craig A. Hall and hJ wife Jlll were killed when a semitruck&#13;
veered across the highway median strip and hJt&#13;
sev n cars, according to JeMy Price, director of student&#13;
llfe.&#13;
Hall, who was chosen for the posltlon last month, was to&#13;
begin work at Parkside next week.&#13;
rice said she is uncertain what will happen to fill the&#13;
position. She speclat d another candidate from the ftnal&#13;
pool will be selected to fill the vacancy.&#13;
Flv Years Ago&#13;
April 29, 1982&#13;
"Sav th Ubra.ry Day" set&#13;
Members of student organizations - P AB, PSGA,&#13;
Ranger and SOC. are organlzlng "Save the Library Day"&#13;
on Wednesday, May 12 ln an effort to ralSe funds for the&#13;
Ubra.ry, which has been seriously hurt by state mandated&#13;
budget cuts.&#13;
The library ts also receiving attention from the PSGA&#13;
Senate and the Science Divlslon Ad Hoc Library Crisis&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The student organization leaders have arranged for&#13;
more than 30 items to be donated to a raffle to raise funds&#13;
for the library. The prizes include a semester's books and&#13;
a white parking sticker.&#13;
They also have sought and received several donations&#13;
from the business communities in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
TenYean Ago&#13;
April 7, 1977&#13;
Bal ano r celv unJ xual grant&#13;
Lif scienc professor Joseph Balsano has been awardd&#13;
a $35,000 grant from the National Science Foundation&#13;
to continue his studies of an evolutionary biology of an&#13;
unusual species of small untsexuaJ fish in which all offspring&#13;
are female.&#13;
Balsano who has been studying the various aspects of&#13;
the Poectlla formosa stnce the mid-1960's, points out that&#13;
the research ts particularly valuable for genetic research.&#13;
oeology Club&#13;
Mr. Bart Adrian of the&#13;
Weather Department of&#13;
WITI-Channel 6 in Milwaukee&#13;
will speak on "Tornadoes and&#13;
Severe Thunderstorm '• on&#13;
Friday, May l at I p.m. The&#13;
talk is scheduled for Greenqulst&#13;
113 but may be moved&#13;
to a larger room 1f interest&#13;
dictates. Everyone Is welcome.&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Symposium&#13;
Shella Kaplan wtll be&#13;
speaking on "State Colleges&#13;
and Universities: Their Role&#13;
in the Future" on Sunday,&#13;
soc&#13;
May 3 at 7:SO p.m. The ympostum&#13;
will be held at 4601&#13;
Edgewater Drive ln Racine.&#13;
Everyone ls welcome.&#13;
English Club&#13;
Students interested ln forming&#13;
an Engll.sh club will meet&#13;
Monday, May t In CA 233 at&#13;
12:15 p.m. The winner of the&#13;
English scholarship will be&#13;
announced at the meeting and&#13;
organizational strategies will&#13;
be discussed. All interested&#13;
students are encouraged to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Pi Sigma. Epsilon&#13;
Pl Sigma Epsilon will be&#13;
sponsoring the Loop ISOO on&#13;
SOC from page 1&#13;
major status, It doesn't mean another organization has to&#13;
lose major status. There is no guideline stating that there&#13;
can only be four major statu organizations on campus.&#13;
"Our goals for the next year are to continue club involvement&#13;
on campus and continue the worthwhile actlvi•&#13;
ties SOC has been doing all along. Hopefully we'll be able&#13;
to set up new clubs on campus, we've also got several&#13;
new committees that are going to keep us busy," Harmeyer&#13;
stated.&#13;
"I hope that as a result of SOC gatntng major status, we&#13;
don't have a break from PSGA. Although we're not going&#13;
to be a standing committee of PSGA anymore, I would&#13;
hope that the president and vice-president would continue&#13;
to work with SOC as well as the other organlzationa on&#13;
campus. Just becau se we're leaving PSGA, it doesn't&#13;
mean we have to stop doing all the important things we&#13;
do together," he added.&#13;
Harmeyer summarized his feelings about SOC by saying,&#13;
"The whole thing with SOC could never have been&#13;
done without the help of people like Bill Serpe, Dan Galbraith,&#13;
Buddy Couvion, Kay Rouse and many others. I'm&#13;
really thankful for the help all those people have given me&#13;
thJs past semester. I hope they continue in their support&#13;
for SOC.&#13;
"This ls what SOC deserves. We've worked long and&#13;
hard to gain major status. I don't see any problems with&#13;
SOC keeping major status. We're a vital part of Parkside&#13;
and will continue to be for years to come," Harmeyer&#13;
concluded.&#13;
In other Senate business, Senators and Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee (SUFAC) members&#13;
were elected.&#13;
Kay Rouse and Sue Walborn were elected senator of&#13;
PSGA. Dan Vogt was re-elected assistant pro-tempore of&#13;
PSGA. The three spring SUF AC seats were filled by Senators&#13;
Kevin Zlrkelbach, Blake Topel and Sue Walborn. The&#13;
two fall seata were filled by Chief Justice of PSOA Scott&#13;
Pet erson and Peer Support member Ralph Aba gian.&#13;
Friday, May l at 1 p.m. in th&#13;
Inner Loop Ro d. Team fee&#13;
are $12 and price includ s a&#13;
Loop ISOO t -shirt for h&#13;
member. Prizes will be&#13;
awarded for wlnn n. Sign-up&#13;
will b held through y 1 ln&#13;
the Alcove.&#13;
Reme mber,&#13;
• no issue&#13;
after next&#13;
week.&#13;
Get your club&#13;
ev ents in by&#13;
Mond ay&#13;
at&#13;
noon&#13;
GOOD EXPERIENCE&#13;
GREAT EARNINGS&#13;
Telecable of Racine has need of&#13;
part-time direct sales people&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
• paid train ing&#13;
• evenings and weekend hours&#13;
• average income s200.s300&#13;
per week&#13;
NEED PEOPlE WITH:&#13;
• professional appearance&#13;
• professional attitude&#13;
• dependable transportation&#13;
CAlL TElECABLE AT 837-8977&#13;
ASK FOR FRED&#13;
eoe. M/F&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, April 29,1987 9 park's dept.&#13;
Thursday, April 30&#13;
VIDEO: "Shoah" will be&#13;
shown continuously all day&#13;
starting at 8:30 a.m. in Union&#13;
104. This film is about the destruction&#13;
of Jews during&#13;
World War II. The showing is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, May 1&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
cinema. Admission is free for&#13;
Parkside/Carthage students&#13;
and $2 for others. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
A Week at the Park•&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" starts at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Tickets will be available at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Saturday, May 2&#13;
WORKSHOPS: "Successful&#13;
Parenting of Teenagers" and&#13;
"Advanced Lotus 1-2-3" both&#13;
start at 9 a.m. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for further details.&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" will be repeated at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Sunday, May 3&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: "Shoah"&#13;
(part one of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, May 4&#13;
CONCERT: "Pizza, Pasta&#13;
and all that Jazz" featuring&#13;
the Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
from 12 noon to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. All are welcome.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be shown at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: "Shoah"&#13;
(part two of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The film is open to&#13;
the public at no charge.&#13;
Tuesday, May 5&#13;
CONCERT: featuring the&#13;
Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
starting at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
will be charged at the&#13;
door.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
Wednesday, May 6&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Marketing in&#13;
a Non-Profit Organization"&#13;
starts at 9 a.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE: featuring&#13;
Steve Mullin from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6-8 p.m. in&#13;
Main Place. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be repeated at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
16. The rally will be a road&#13;
race/scavenger hunt and will&#13;
begin at 2 p.m. A $5 entry fee&#13;
will be charged, but all entrants&#13;
will have the opportunity&#13;
to win a $100 cash prize&#13;
for the best time. There will&#13;
be a post-rally celebration&#13;
with food and beverages. The&#13;
rally winner will be announced&#13;
at The End Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
— The Files —&#13;
One Year Ago&#13;
May 1, 1986&#13;
Residence director dies&#13;
The recently-named residence director for Parkside's&#13;
new housing project died this weekend in a seven-car accident&#13;
near Oklahoma City, OK.&#13;
Craig A. Hall and his wife Jill were killed when a semitruck&#13;
veered across the highway median strip and hit&#13;
seven cars, according to Jenny Price, director of student&#13;
life.&#13;
Hall, who was chosen for the position last month, was to&#13;
begin work at Parkside next week.&#13;
Price said she is uncertain what will happen to fill the&#13;
position. She speclated another candidate from the final&#13;
pool will be selected to fill the vacancy.&#13;
Five Years Ago&#13;
April 29, 1982&#13;
"Save the Library Day" set&#13;
Members of student organizations - PAB, PSGA,&#13;
Ranger and SOC - are organizing "Save the Library Day"&#13;
on Wednesday, May 12 in an effort to raise funds for the&#13;
library, which has been seriously hurt by state mandated&#13;
budget cuts.&#13;
The library is also receiving attention from the PSGA&#13;
Senate and the Science Division Ad Hoc Library Crisis&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The student organization leaders have arranged for&#13;
more than 30 items to be donated to a raffle to raise funds&#13;
for the library. The prizes include a semester's books and&#13;
a white parking sticker.&#13;
They also have sought and received several donations&#13;
from the business communities in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Ten Years Ago&#13;
April 27, 1977&#13;
Balsano receives unisexual grant&#13;
Life science professor Joseph Balsano has been awarded&#13;
a $35,000 g rant from the National Science Foundation&#13;
to continue his studies of an evolutionary biology of an&#13;
unusual species of small unisexual fish in which all offspring&#13;
are female.&#13;
Balsano, who has been studying the various aspects of&#13;
the Poecilia formosa since the mid-1960's, points out that&#13;
the research is particularly valuable for genetic research.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The Pi Sigma Epsilon Co-&#13;
Ed Marketing Fraternity will&#13;
hold meetings every Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Molinaro 116.&#13;
PAB&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board will be sponsoring a&#13;
road rally on Saturday, May&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Geology Club&#13;
Mr. Bart Adrian of the&#13;
Weather Department of&#13;
WITI-Channel 6 in Milwaukee&#13;
will speak on "Tornadoes and&#13;
Severe Thunderstorms" on&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. The&#13;
talk is scheduled for Greenquist&#13;
113 but may be moved&#13;
to a larger room if interest&#13;
dictates. Everyone is welcome.&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Symposium&#13;
Sheila Kaplan will be&#13;
speaking on "State Colleges&#13;
and Universities: Their Role&#13;
in the Future" on Sunday,&#13;
May 3 at 7:30 p.m. The symposium&#13;
will be held at 4601&#13;
Edgewater Drive in Racine.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
English Club&#13;
Students interested in forming&#13;
an English club will meet&#13;
Monday, May 4 in CA 233 at&#13;
12:15 p.m. The winner of the&#13;
English scholarship will be&#13;
announced at the meeting and&#13;
organizational strategies will&#13;
be discussed. All interested&#13;
students are encouraged to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon will be&#13;
sponsoring the Loop 500 on&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. in the&#13;
Inner Loop Road. Team fees&#13;
are $12 and price includes a&#13;
Loop 500 t-shirt for each&#13;
member. Prizes will be&#13;
awarded for winners. Sign-up&#13;
will be held through May 1 in&#13;
the Alcove.&#13;
Remember,&#13;
no issue&#13;
after next&#13;
week.&#13;
Get your club&#13;
events in by&#13;
Monday&#13;
at&#13;
noon&#13;
GOOD EXPERIENCE&#13;
GREAT EARNINGS&#13;
Telecable of Rac ine has need of&#13;
part-time direct sales people&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
• paid tr aining&#13;
• evenings and weekend hours&#13;
• average income $200-$300&#13;
per week&#13;
WE NEED PEOPLE WITH:&#13;
• professional appearance&#13;
• professional attitude&#13;
• dependable transportation&#13;
CALL TELECABLE AT 637-6977&#13;
ASK FOR FRED&#13;
eoe-M/F&#13;
SOC&#13;
SOC from page 1&#13;
major status, it doesn't mean another organization has to&#13;
lose major status. There is no guideline stating that there&#13;
can only be four major status organizations on campus.&#13;
"Our goals for the next year are to continue club involvement&#13;
on campus and continue the worthwhile activities&#13;
SOC has been doing all along. Hopefully we'll be able&#13;
to set up new clubs on campus, we've also got several&#13;
new committees that are going to keep us bus v." Harmeyer&#13;
stated.&#13;
^^°Pe that as a result of SOC gaining major status, we&#13;
don t have a break from PSGA. Although we're not going&#13;
to be a standing committee of PSGA anymore, I would&#13;
hope that the president and vice-president would continue&#13;
to work with SOC as well as the other organizations on&#13;
campus. Just because we're leaving PSGA, it doesn't&#13;
mean we have to stop doing all the important things we&#13;
do together," he added.&#13;
Harmeyer summarized his feelings about SOC by saving,&#13;
"The whole thing with SOC could never have been&#13;
done without the help of people like Bill Serpe, Dan Galbraith,&#13;
Buddy Couvion, Kay Rouse and many others. I'm&#13;
really thankful for the help all those people have given me&#13;
this past semester. I hope they continue in their support&#13;
for SOC.&#13;
"This is what SOC deserves. We've worked long and&#13;
hard to gain major status. I don't see any problems with&#13;
SOC keeping major status. We're a vital part of Parkside&#13;
and will continue to be for years to come," Harmeyer&#13;
concluded.&#13;
In other Senate business, Senators and Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee (SUFAC) members&#13;
were elected.&#13;
Kay Rouse and Sue Walborn were elected senators of&#13;
PSGA. Dan Vogt was re-elected assistant pro-tempore of&#13;
PSGA. The three spring SUFAC seats were filled by Senators&#13;
Kevin Zirkelbach, Blake Topel and Sue Walborn The&#13;
two fall seats were filled by Chief Justice of PSGA Scott&#13;
Peterson and Peer Support member Ralph Abagian.&#13;
A&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29, 1987 9 park's dept.&#13;
--------A Week at the Park--------&#13;
'lbunda , April SO&#13;
VIDEO: "Shoah" wlll b&#13;
shown continuously all day&#13;
starting at 8:80 a.m. in Union&#13;
104. This film ls about the destruction&#13;
of Jews during&#13;
World War II. The showing is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, May 1&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. In the Union&#13;
cinema. Admis ion is fr e for&#13;
Parkside/Carthage students&#13;
and $2 for others. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
PLA y: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" starts at 8 p.m. In the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Tickets will be available at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Saturday, May Z&#13;
WORKSHOPS: •·successful&#13;
Parenting of Teenagers" and&#13;
"Advanced Lotus -2-3" both&#13;
start at 9 a.m. Call ext. 2812&#13;
for further detail .&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle wm&#13;
Rock" will be repeated at 8&#13;
p.m. 1n the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Sunday, May 3&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: "Shoah"&#13;
(part one of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 2 p.m. In the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. 1n&#13;
the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, May t&#13;
CONCERT: "Pizza, Pasta&#13;
and all that Jazz" featuring&#13;
the· Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
from 1.2 noon to 2 p.m. 1n&#13;
Union Square. All are welcome.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be shown at l:M p.m. 1n&#13;
Union Square. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: ''Shoah''&#13;
( part two of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The film ls open to&#13;
the public at no charge.&#13;
Tuesday, May 5&#13;
OONCERT: featuring the&#13;
Parkside Wind Ens mble&#13;
starting at 8 p.m. 1n the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
will be charged at the&#13;
door.&#13;
VIDEO: ''Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. In&#13;
Uruon Square.&#13;
Wedneaday, May 8&#13;
WORK HOP: "Marketing In&#13;
a Non-Profit Organization"&#13;
starts at 9 a.m. In Union 207.&#13;
Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Offlc&#13;
OOFFEEHO f turing&#13;
Steve Mulltn from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6-8 p.m. In&#13;
Main Place. The event ls free&#13;
and open to th public. Sponsored&#13;
by p AB.&#13;
VIDEO: "Fl h Gordon" wlll&#13;
be repeated at 3:30 p.m. In&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
----------Club Events----------&#13;
Pl Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The Pl Sigma Epsilon Co·&#13;
Ed Marketing Fraternity will&#13;
hold meeting every Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. In Molinaro 116.&#13;
PAB&#13;
The Parkside AcUvitles&#13;
Board will be sponsoring a&#13;
road rally on Saturday, May&#13;
16. The rally will be a road&#13;
race/scavenger hunt and will&#13;
begin at 2 p.m. A $~ entry fee&#13;
will be charged, but all entran&#13;
will have the opportunity&#13;
to wtn a $100 cash prize&#13;
for the best time. There will&#13;
b a post-rally celebration&#13;
with food and beverages. The&#13;
rally winner will be announced&#13;
at The End Saturday&#13;
night. - The Files -&#13;
On Year go&#13;
May 1, 1986&#13;
Iden dlrector di&#13;
The recently-named residence director for Parkslde's&#13;
new housing project di d this weekend in a seven-car accident&#13;
near Oklahoma City, OK.&#13;
Craig A. Hall and his wife Jill were killed when a semitruck&#13;
veered across the highway median strip and hit&#13;
seven cars, according to Jenny Prlce, director of student&#13;
life.&#13;
Hall, who was cho en for the position last month, was to&#13;
begin work at Park Ide next week.&#13;
Price said she ls uncertain what will happen to fill the&#13;
position. Sh speclated another candidate from the final&#13;
pool will be selected to fill the vacancy.&#13;
Flv Y rs Ago&#13;
April 29, 198&#13;
" th Llbrary Day" t&#13;
Members of student organizations • P AB, PSOA,&#13;
Ranger and SOC. are organizing "Save the Library Day"&#13;
on Wednesday, May 1.2 in an effort to raise funds for the&#13;
library, which has been seriously hurt by state mandated&#13;
budget cuts.&#13;
The library ls also receiving attention from the PSGA&#13;
Senate and the Science Division Ad Hoc Library Crisis&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The student organization leaders have arranged for&#13;
more than so items to be donated to a raffle to raise funds&#13;
for the library. Th prize Include a semester's books and&#13;
a whit parking Ucker.&#13;
They also have sought and received several donations&#13;
from the busln communities In Racine and Keno ha.&#13;
Lt cl nc profe or Jo eph Balsano has been award•&#13;
d 35,000 grant from the atlonal Science Foundation&#13;
to contlnu hi tudl of an volutlonary biology of an&#13;
unusu l specl of small unlsexual fish in which all o!f•&#13;
spring ar f male.&#13;
Balsano who ha b en studying the various aspects 0 f&#13;
the Poecuia formo inc the mld-1960's, points out tha&#13;
the research Is particularly valu ble for genetic research.&#13;
oeology Club&#13;
Mr. Bart Adrian of the&#13;
Weather Department of&#13;
WITl•Channel 6 In Milwaukee&#13;
will speak on • 'Tornadoes and&#13;
Severe Thunderstorms" on&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. The&#13;
talk Is scheduled for Greenqulst&#13;
113 but may be moved&#13;
to a larger room if Interest&#13;
dictates. Everyone Is welcome.&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Symposium&#13;
Sheila Kaplan will be&#13;
speaking on "State Colleges&#13;
and Universities: Their Role&#13;
1n the Future" on Sunday,&#13;
soc&#13;
May S at 7:30 p.m. The symposium&#13;
will b held at 4001&#13;
Edgewater Drive In Racine.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
English Club&#13;
Students interested In formIng&#13;
an English club will meet&#13;
Monday, May 4 1n CA 283 at&#13;
12:lr» p.m. The winner of the&#13;
English scholarship will be&#13;
announced at the meeting and&#13;
organizational strategies will&#13;
be discussed. All Interested&#13;
students are encouraged to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Pi Sigma. Epsilon&#13;
Pl Sigma Epsilon will be&#13;
sponsoring the Loop ISOO on&#13;
SOC from page 1&#13;
major status, lt doesn't mean another organization has to&#13;
lose major status. There ts no guideline stating that there&#13;
can only be four major status organizations on campus.&#13;
"Our goals for the next year are to continue club involvement&#13;
on campus and continue the worthwhile activities&#13;
SOC has been doing all along. Hopefully we'll be able&#13;
to set up new clubs on campus, we've also got several&#13;
new committees that are going to keep us busy," Harmeyer&#13;
stated.&#13;
"I hope that as a result of SOC galntng major status, we&#13;
don't have a break from PSGA. Although we're not going&#13;
to be a standing committee of PSOA anymore, I would&#13;
hope that the president and vice-president would continue&#13;
to work with SOC as well as the other organizations on&#13;
campus. Just because we're leaving PSGA, it doesn't&#13;
mean we have to stop doing all the important things we&#13;
do together," he added.&#13;
Harmeyer summarized his feelings about SOC by saying,&#13;
"The whole thing with SOC could never have been&#13;
done without the help of people like Bill Serpe, Dan Galbraith,&#13;
Buddy Couvion, Kay Rouse and many others. I'm&#13;
really thankful for the help all those people have given me&#13;
this past semester. I hope they continue In their support&#13;
for SOC.&#13;
"This is what SOC deserves. We've worked long and&#13;
hard to gain major status. I don't see any problems with&#13;
SOC keeping major status. We're a vital part of Parkside&#13;
and will continue to be for years to come," Harmeyer&#13;
concluded.&#13;
In other Senate business, Senators and Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee (SUFAC) memb&#13;
were elected.&#13;
Kay Rouse and Sue Walborn were elected senators of&#13;
PSGA. Dan Vogt was re-elected assistant pro-tempore of&#13;
PSGA. The three spring SUF AC s ats were filled by Senators&#13;
Kevin Zlrkelbach, Blake Topel and Sue Walborn. The&#13;
two fall seats were fUled by Chief Justice of PSGA Scott&#13;
Peterson and Peer Support member Ralph Abagian.&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. Jn the&#13;
Inner Loop Road. T m f&#13;
are $12 and price lnclud&#13;
Loop 500 t- hirt for&#13;
member. mes will b&#13;
awarded for winners. lgn-up&#13;
will b h ld through y in&#13;
the Alcove.&#13;
.&#13;
Remember,&#13;
• no issue&#13;
after next&#13;
week.&#13;
Get your club&#13;
events in by&#13;
Monday&#13;
at&#13;
noo n&#13;
GOOD EXPERIENCE&#13;
GREAT EARNINGS&#13;
Telecable of Racine has need of&#13;
part-time direct sales people&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
• paid training&#13;
• evenings and weekend hours&#13;
• average income '200-'300&#13;
per week&#13;
WE NEED PEOPLE WITH:&#13;
• professional appearance&#13;
• professional attitude&#13;
• dependable transportation&#13;
CAl.l TB.ECABlE AT 837-8977&#13;
ASK FOR FRED&#13;
10 Thursday, April 29, 1987 entertainment Play on campus&#13;
"The Cradle Will Rock" has fine performances bv Kimberlin Kmnirh Q/ttinrv ... 1 - 3 1. • •- -- — I •iniMWi—IMMMMMMMilUllMIII I -&#13;
RANGER&#13;
by Klmberlie Kranich&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The Dramatic Arts Discipline's&#13;
production of Marc&#13;
Blitzstein's play, "The Cradle&#13;
Will Rock," has broken the&#13;
long record of non-musical&#13;
performances on campus.&#13;
Judging by the acting and directing&#13;
of "Cradle," more&#13;
musicals should be staged.&#13;
"Cradle's" pro-union plot&#13;
about a foreman who tries to&#13;
organize workers In a steel&#13;
mill is not a big audiencedrawer,&#13;
given the conservative&#13;
tone of the Reagan administration.&#13;
Nonetheless, the&#13;
excellent acting combined&#13;
with the directing of Lisa&#13;
Kornetsky provide the audience&#13;
with an unusual experience.&#13;
The musical never intended&#13;
to give the audience the illusion&#13;
that what they were seeing&#13;
was real - one knew it&#13;
was a performance the whole&#13;
time. Kornetsky achieved this&#13;
from the beginning of the&#13;
play when the audience was&#13;
seated in front of an empty&#13;
stage. The play began with&#13;
the stage hands setting up the&#13;
scenery, the stage manager&#13;
checking the lights and the&#13;
entire cast walking across&#13;
stage in full costume.&#13;
All of the actors were on&#13;
stage at all times. When they&#13;
weren't acting, they would&#13;
watch the musical from the&#13;
sidelines, in clear view of the&#13;
audience. Signs with quotations&#13;
from union leaflets and&#13;
comments about the human&#13;
condition were lowered and&#13;
raised on stage to get the&#13;
audience to think about the&#13;
play in addition to reminding&#13;
us that what we were seeing&#13;
wasn't real.&#13;
In addition, several actors&#13;
had to play more than one&#13;
role. With little more than&#13;
putting on a robe or adding&#13;
an accent, these actors had to&#13;
convince the audience that&#13;
they were a different character.&#13;
They pulled it off, especially&#13;
Dave Heller and Scott&#13;
Verissimo. Heller played&#13;
three characters - a sleazy&#13;
gent, a grimy thug and a&#13;
pseudo artist. Everything&#13;
from Heller's accent to gestures&#13;
proved that he was well&#13;
cast for his three roles. Verissimo&#13;
was the perfect Reverend&#13;
with a voice for singing&#13;
gospel. He also convincingly&#13;
played the character opposite&#13;
the Reverend Salvation; Mr.&#13;
Mister, a ruthless union-busting&#13;
manipulator who has the&#13;
town under his thumb.&#13;
Pianist August M. Wegner&#13;
and the actors managed to&#13;
stay in sync with one another&#13;
throughout the musical. The&#13;
music, which was played entirely&#13;
on a piano, also helped&#13;
shatter the reality illusion.&#13;
Often times the beat and the&#13;
lyrics seemed to contradict&#13;
one another. In one scene,&#13;
Mrs. Mister, the rich wife&#13;
who manages to wrap men&#13;
around her finger, sings a depressing&#13;
song about the idiocy&#13;
of war with a smile on her&#13;
face accompanied by a light&#13;
and bouncy melody.&#13;
Missy Weaver was originally&#13;
cast to play Mrs. Mister&#13;
but came down with a case of&#13;
the chicken pox and was replaced&#13;
by Paula Boehler.&#13;
Boehler turned out a fine per*&#13;
formance and can really sing.&#13;
Other excellent performances&#13;
included John A.J. Oleksy as&#13;
Editor Daily, the town newspaper&#13;
editor who prints lies in&#13;
his paper because he's afraid&#13;
of Mr. Mister; Andrew Holahan&#13;
as the brave union organizer&#13;
and Connie Kowalski as&#13;
Sister Mister, a bratty,&#13;
preadolescent girl. Kowalski&#13;
is a joy to watch because her&#13;
facial expressions are so precise&#13;
and appropriate to her&#13;
character. She also does an&#13;
excellent job while she's sitting&#13;
on the sidelines.&#13;
The only criticism I have is&#13;
the choice to have the thug&#13;
light and smoke his cigarette&#13;
on stage. Several audience&#13;
members, including myself,&#13;
tried to fan the smoke away.&#13;
RANGER IS NOW ACCEPTINGAPPUCATION^ORTHEFOriSwiNG&#13;
STOFPOSITIBMSraaI THE 1987-88 ACADEMIC YEAR&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
• ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR&#13;
• FEATURE EDITOR&#13;
• SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
• PHOTO EDITOR&#13;
• ADVERTISING MANAGER&#13;
• DISTRIBUTION MANAGER&#13;
• BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
Requirements: UW-Parkside student in good standing carrying at&#13;
least 6 credits per semester.&#13;
Qualifications: Previous newspaper experience helpful.&#13;
All positions are paid&#13;
Applications available in the Ranger office D139C&#13;
Scene from "The Cradle Will Rock'&#13;
Camelot&#13;
Harris a&#13;
show is&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Richard Harris and "Camelot"&#13;
played the Riverside&#13;
Theater in Milwaukee on&#13;
Tuesday, April 28, the first in&#13;
a series of engagements running&#13;
through Sunday, May 3.&#13;
One of them was sensational.&#13;
Harris, the Britisher, as&#13;
noted for his drinking as for&#13;
his acting, was superlative as&#13;
King Arthur, the legendary&#13;
role with which his name has&#13;
become synonymous. The&#13;
overall production, however,&#13;
hampered by leaden performances&#13;
and technical problems,&#13;
rose just slightly above&#13;
the best a high school drama&#13;
department has to offer.&#13;
By now everyone is familiar&#13;
with the story of Lerner&#13;
and Loewe's musical, which&#13;
was immortalized in the 1967&#13;
film starring Harris. Arthur,&#13;
a frivolous chap, who more or&#13;
less becomes King of England&#13;
by accident, marries Guenevere&#13;
(Elizabeth Williams)&#13;
and starts to get serious&#13;
about his royal duty.&#13;
Envisioning a world where&#13;
"might for right" replaces&#13;
"might is right," he establishes&#13;
an order of knights devoted&#13;
not to destruction but to&#13;
peace. Leading these Knights&#13;
of the Round Table is Lancelot&#13;
(Bob Cuccioli), a flawless&#13;
Frenchman who knows no&#13;
passion until he falls in love&#13;
with Guenevere and ushers in&#13;
the end of the idyllic civilization&#13;
Arthur has succeeded in&#13;
building.&#13;
Harris, now 54. brings a&#13;
world-weariness to Arthur&#13;
that wasn't present in his almost&#13;
chUdhke portrayal in&#13;
the mm, and the effect is&#13;
striking. Still vigorous and&#13;
photo by Ken McCray&#13;
Richard Harris&#13;
forceful even though he could&#13;
easily sleepwalk through the&#13;
part after 20 years of doing it,&#13;
the veteran actor/singer&#13;
clearly has a good time, especially&#13;
in his comical scenes&#13;
with Merlyn, his magical&#13;
mentor (delightfully played&#13;
by James Valentine).&#13;
But, alas, Harris and&#13;
Valentine can't compensate&#13;
for the performances of Williams&#13;
and Cuccioli, who are&#13;
wholly unbelievable in their&#13;
central roles. Williams'&#13;
Guenevere comes off not as&#13;
the naive girl made to be a&#13;
woman and wife before her&#13;
time, but rather as a spoiled,&#13;
maneuvering wench deserving&#13;
little or no compassion&#13;
from the audience or the husband&#13;
she betrays. And Cuccioli,&#13;
an Italian, sounds like&#13;
Steve Martin doing his&#13;
Swinging American" character&#13;
on "Saturday Night&#13;
Live ' when he tries to tackle&#13;
a French accent.&#13;
e rite rt a i nm en t ~1&#13;
0 T~hureday:::• Aprl:::l 29:::•&#13;
1987&#13;
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&#13;
Play on C8fflRUS&#13;
'' The Cradle Will Rock'' has fine performances&#13;
by Kimberli Kranich&#13;
tur Editor&#13;
Th Dramatic Arts clplln&#13;
' s producUon ot Mate&#13;
lltzsteln's play, "The Cradle&#13;
WW Rock," has broken the&#13;
long cord of non-muate&amp;J&#13;
p rformances on campus.&#13;
Judging by the acting and dieting&#13;
of "Cradl , " mor&#13;
musical Bhould be tag; d.&#13;
''Cradle's" pro-union plot&#13;
bout foreman who trle to&#13;
organize worker&amp; tn a. teel&#13;
mill ls not a big audlencedrawer,&#13;
given the conservative&#13;
tone of the Reagan a.dmlnlstratlon.&#13;
Nonethel s , th&#13;
c llent ctlng combined&#13;
with the directing of Lisa.&#13;
Kornetsky provide the audience&#13;
wlth an unusual expertenc.&#13;
The musical never intended&#13;
to gtv th audience the Wuslon&#13;
that what they were seeing&#13;
w real - one knew it&#13;
as a performance the whole&#13;
me. Kometsky achieved this&#13;
from the beginning of the&#13;
play when the audience was&#13;
eated 1n front of an empty&#13;
stage. The play began with&#13;
th stag hands tting up the&#13;
sc n ry, th stag manager&#13;
checking the lights and the&#13;
nUr cast walking across&#13;
stag 1n full co tume.&#13;
All of the actors were on&#13;
tage t all times. When they&#13;
wer n't acting, they would&#13;
watch the musical from the&#13;
aldeUnes, in clear view of the&#13;
audlenc . Signs with quotations&#13;
from union leaflets and&#13;
comm nts about the human&#13;
condltion were lowered and&#13;
rats d on tage to get th&#13;
audience to think about the&#13;
play in addition to reminding&#13;
ua th t what we were eing&#13;
wasn't real.&#13;
In ddltlon, several actors&#13;
had to play more than on&#13;
role. Wlth little more than&#13;
putting on a robe or adding&#13;
an accent, these actors had to&#13;
convince the audlence that&#13;
they were a different character.&#13;
They pulled lt off, especlally&#13;
Dave Heller and Scott&#13;
Verissimo. Heller played&#13;
three characters - a sleazy&#13;
gent, a grimy thug and a&#13;
pseudo artlat. Everything&#13;
from Heller's accent to gestures&#13;
proved that he was well&#13;
cast for his three roles. Verissimo&#13;
wa. the perfect Reverend&#13;
with a voice tor slnglng&#13;
gospel. He also convlnctngly&#13;
played the character opposite&#13;
the Reverend Salvation; Mr.&#13;
Mister, a ruthle s union-busting&#13;
manipulator who ha.s the&#13;
town under hJs thumb .&#13;
Pianist August M. Wegner&#13;
and the actors managed to&#13;
stay in sync with one another&#13;
throughout the musical. The&#13;
music, which was played en-&#13;
• NEWS EDITOR&#13;
tlrely on a piano, also helped&#13;
shatter the reality Uluslon.&#13;
Often times the beat and th&#13;
lyric s med to contradict&#13;
one another. In one scene,&#13;
Mrs. MJster, the rich wUe&#13;
who manages to wrap men&#13;
around her fln er, ings ad •&#13;
pressing song a.bout the idiocy&#13;
of war with a smile on her&#13;
face accompanied by a llght&#13;
and bouncy melody.&#13;
Missy We ver w orlg1nally&#13;
cast to play Mrs. Mister&#13;
but came down With a case of&#13;
the chicken pox and was replaced&#13;
by Paula Boehler.&#13;
Boehler turned out a fine per•&#13;
formance and can really sing.&#13;
Other excellent performances&#13;
included John A.J. Oleksy as&#13;
Editor Daily, the town newspaper&#13;
edltor who prints lies 1n&#13;
his paper because he's afraid&#13;
of Mr. Mister; Andrew Holahan&#13;
as the brave union organizer&#13;
and Connie Kowalski as&#13;
Sister Mister, a bratty,&#13;
preadole cent glrl. Kowalski&#13;
1.8 a joy to watch because her&#13;
facial xpresslons are so precui&#13;
and appropriate to her&#13;
character. She also does an&#13;
excellent job while she's sitting&#13;
on the sidelines .&#13;
The only crltlctsm I have ts&#13;
the choice to have the thug&#13;
light and smoke h1a cigarette&#13;
on stage. Several audience&#13;
members, including ·myself,&#13;
tried to fan the smoke away.&#13;
• ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR&#13;
• FEATURE EDITOR&#13;
• SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
• PHOTO EDITOR&#13;
• ADVERTISING MANAGER&#13;
• DISTRIBUTION MANAGER&#13;
• BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
Requirements: UW-Parkside student in good standing carrying at&#13;
least 6 credits per semester.&#13;
Quallflcatlons: Previous newspaper experience helpful.&#13;
All positions are paid&#13;
Appllcatlons available In the Ranger office D139C&#13;
photo by Kll'l llcCNy&#13;
Scene from • 'The Cradle WIii Rock''&#13;
Camelot&#13;
Harris a gem,&#13;
show is not&#13;
by Gary L Scbneeberger&#13;
Richard Ha rts and "Cameiot"&#13;
played the Riverside&#13;
Theater in Milwaukee on&#13;
Tuesday, April 28. the first ln&#13;
a series of engagements running&#13;
through Sunday, May s.&#13;
One of them W&amp;.8 sensational.&#13;
Harris, the Britisher, as&#13;
noted for his drlnklng u for&#13;
his acting, wa.s superlative as&#13;
King Arthur, the legendary&#13;
role wtth which h1.a name ha.s&#13;
become synonymous. The&#13;
overall production, however,&#13;
hampered by leaden performances&#13;
and technical problems,&#13;
rose juat l'lllghtly abOve&#13;
the best a high school drama&#13;
department ha.s to offer.&#13;
By now everyone ls fa.mu.&#13;
tar with the story of Lerner&#13;
and Loewe's musical, which&#13;
was immortalized 1n the 1967&#13;
film starring Harris. Arthur,&#13;
a frivolous chap, who more or&#13;
le becomes King ot England&#13;
by accident, marries Guenevere&#13;
(Elizabeth Wllllams)&#13;
and starts to get serious&#13;
about h.1s royal duty.&#13;
Envisioning a world where&#13;
"might for right" replaces&#13;
"might ls right," he establishes&#13;
an order of knights devoted&#13;
not to destruction but to&#13;
peace. Leading these Knights&#13;
of the Round Table ls Lancelot&#13;
(Bob Cuccloll), a flawless&#13;
Frenchman who knows no&#13;
passion until he falla ln love&#13;
with Guenevere and ushers 1n&#13;
the end of the idylllc ctv111za.&#13;
tion Arthur has succeeded in&#13;
building.&#13;
Harris, now M, brings a&#13;
world-weariness to Arthur&#13;
that wasn't present in his al.&#13;
mo.st childlike portrayal in&#13;
the film, and the effect 18&#13;
strlklng. Stlll vigorous and&#13;
Richard Hams&#13;
forceful even though he could&#13;
easily sleepwalk through the&#13;
part after 20 years of doing It,&#13;
the veteran actor/singer&#13;
clearly has a good time, especially&#13;
ln his comical scenes&#13;
with Merlyn, his magical&#13;
mentor ( delightfully played&#13;
by James Valentin ).&#13;
But, alas, Harrl8 and&#13;
Valentine can't compensate&#13;
for the performances of Williams&#13;
and Cucctoll, who are&#13;
wholly unbelievable In their&#13;
central roles. WW!ams'&#13;
Guenevere comes off not as&#13;
the naive girl mad to be a&#13;
woman and wife before her&#13;
time. but rather as a spoiled,&#13;
maneuvering wench d serving&#13;
little or no compassion&#13;
from the audlenct, or the husband&#13;
she betrays. And Cuccloll,&#13;
an Italian, sounds llk&#13;
Steve Martin doing his&#13;
"Swinging American" character&#13;
on • 'Saturday Night&#13;
Live'' wh n he tries to tackle&#13;
a French accent.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Exclusive interview&#13;
Thursday, April 29, 1987 11&#13;
Stranglers' drummer discusses philosophies&#13;
by Rick Luehr so Ion, . ^ ^&#13;
Rising out of the turbulent&#13;
mid-seventies British music&#13;
scene, The Stranglers made&#13;
their mark with their own&#13;
brand of harsh, often cynical&#13;
commentaries on the world&#13;
around them.&#13;
Still going strong afer 13&#13;
years, The Stranglers are embarking&#13;
on their first American&#13;
tour in five years. In a&#13;
recent phone interview,&#13;
drummer Jet Black discussed&#13;
the band's philosophy and&#13;
reasons for tourning after&#13;
such a long abscence.&#13;
"We decided to tour," said&#13;
Black, "because it has been&#13;
so long, and one can't keep&#13;
going to the same pices,&#13;
which one has to do if you&#13;
keep missing out on America.&#13;
that's really why we've&#13;
come here, because we feel&#13;
its overdue. It's great to be&#13;
back here. It's surprising me,&#13;
the audiences seem to be getbigger&#13;
all the time,&#13;
wnich is encouraging. It's&#13;
going so well, it's been suggested&#13;
we stay away a bit&#13;
more often."&#13;
Over their 13 year existence,&#13;
The Stranglers have&#13;
gone through an almost constand&#13;
evolution, becoming&#13;
smoother and more melodic.&#13;
The addition of horns on their&#13;
two most recent albums has&#13;
aided in this transition. The&#13;
horns also bring a new dimension&#13;
to the bands older&#13;
material in concert. Black,&#13;
who for an undisclosed reason&#13;
was absent from the band's&#13;
recent Milwaukee appearance,&#13;
explained that, although&#13;
their music is becoming&#13;
smoother, and several&#13;
songs more optimistic, this&#13;
does not mean the band's&#13;
basic philosophy has&#13;
changed.&#13;
"I think we're still prophets&#13;
of doom, in a minor, unimportant&#13;
way," Black explained.&#13;
"I think that we observe&#13;
some of the nastier facets of&#13;
Record review&#13;
Del Fuegos release third LP Scrt*a. nd.i »UTp_&#13;
The Del Fuegos (Slash)&#13;
Oh muse give me the gift of&#13;
the golden tongue so I may&#13;
laud the talents of a band of&#13;
rogues known as The Del&#13;
Fuegos. These boys just don't&#13;
stop producing music that&#13;
needs to be heard from the&#13;
highest mountaintops. Their&#13;
third release just furthers the&#13;
status of the Fuegs as the&#13;
band with probably the best&#13;
chops in the business.&#13;
The Fuegs are augmented&#13;
by the awesome talents of&#13;
producer Mitchell Fromm&#13;
(who also handled production&#13;
chores on the bands' other&#13;
two releases.) He captures&#13;
the Fuegs' killer live sound in&#13;
the studio while also giving&#13;
them a smoothness and soulfulness&#13;
that has yet to be&#13;
equaled by any of those other&#13;
so-called "American" music&#13;
bands.&#13;
The key word to describe&#13;
what makes "Stand&#13;
Up" different from the band's&#13;
previous work is Soul.&#13;
Fromm adds some background&#13;
singers, horns, very&#13;
tasty Hammond organ licks&#13;
(Fromm's own) and, get this,&#13;
there is even a track with&#13;
strings!&#13;
There is absolutely no filler&#13;
on this album and every&#13;
track has its own character&#13;
and feel showing the various&#13;
influences that have touched&#13;
the Fuegs and their music.&#13;
Lyrically the Fuegs are direct&#13;
and emotive. They seem&#13;
to be in touch with what is&#13;
common to most people's experience.&#13;
Rather than giving&#13;
the listener diatribes on the&#13;
joys of burning flesh for&#13;
satan, the Fuegs tell us the&#13;
story of a guy who tossed&#13;
back one too many at the cor--&#13;
ner bar and if that isn't poetry&#13;
I don't know what is.&#13;
The Fuegs are one of the&#13;
best recorded bands emerging&#13;
in the last few years, and&#13;
The Del Fuegos continue success&#13;
the mix on "Stand Up" is&#13;
proof positive of this fact.&#13;
Rock and roll is too often&#13;
seen in black and white terms&#13;
and that is why a band like&#13;
Del Fuegos is so needed, because&#13;
their overabundance of&#13;
talent allows them to bring&#13;
out the full spectrum of colors&#13;
that exist in the rock and roll&#13;
idiom.&#13;
This album should be the&#13;
one to catapault the Fuegs&#13;
into success ("Long Slide,"&#13;
the first single, is doing quite&#13;
well) on a mainstream level&#13;
and there isn't a band in this&#13;
country (except Milwaukee's&#13;
Pat McCurdy and the Confidentials)&#13;
more deserving.&#13;
"Bernie Doll&#13;
1841 Douglas Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wl 53402&#13;
637-8895&#13;
4006 Durand Ave.&#13;
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We Have It All!&#13;
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Cakes, Rolls, Breads &amp; Donuts.&#13;
OH-SO-GOOD!&#13;
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the environment in which we&#13;
move, and occasionally make&#13;
comments on them. But," he&#13;
added, "it's usually done in a&#13;
very ambiguous manner, and&#13;
it isn't always apparent what&#13;
we're actually saving.&#13;
"We've never attempted to&#13;
promote any kind of doctrine",&#13;
Black continued, "but&#13;
we do, in fact use various&#13;
social and political scenarios&#13;
to explore a lyrical idea."&#13;
Having been in the music&#13;
business for 13 years, Black&#13;
has some very definite views&#13;
on the industry. "We don't&#13;
really listen to any particular&#13;
music, except one might be&#13;
travelling and have the radio&#13;
on. So, I just have a general&#13;
idea of whats going on, and&#13;
basically it's the same as&#13;
always, a mixture of the&#13;
blend and adventurous.&#13;
"From the artist's point of&#13;
view," Black continued, "The&#13;
industry is rotten to the core.&#13;
On the one hand, you have&#13;
the artist, who is, generally&#13;
speaking, only capable of&#13;
doing one thing, that is,&#13;
producing his art. Then on&#13;
the other side of things, you&#13;
have the entrepreneurs, who&#13;
are only good at one thing,&#13;
and that's making money, out&#13;
of anyone or anything. And&#13;
unless one of those parties&#13;
has sympathies for the other,&#13;
there's no way the two groups&#13;
can work together with the&#13;
same interests. So," he&#13;
added, "it makes for a&#13;
strained existance most of the&#13;
time for most of the artists."&#13;
Black says the band has no&#13;
definite long range plans, but&#13;
that, as long as they enjoy&#13;
what they're doing, they will&#13;
continue. "We've always felt&#13;
that we're doing what we&#13;
wanted to do. It was very,&#13;
very difficult in the beginning,&#13;
but it's getting easier&#13;
all the time. We don't actually&#13;
look that far ahead. In retrospect,&#13;
I wouldn't have&#13;
dreamt that we'd still have&#13;
been active after 13 years. As&#13;
long as we have plenty more&#13;
ideas, there'll be plenty more&#13;
work to be done.&#13;
"I shouldn't think anyone&#13;
will remember us after 20 or&#13;
30 years," Black added,&#13;
"knowing the state of the&#13;
music industry. If it ended tomorrow,&#13;
it would be nice to&#13;
be remembered as those are&#13;
the guys who managed to last&#13;
13 years.&#13;
TW012" PIZZAS&#13;
FOR $9.87&#13;
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YYon&gt;u, onnnlly.. kha.v..e. t.o aski .f.o.r. .t.h e •&#13;
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special coupon when your&#13;
pepperoni special arrives.&#13;
Remember the Domino's&#13;
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we'll give you $3.00 off!&#13;
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i Special&#13;
Offer not valid with any oiher&#13;
Offer vC 1987 Doming s Pizza. Inc&#13;
• M&#13;
0 3S O E&#13;
Avoid The NOID*&#13;
Call Domino's Pizza-&#13;
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2136 Washington Ave.&#13;
654-5070&#13;
8028 22nd Ave.&#13;
652-1222&#13;
4919 60th Street&#13;
654-5577&#13;
Hours:&#13;
4:00pm -1:00am Sun. -Thurs.&#13;
4:00pm - 2:00am Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
TWO 12" PEPPERONI I&#13;
PIZZAS FOR $9.87! I&#13;
Simply present this •&#13;
coupon when you&#13;
receive your order. •&#13;
I&#13;
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Last time I or dered a pizza |&#13;
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Expires: 7/15/871&#13;
Fast, Free Delivery'" J|&#13;
Our drivers carry less man $20 00 Limned&#13;
delivery area Toppings car oe svesniuied&#13;
; I&#13;
RANGER • I • J f Thursday, April 29, 1987 11&#13;
Exclusive interview&#13;
Stranglers' drummer discusses philosophies&#13;
by Rick Lu br&#13;
Rislng out of the turbulent&#13;
mld-sevenU s Britlah muslc&#13;
scene, The Stranglers made&#13;
thelr mark with their own&#13;
brand of harsh, often cynical&#13;
commentaries on the world&#13;
around them.&#13;
Still golng strong afer lS&#13;
years, The Stranglers are embarking&#13;
on their first Amert.&#13;
can tour ln five years. In a&#13;
recent phone interview,&#13;
drummer Jet Black discussed&#13;
the band's philosophy and&#13;
reasons for tourning after&#13;
such a long abscence.&#13;
"We decided to tour," said&#13;
Black, ''because It has been&#13;
Record review&#13;
so long, and one can't keep&#13;
going to the same plces,&#13;
which one has to do U you&#13;
keep missing out on America.&#13;
So that's really why we've&#13;
come here, becau e we feel&#13;
it's overdue. It's great to be&#13;
back here. It's surprlslng me,&#13;
the audiences seem to be getting&#13;
bigger all the time,&#13;
which ts encouraging. It's&#13;
going so well, it's been suggested&#13;
we stay away a bit&#13;
more often."&#13;
Over their S year existence,&#13;
The Stranglers have&#13;
gone through an almost constand&#13;
evolution, becoming&#13;
smoother and more melodic.&#13;
The addition of horns on their&#13;
two most recent albums has&#13;
aided in this transltlon. The&#13;
homs also brlng a new dimension&#13;
to the bands older&#13;
material in concert. Black,&#13;
who for an undisclosed reason&#13;
was absent from the band's&#13;
recent Milwaukee appearance,&#13;
explained that, although&#13;
their music ls becoming&#13;
smoother, and several&#13;
songs more optlmistic, th1&#13;
does not mean the band's&#13;
basic phllosophy baa&#13;
changed.&#13;
"I think w 're still prophets&#13;
of doom, in a minor, unimportant&#13;
way," Black explained.&#13;
"I think that we observe&#13;
some of the nasUer facets of&#13;
Del Fuegos release third LP&#13;
Stand Up&#13;
1b Del Fu gos ( h)&#13;
Oh muse give me the gift of&#13;
the golden tongue so I may&#13;
laud the talents of a. band of&#13;
rogues known a The Del&#13;
Fuegos. These boys just don't&#13;
stop producing music that&#13;
needs to be heard from the&#13;
highest mountaintops. Their&#13;
third rel as just furthers the&#13;
status of the Fuegs as the&#13;
band with probably the best&#13;
chop ln the business.&#13;
The Fuegs are augmented&#13;
by th awesom talents of&#13;
producer Mitchell Fromm&#13;
(who also handled production&#13;
chores on the bands' other&#13;
two releases.) He captures&#13;
th Fu g • killer live sound 1n&#13;
the studio while al o giving&#13;
them a smoothnes and soulfulnes&#13;
that has y t to be&#13;
equaled by any of those other&#13;
so-call d "American" mu le&#13;
band.&#13;
The key word to descrlb&#13;
what mak " tand&#13;
Up" different from the band's&#13;
previous work is Soul.&#13;
Fromm adds some background&#13;
singers, horns, very&#13;
ta.sty Hammond organ licks&#13;
(Fromm's own) and, get thls,&#13;
there ls even track with&#13;
etrlngs!&#13;
There ls absolutely no filler&#13;
on thls album and very&#13;
track has its own character&#13;
and feel showing the varlou&#13;
influences that have touched&#13;
the Fuegs and their music.&#13;
Lyrically the Fuegs are direct&#13;
and emotive. They seP.m&#13;
to be 1n touch with what is&#13;
common to most peopl 's experience.&#13;
Rather than giving&#13;
the listener diatribes on the&#13;
Joys of burning flesh for&#13;
satan, the Fuegs tell us the&#13;
story of a guy who toss d&#13;
back one too many at the corner&#13;
bar and if that isn't po try&#13;
I don't know what ls.&#13;
Th ueg ar one of the&#13;
b st r corded bands em rglng&#13;
in th last few ye rs, and&#13;
The Del Fuegos continue success&#13;
the mix on "Stand Up" ts&#13;
proof positive of this fact.&#13;
Rock and roll is too often&#13;
se n in black and white terms&#13;
and that ls why a band 11.ke&#13;
Del Fuegos ts so needed, because&#13;
their overabundance of&#13;
ta.lent allows them to bring&#13;
out the full spectrum of colors&#13;
that exist in the rock and roll&#13;
idiom.&#13;
DANISH&#13;
This album should be the&#13;
one to cata.pault the Fuegs&#13;
into success ( "Long Slide,"&#13;
the first single, ls doing quite&#13;
well) on a mainstream level&#13;
and there Isn't a band in this&#13;
country (except Milwaukee's&#13;
Pat ?t{cCurdy and the Confi.&#13;
dentlals) more deservtng.&#13;
•·Berni Doll&#13;
We Have It All!&#13;
BAKERY The Finest Danish Kringles,&#13;
Cak s, Rolls, Breads &amp; Donuts.&#13;
1841 Oougla~ Ave-.&#13;
ltKIM, W1 'i J402&#13;
637-889S&#13;
.-006Ourind Aw.&#13;
554-1'.111&#13;
OH-SO-GOOD!&#13;
Gen ration of Quality aking&#13;
the environment 1n which we&#13;
move, and occasionally make&#13;
comments on them. But,'' he&#13;
added, "it's usually done 1n a&#13;
very ambiguous manner, and&#13;
lt isn't always apparent what&#13;
we're actually saving.&#13;
• 'We've never attempted to&#13;
promote any k.lnd of doctrine",&#13;
Black continued, "but&#13;
we do, in fact use varlous&#13;
social and political cenarlos&#13;
to explore a lyrical idea.''&#13;
Having been in the mu le&#13;
business for 18 years, Black&#13;
has some very definite views&#13;
on the industry. "We don't&#13;
really listen to any particular&#13;
music, except one mlght be&#13;
travelling and have the radio&#13;
on. So, I Just have a general&#13;
idea of whats going on, and&#13;
basically it's the same as&#13;
always, a mixture ot the&#13;
blend and adventurous.&#13;
"From the artist's point of&#13;
view," Black continued, "The&#13;
industry ts rotten to the core.&#13;
On the one hand, you have&#13;
the artist, who ls, generally&#13;
speaking, only capable of&#13;
doing one thing, that ls,&#13;
producing h1s art. Then on&#13;
the other side of things, you&#13;
have the entrepreneurs, who&#13;
are only good at one thing,&#13;
and that's making money, out&#13;
of anyone or anything. And&#13;
unless one of those parties&#13;
has sympathies for the other,&#13;
there's no way the two group&#13;
can work together with the&#13;
same interests. So,'' he&#13;
added, "it makes tor a&#13;
sll"a1ned extstance moat of the&#13;
Ume for most of the artists."&#13;
Black says the band has no&#13;
deflnlte long rang plan , but&#13;
that, as Ion as they njoy&#13;
what they're doing, they will&#13;
continue. "W 've alway f lt&#13;
that we're dolng what we&#13;
wanted to do. It was very,&#13;
very difficult 1n the b glnn1ng,&#13;
but It's g ttlng !er&#13;
all the time. We don't actually&#13;
look that far ahead. In ret.&#13;
rospect, I wouldn' hav&#13;
dreamt that w 'd till hav&#13;
been active after 18 years. A&#13;
Ion as w have plenty mor&#13;
Ideas, there'll be plenty more&#13;
work to be done.&#13;
"I houldn't think anyon&#13;
will remember us aft r 20 or&#13;
80 years," Blac added,&#13;
"knowing the sta.te of th&#13;
music industry. U 1t ended tomorrow,&#13;
1t would be nice to&#13;
be remembered as thos ar&#13;
the guys who managed to last&#13;
S years.&#13;
TRY THE PEPPERONI SPEaAL&#13;
You only ha-le to ask for the&#13;
~onl Speciaf, then give&#13;
tne dehvery l)fflOn the&#13;
special coup0n when your&#13;
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If you ptua tSn·t right,&#13;
we1I fix it If ,t's late.&#13;
we'll give you $3.00 off!&#13;
Call us for details.&#13;
Avoid The NOIDw&#13;
Call Domino·• Pizza•&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
2136 Washington Ave.&#13;
654-5070&#13;
8028 22nd Ave.&#13;
652-1222&#13;
4919 60th Street&#13;
654-5577&#13;
Hours:&#13;
4 OO?m • 1 OOam Sun • ThuB&#13;
-'()()pm• 2 ooam Fn &amp; Sat&#13;
·----------------------· I p • TWO 12" PEPPERONI I&#13;
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12 Thursday, April 29, 1987&#13;
Shaka Zulu&#13;
Ladysmith Black Mabazo&#13;
(Warner)&#13;
Paul Simon and Warner&#13;
Brothers have opened a window&#13;
on an incredibly rich and&#13;
inspired culture which is almost&#13;
as totally foreign to us&#13;
as the Saxons who decorated&#13;
Deerhurst Chapel with jagged&#13;
toothed monsters of sinister&#13;
beauty.&#13;
Never mind that there have&#13;
been periodic peeks at this&#13;
culture over the past thirty&#13;
years. Let us acknowledge&#13;
Harry Belafonte's consistent&#13;
efforts to secure an audience&#13;
for the music of South Africa's&#13;
Blacks. Don't denigrate&#13;
"King Kong," a notable musical&#13;
of the early sixties in London.&#13;
Indeed, as a refugee,&#13;
Kurt Weill did a gallant job of&#13;
trying to identify with native&#13;
music in "Lost in the Stars."&#13;
We have no real chance to&#13;
experience the Black South&#13;
African musical scene in&#13;
depth. We can't pretend to&#13;
judge whether what we hear&#13;
when we listen to Shaka Zulu&#13;
is typical, top rank, or musical&#13;
genius.&#13;
But if this disc is a unique&#13;
contribution, it can still have&#13;
an impact on serious popular&#13;
music akin to that of Japanese&#13;
prints upon Impressionist&#13;
painting. If this disc only&#13;
served to remind us of how&#13;
many rich musical forms we&#13;
are ignorant of, whether Portugese&#13;
fados, Malaysian theater&#13;
music, or South American&#13;
Indian lullabies, it would be&#13;
worth all the fuss.&#13;
But apart from all the&#13;
social and cultural overtones,&#13;
Shaka Zulu is a stunning&#13;
musical tour de force that&#13;
people will either love or&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Short Cuts&#13;
hate. I, for one, love it.&#13;
-Davie M. Doll&#13;
GUIS GUIS&#13;
by Dr. John (Alligator)&#13;
Dr. John, who had a hit&#13;
with "Right Place Wrong&#13;
Time" back around 1972, is&#13;
being hailed with his first and&#13;
best LPs in Alligator's "rockback"&#13;
series.&#13;
The release of the long outof-&#13;
print "Gumbo" last fall&#13;
proved successful enough to&#13;
release Dr. John's debut classic&#13;
"Gris Gris," which many&#13;
find to be his masterpiece.&#13;
In the wake of John Fogerty's&#13;
present urge of "we&#13;
missed you" popularity,&#13;
Dr.John's often more stated&#13;
musical works are a much&#13;
deeper presentation of the&#13;
same Bayou style.&#13;
Similar to "Gumbo," the&#13;
music of "Gris Gris" is much&#13;
grittier and, thus, more biting&#13;
Dr. John is back in print&#13;
in its delivery. And the Doctor's&#13;
gravelly, swamp-filled&#13;
sound is a fascinating extension&#13;
of the blues that Alligator&#13;
Records is so noted for.&#13;
Continuing with their string&#13;
of blues and rock roots LPs,&#13;
Alligator has initiated a wonderful&#13;
series with "Rockback"&#13;
that is destined to rerelease&#13;
many rare gems the&#13;
likes of "Gris Gris." As per&#13;
usual, everything the label releases&#13;
is the foundation of virtually&#13;
all rock-oriented&#13;
music.&#13;
-Jim Neibaur&#13;
Made In The USA:&#13;
Soundtrack&#13;
Various Artists (Chrysalis)&#13;
What we have here is an interesting&#13;
compilation of the&#13;
music that - for the most&#13;
part- Top 40 has deemed&#13;
unacceptable. Music that can&#13;
only be found in the back of&#13;
Pignotti's&#13;
- if&#13;
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Close Out Sale&#13;
Assorted Flavors&#13;
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4 pack 24 Pack Match&#13;
alternative record stores.&#13;
Unique music that's been rejected&#13;
because of its difference&#13;
and lack of commercial&#13;
attractiveness.&#13;
Low. points of the album include&#13;
yet another "Enuff"&#13;
song from The Fabulous&#13;
Thunderbirds. "Can't Tear It&#13;
Up Enuff" is identical to any&#13;
other T-bird's song. Also marring&#13;
the LP is the appearance&#13;
of Timbuck's suicidal and depressing&#13;
"Life Is Hard," and&#13;
a cumbersome cowpunk tune&#13;
by Flies On Fire, "Baptize&#13;
Me Over Elvis Presley's&#13;
Grave."&#13;
These are balanced by&#13;
some great performances, including&#13;
the return of Peter&#13;
Case (ex of The Plimsolls)&#13;
with "Old Blue Car." Also&#13;
bright is the Dyianesque&#13;
"Ballad Of The Little Man"&#13;
by World Party. Mojo Nixon&#13;
and Skid Roper bring their bizarre&#13;
sense of humor in "I&#13;
Hate Banks."&#13;
This soundtrack is like the&#13;
unlabeled box of chocolates.&#13;
You might grab something&#13;
really tasty or it might end&#13;
up being a really disgusting&#13;
piece.&#13;
-Tyson Wilda&#13;
Boom Baby Boom&#13;
Mondo Rock (CBS)&#13;
Synthesizer meets power&#13;
percussion, jazz sax, and a&#13;
voice like Kenny Loggins in&#13;
this rocking debut album.&#13;
With summer just around&#13;
the corner, the release of the&#13;
LP is perfectly timed. This is&#13;
the typical good-time, cruisin-&#13;
'-with-the-top-down music.&#13;
This is high-energy, fun&#13;
music. Surprisingly, Mondo&#13;
Rock manages to create this&#13;
sound without becoming Tod&#13;
40 clones. v&#13;
Sizzling guitar solos mix&#13;
with deep, throaty vocals. A&#13;
soul background chorus harmonizes&#13;
with keyboards.&#13;
Horns punch up bright dance&#13;
tunes. Real drums accentuate&#13;
an atmosphere of fast times&#13;
and girl chasing. This is 80's&#13;
style surf and summer music&#13;
at its best.&#13;
Unfortunately, the band&#13;
seems to lack an ability to&#13;
capture other musical styles&#13;
They stand out in their rock&#13;
but fail with slower moods!&#13;
This is most obvious in the&#13;
track "Let It Rain," which is&#13;
a nice mellow island song,&#13;
but doesn't seem any different&#13;
than thousands of other&#13;
nice mellow island songs on&#13;
the adult listening charts&#13;
today.&#13;
Mondo Rock's chance for&#13;
success lies in their power&#13;
their ability to create a last!&#13;
ing impression with a powerful&#13;
rock beat. This does make&#13;
them a one dimensional band&#13;
but within that dimension!&#13;
they work wonders.&#13;
-Tyson Wilda&#13;
Atmosphere&#13;
Various Artists (CBS)&#13;
"Atmospheres" is CBS records'&#13;
latest entry into the&#13;
market of new age samplers&#13;
and though there are some&#13;
wonderful tracks included on&#13;
this disk it does not contain&#13;
the cohesiveness of a Windham&#13;
Hill or Narada sampler.&#13;
That is not to say that "Atmospheres"&#13;
is not a worthy&#13;
effort to garner some attention&#13;
for the new instrumental&#13;
artists recording for CBS, but&#13;
they can learn from the independents&#13;
who have really cornered&#13;
the market on this type&#13;
of music.&#13;
"Atmospheres" is a sometimes&#13;
acoustic, sometimes&#13;
electric, and sometimes vocal&#13;
journey that take you anywhere&#13;
that the music inspires&#13;
your mind to go. The album&#13;
features the incomparable&#13;
talents of electric harpist Andreas&#13;
Vollenweider, cellist&#13;
Yo-Yo Ma, guitarist Liona&#13;
Boyd, and the fusion group&#13;
Free Flight. It is their tracks&#13;
that make "Atmospheres" a&#13;
worthwhile addition to your&#13;
collection.&#13;
The album does have a&#13;
problem with the fact that&#13;
some of the other artists included&#13;
are simply overshadowed&#13;
by the aforementioned&#13;
musicians and the tracks by&#13;
avant garde composers simply&#13;
do not have a place here.&#13;
"Atmospheres" is a noble&#13;
and worthwhile effort that includes&#13;
some of the most talented&#13;
instrumentalists of our&#13;
day. Too bad it doesn't sustain&#13;
the quality of performances&#13;
throughout.&#13;
-Bernie Doll&#13;
ALL THE WAY CRAZY&#13;
by Little Charlie&#13;
and the Nightbeats&#13;
(Alligator)&#13;
For years a fixture on the&#13;
San Francisco music scene,&#13;
Little Charlie and the Nightbeats&#13;
play a hard driving&#13;
mixture of rock and blues,&#13;
aptly described on the album&#13;
as "genuine houserockin'&#13;
music."&#13;
Much of the credit for the&#13;
album's drive and excitement&#13;
goes to vocalist and harmonica&#13;
player Rick Estrin. Estrin&#13;
has one of the most expressive&#13;
and powerful blues&#13;
voices around, and has been&#13;
described as "the best harmonica&#13;
player working&#13;
today".&#13;
Many of the songs exhibit a&#13;
rather bizarre sense of&#13;
humor. Numbers such as&#13;
"T.V. Crazy" and "Poor Tarzan"&#13;
take a warped and very&#13;
funny look at life and relationships.&#13;
The album also&#13;
gives the band ample opportunity&#13;
to demostrate its skill&#13;
at slower, more traditional&#13;
blues numbers.&#13;
Alligator Records is to be&#13;
commended for giving broad&#13;
exposure to one of San Francisco's&#13;
best and most popular&#13;
bands. This is the kind of&#13;
stuff the Fabulous Thunderbirds&#13;
only wish they could&#13;
Play.&#13;
-Rick Luehr&#13;
12 Thul'8day, April 29, 1987&#13;
Zahl&#13;
m.lt.b Black I buo&#13;
(Wam r)&#13;
Paul Simon and Wamer&#13;
Brothers have opened a window&#13;
on an incredibly rich and&#13;
lnsplred culture which ls almost&#13;
totally fol"elgn to u&#13;
aa the Saxons who decorated&#13;
D erhurst Chapel with jagged&#13;
toothed monsten of lnlster&#13;
be uty.&#13;
Never mind that there have&#13;
b en period.le peeks at thla&#13;
culture over the past thirty&#13;
years. Let us acknowledge&#13;
Harry Bela.fonte's consistent&#13;
efforts to secure an audience&#13;
for the music of South Africa&#13;
'a Bl ck . Don't denigrate&#13;
"King Kong," a notable musical&#13;
of the early sixties ln Lon•&#13;
don. Inde d, a retug e,&#13;
Kurt Welll did a gallant job of&#13;
trying to ld nWy with naUve&#13;
mustc tn "Lost in the Stars."&#13;
W have no real chance to&#13;
experl nee the Black South&#13;
African musical scene in&#13;
depth. We can't pretend to&#13;
judge whether what we hear&#13;
when we llsten to Sha.lea Zulu&#13;
1 yptcal, top rank, or mustcal&#13;
genius.&#13;
But lf this disc la a unique&#13;
contribution, tt can sUll have&#13;
an imp ct on serious popular&#13;
mu le kin to that of Japanese&#13;
prints upon Impressionist&#13;
painting. If th1s disc only&#13;
erved to remind us of how&#13;
many rlch mwdcal forms we&#13;
are Ignorant of, wh ther Portuges&#13;
fadoa, M.alayalan theater&#13;
music, or South American&#13;
Indian lullabies, lt would be&#13;
worth all the fuss.&#13;
But apart from all the&#13;
aoclal and cultural overtonea,&#13;
Shak ZUlu 11 a .tunning&#13;
mu lcal tour de force that&#13;
people will either love or&#13;
Short Cuts&#13;
Dr. John I back In print&#13;
hate. I, for one, love tt.&#13;
··Dav M . DoU&#13;
ORIS ORIS&#13;
by Dr. John (All1pt:or)&#13;
Dr. John, who had a hit&#13;
with "Right Place Wrong&#13;
Time.. back around 1972, ls&#13;
being hailed with his first and&#13;
best LPs in Alligator's • 'rockback"&#13;
series.&#13;
The release of the long outof-&#13;
prlnt "Gumbo" last fall&#13;
proved successful enough to&#13;
release Dr. John's debut classic&#13;
"Orta Orta," which many&#13;
find to be his masterpiece.&#13;
In the wake of John Fogerty'a&#13;
present urge of "w&#13;
mined you" popularity,&#13;
Dr.John's often more stated&#13;
musical works are a much&#13;
deeper presentaUon of the&#13;
same Bayou atyle.&#13;
SJmllar to •'Gumbo,•' the&#13;
music of "Gris Oris" ls much&#13;
grittier and, thus, more biting&#13;
in its delivery. And the Doctor's&#13;
gravelly, swamp-filled&#13;
sound ls a fascinating extension&#13;
of the blues that Alllgator&#13;
Records ts so noted for.&#13;
Continuing with their et.ring&#13;
of blues and rock roots LPs,&#13;
AlUgator has lnttiated a wonderful&#13;
series with "Rockback"&#13;
that ls destined to re•&#13;
release many rare gem the&#13;
likes of "Orts Gris." All per&#13;
usual, everything the label releases&#13;
ls the fowtdaUon of virtually&#13;
all rock-oriented&#13;
music.&#13;
•·Jfm Nelbaur&#13;
Made In Tbe USA~&#13;
8ouDdtrae&#13;
Various .Artim (Olryuli9)&#13;
What we have here la an interesting&#13;
compilation of the&#13;
music that • for the moet&#13;
part. Top .0 hU deemed&#13;
unacceptable. Muatc that can&#13;
only be found in the bacJc of&#13;
P~~-notg~ Please use our products In moderation.&#13;
HOURS HwyA&#13;
Open Mon. thru Sat. r 1&#13;
S.9 : UWP :&#13;
Open Sunday t . __ J HwyE&#13;
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4 pack 24 Pack Match&#13;
altemativ r cord stor s .&#13;
Unique muslc that's been rejected&#13;
because of Its differ•&#13;
ence and lack of commercial&#13;
attractiveness.&#13;
Low points of the album Include&#13;
yet another "Enu!t"&#13;
song from The Fabulous&#13;
Thunderbirds. "Can't Tear It&#13;
Up Enuff'' ls identical to any&#13;
other T -blrd's song. Also mar•&#13;
ring the LP la the appearanc&#13;
of nmbuck's sulcidaf and depressing&#13;
"Life Is Ha.rd," and&#13;
a cumbersome cowpunk tune&#13;
by Files On Fire, "Baptize&#13;
Me Over Elvis Presle.,"B&#13;
Grave."&#13;
These ar balanced by&#13;
some great performances, Including&#13;
the return of Peter&#13;
Case ( ex of The Plimsolls)&#13;
with "Old Blue Car.'' Also&#13;
bright le the Dylanesque&#13;
"Ballad Of The Little Man"&#13;
by World Party. Mojo Nixon&#13;
and Skid Roper bring their bizarre&#13;
sens of humor in "I&#13;
Hate Banks.''&#13;
Th1s soundtrack ts like the&#13;
unlabeled box of chocolates.&#13;
You might grab something&#13;
really tasty or lt might end&#13;
up being a really disgusting&#13;
piece.&#13;
··T11~on Wilda&#13;
Boom Baby Boom&#13;
Mondo Bock (CBS)&#13;
Synthesizer meets power&#13;
percu.sslon. Jazz sax, and a&#13;
voice llke KeMy Logglna 1n&#13;
th.la rocking debut album.&#13;
With summer Just around&#13;
the comer, the release of the&#13;
LP ls perfectly Umed. This ls&#13;
the typical good-time. crulsin•&#13;
'•with-the-top.down mualc.&#13;
Thia is high-energy, tun&#13;
music. Surprisingly, M.ondo&#13;
Rock manages to create this&#13;
aound without becoming Top&#13;
to clones.&#13;
Btzzllng gultar aolos mix&#13;
with deep, throaty Vocals. A&#13;
IOUl background chorus har·&#13;
moniles with keyboards.&#13;
Horns punch up bright dance&#13;
tunes. Real drums accentuate&#13;
an atmosphere of faat times&#13;
and girl chasing. This ts SO's&#13;
styl surf and summer muslc&#13;
at its best.&#13;
Unfortunately, the band&#13;
aeems to lack an ability to&#13;
capture other musical style .&#13;
They stand out in their rock,&#13;
but fall with lower mOOd .&#13;
Thi ls most obvious ln the&#13;
track "Let It Rain," which ls&#13;
a nlce mellow 1 land song,&#13;
but doesn't s m any differnt&#13;
than thousands of oth r&#13;
n1ce mellow Island songs on&#13;
the adult listening charts&#13;
today.&#13;
ondo Rock's chanc or&#13;
success lles in their power,&#13;
their ability to create a last.&#13;
Ing impression with a powertut&#13;
rock beat. Thi does make&#13;
them one dimensional band&#13;
but Within that dimen Ion'&#13;
they work wonders. '&#13;
· ·Tyson Wilda&#13;
tmosph r&#13;
V rlous Artist (CBl )&#13;
"Atmospheres" is CB records'&#13;
latest entry into the&#13;
market of n w age sampler&#13;
RANGER&#13;
and though there re some&#13;
wonderful tracks lnclud d on&#13;
th1.9 disk it does not contain&#13;
the coheslv ness of a Windham&#13;
Hill or Narada sampler.&#13;
That ls not to y that "Atmospheres"&#13;
ls not a worthy&#13;
effort to gamer some attention&#13;
for the new instrumental&#13;
artists recording for CB • bu&#13;
they can learn from the independents&#13;
who hav really cornered&#13;
th m rke on Um type&#13;
of muslc.&#13;
., Atmospheres" la a sometimes&#13;
acoustic, sometlmea&#13;
electric, and sometJmes vocal&#13;
journey that take you aay.&#13;
where that the music lmpl..rea&#13;
your mind to go. The album&#13;
features th incomparable&#13;
talents of el ctrtc harplst Andreas&#13;
Vollenweld r, celllsl&#13;
Yo-Yo M , gultarlst Liona&#13;
Boyd, and the fusion group&#13;
Free Flight. It ls thel.r tracks&#13;
that make "Atmospheres" a&#13;
worthwhll addition to your&#13;
collection.&#13;
The album does have a&#13;
problem with the fact that&#13;
some of the other artists included&#13;
are simply overshadowed&#13;
by the aforemenUoned&#13;
muslclans and the tracks by&#13;
avant garde composers simply&#13;
do not have a place here.&#13;
"Atmosphere " la a noble&#13;
and worthwhile effort that includes&#13;
some of the most taJ.&#13;
ented lnstrumentallats of our&#13;
day. Too bad 1t doesn't sustain&#13;
the qua.ltty of performance&#13;
throughout.&#13;
··Beml6 DoU&#13;
ALL THE WAY CRAZY&#13;
by Uttle rlle&#13;
and the lgbtbea&amp;a&#13;
(Alligator)&#13;
For years a fixture on the&#13;
San Franclseo mu.ale scene,&#13;
Little Chad.le and th Night•&#13;
beata play a hard driving&#13;
mixtuN of rock and blues,&#13;
aptly described on the album&#13;
as "genuine houserockln'&#13;
music."&#13;
Much of the credit for the&#13;
album's drive and excitement&#13;
goes to vocallst and harmon•&#13;
ica player Rick Estrin. Estrin&#13;
haa one of the most expressive&#13;
and powerful blues&#13;
volces around, and has been&#13;
described "th b t har·&#13;
monica play r working&#13;
today''.&#13;
1:any of the songs exhlbll a&#13;
rather bizarre ense of&#13;
humor. Numb rs such as&#13;
"T.V. Crazy" and "Poor TarUU'l"&#13;
take a warped and v ry&#13;
funny look at life and rel •&#13;
Uonships. The album also&#13;
giv the band ample oppor•&#13;
tunlty to demostrate lts skill&#13;
at alower, more tradlUonal&#13;
blues numb rs.&#13;
Alligator Record Is to&#13;
commended for giving bro d&#13;
xposure to one of San Francisco's&#13;
b st nd most popular&#13;
band . This L the kJnd of&#13;
luff th Fabulou Titund r -&#13;
birds only i h th y could&#13;
play.&#13;
·· Rick Lu hr&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Movie review Thursday, April 29, 1987 13&#13;
as;&#13;
Ra,S,"g Ari??na" towers viewer expectations ITlOrp an fhon overplay even funny. However, nnthino- ,, .«« * ... .&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
The Three Stooges meet&#13;
Jerry Lewis as per their&#13;
comic styles in this wild, unhibited&#13;
farce by brothers Joel&#13;
and Ethan Coen ("Blood Simple").&#13;
As one awaits a surprise&#13;
cameo by Jim Nabors or&#13;
Andy Griffith, the Coens&#13;
present a film of startling&#13;
comic images that owe more&#13;
to intentional overacting and&#13;
director brother Joel's intentionally&#13;
obtrusive close-ups&#13;
than to the script.&#13;
A childless couple steals a&#13;
baby from a child-filled couple,&#13;
complicated- by two&#13;
greasy-but-loveable ex-cons,&#13;
plenty of sight gags that that&#13;
pay affectionate homage to&#13;
Mack Sennet silents, and a&#13;
hillbilly setting (complete&#13;
with intentionally blatant&#13;
southern accents) that makes&#13;
one wonder whatever became&#13;
of Max Baer, Jr.&#13;
What hinders this film most&#13;
significantly is its pacing.&#13;
While it does want to be obtrusive,&#13;
it hastily exerts high&#13;
levels of energy in its opening&#13;
moments and thus has trouble&#13;
maintaining such a breakneck&#13;
pace throughout its&#13;
duration. Hence after about&#13;
twenty minutes it dies on its&#13;
feet.&#13;
An interesting aspect is&#13;
that the Coens, like Jerry&#13;
Lewis, allow their supporting&#13;
players to overplay even&#13;
more so than the leads. Durwhirl&#13;
^ tPPing attem which the two ex-consP (tB iinll&#13;
J0hn ^man)&#13;
dnl th ^ drive back down the street looking for it.&#13;
all the while screaming repeatedly&#13;
at the top of their&#13;
(a ^ect parallel to a&#13;
similar scene in Jerry Lewis'&#13;
"Which Way to the FnnVr&#13;
. ™ leads. on the other&#13;
are more low key.&#13;
Nicholas Cage plays deadpan&#13;
. . . manic s h enani gans ,&#13;
while Holly Hunter is a cute,&#13;
fiery example of southern&#13;
belle screen sexism. As thev&#13;
are at the forefront of the action,&#13;
they are the most reserved&#13;
(although reserved in&#13;
this film is comparatively inrf"&#13;
e)- 11 is their duty to uphold&#13;
the thread of the narrative&#13;
amidst the craziness that&#13;
even manages to include Tex&#13;
Cobb as a fugitive from a&#13;
Road Warrior film.&#13;
Another interesting ode to&#13;
Jerry Lewis is a scene directly&#13;
borrowed from his 1959 feature&#13;
"Rock-a-Bye-Baby" in&#13;
which Cage attempts to steal&#13;
one of five infants, only to&#13;
have them be a bit frisky for&#13;
his careful maneuvering&#13;
(Joel Coen's camera work&#13;
here rivals Frank Tashiln's in&#13;
the Lewis original).&#13;
"Raising Arizona" does&#13;
manage to give enough depth&#13;
to the characters so that it is&#13;
not merely the gags that are&#13;
funny. However, nothing in&#13;
the film is too terribly innovative,&#13;
Joel's camera work the&#13;
only genuinely original aspect&#13;
(presenting not so much a&#13;
new technique in photography&#13;
as a different way of photoghraphing&#13;
this type of film).&#13;
But can I recommend the&#13;
movie? Upon my comparing&#13;
it to the Three Stooges, I had&#13;
a friend mention to me that&#13;
not everyone is all that familiar&#13;
with the Stooges. So perhaps&#13;
this is a comedy for people&#13;
who have never seen the&#13;
Three Stooges. They won't&#13;
know any better anyway.&#13;
Selected Shorts&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
THREE FOR THE ROAD&#13;
More teenage shenanigans,&#13;
this time featuring Charlie&#13;
Sheen and Kerri Greene - the&#13;
principals of "Lucas"- and&#13;
John Ruck of "Ferris Bueller&#13;
' fame.&#13;
Greene is a senator's&#13;
daughter with a wild streak,&#13;
Sheen is the senator's yuppie&#13;
yes man who's ordered to&#13;
drive Greene to a girl's&#13;
prison. Ruck is a Maynard G.&#13;
Krebs incarnate who is just&#13;
along for the ride.&#13;
Greene is both amusing and&#13;
terminally attractive as the&#13;
uninhibited lass with a taste&#13;
for the truly outrageous. Her&#13;
antics are in rebellion of her&#13;
staid father's political status&#13;
and his insistence that she act&#13;
like a "real lady." Sheen,&#13;
wno s come down from "Pla-&#13;
°?J}" here. is appropriately&#13;
stitf as the brown-nosing&#13;
young bureaucrat, while&#13;
Kuck adds the necessary&#13;
character balance in a familiar&#13;
"trusted friend" role.&#13;
The script alternates from&#13;
amusing, to poignant, to sophomoric,&#13;
then back to amusnS.&#13;
etc. It apparently is attempting&#13;
an underlying&#13;
ineme regarding teenage&#13;
pris who should not be afraid&#13;
10 be themselves, along with&#13;
the genuine nastiness of the&#13;
suppressive parent role. That&#13;
it takes such a stand is impressive,&#13;
but the ensuing hijinks&#13;
make the film more a&#13;
"cute" item than one to go&#13;
away pondering.&#13;
Sally Kellerman's substantial&#13;
talents are wasted in the&#13;
small, thankless role of the&#13;
girl's estranged mother, especially&#13;
in comparison to a&#13;
similar role Kellerman had in&#13;
the 1979 feature "Foxes" with&#13;
Jodie Foster.&#13;
In some ways "Three For&#13;
The Road" makes the same&#13;
see page 14&#13;
Coming...&#13;
Friday, May 8th&#13;
PARTY ON&#13;
THE PAD&#13;
Live Band -&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Watch for it!&#13;
21^ CINEMAS 5 57th AVE . &amp; 75th St. • 694-7301&#13;
m m.&#13;
STARTING JUNE 26th&#13;
An MGM. UA Communications company&#13;
£196; MtrnOGpLOWYN MAYER PICTURES. INC&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29, 1987 13&#13;
Movie review&#13;
"Raising Arizona" lowers viewer expectations&#13;
players to overplay even&#13;
more 80 than the leads. DurIng&#13;
a kidnapping attempt In&#13;
which the two ex-cons (BW&#13;
Forsythe and John Goodman)&#13;
lose the baby. they drive back&#13;
down the street looking for lt,&#13;
all the while screaming repeatedly&#13;
at the top of their&#13;
lungs (a direct parallel to a&#13;
similar scene In Jerry Lewis'&#13;
"Which Way to the Front").&#13;
by Jim NelbauJ'&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
The Three Stooges meet&#13;
Jerry Lewis as per their&#13;
comic styles In this wild, unhlblted&#13;
farce by brothers Joel&#13;
and Ethan Coen ( "Blood Simple").&#13;
AB one awaits a surprise&#13;
cameo by Jim Nabors or&#13;
Andy Griffith, the Coens&#13;
present a tum of startling&#13;
comic Images that owe more&#13;
to Intentional overacting and&#13;
director brother Joel's lntenUonally&#13;
obtrusive close-ups&#13;
than to the script.&#13;
A childless couple steals a&#13;
baby from a chlld-fllled COU•&#13;
pie, complicated by two&#13;
greasy-but-loveable ex-cons,&#13;
plenty of sight gags that that&#13;
pay affectionate homage to&#13;
Mack Sennet silents, and a&#13;
hillbilly setting ( complete&#13;
with Intentionally blatant&#13;
aouthem accents) that makes&#13;
one wonder whatever became&#13;
of Max Baer, Jr.&#13;
What hinders this film most&#13;
algnlftcanUy ls its pacing.&#13;
While lt does want to be obtrusive,&#13;
It hastily exerts high&#13;
levels of energy In its opening&#13;
moments and thus has trouble&#13;
maintaining such a breakneck&#13;
pace throughout Its&#13;
duration. Hence after about&#13;
twenty minutes It dies on Its&#13;
feet.&#13;
An lnteresttng aspect ls&#13;
that the Coens, like Jerry&#13;
Lewis, allow their supporting&#13;
The leads, on the other&#13;
hand, are more low key.&#13;
Nicholas Cage plays deadpan&#13;
to the manic shenanigans,&#13;
while Holly Hunter ls a cute,&#13;
fiery example of southern&#13;
belle screen sexism. As they&#13;
are at the forefront of the action,&#13;
they are the most reserved&#13;
(although reserved In&#13;
this film ls comparatively in•&#13;
snne). It ls their duty to uphold&#13;
the thread of the narrative&#13;
amidst the craziness that&#13;
even manages to Include Tex&#13;
Cobb as a fugitive from a&#13;
Road Warrior film.&#13;
Another Interesting ode to&#13;
Jerry Lewis ls a scene directly&#13;
borrowed from his 1969 feature&#13;
"Rock-a-Bye-Baby" In&#13;
which Cage attempts to steal&#13;
one of five Infants, only to&#13;
have them be a bit frisky for&#13;
his careful maneuvering&#13;
(Joel Coen's camera work&#13;
here rivals Frank Tashlln's In&#13;
the Lewis original).&#13;
"Raising Arizona" does&#13;
manage to give enough depth&#13;
to the characters so that It ts&#13;
not merely the gags that are&#13;
-Selected Shortsby&#13;
Jim .Selbaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
THREE FOR THE ROAD&#13;
More teenage shenanigans,&#13;
this time featuring Charlie&#13;
Sheen and Kerri Greene . the&#13;
principals of "Lucas"- and&#13;
John Ruck of "Ferris Bueller"&#13;
fame.&#13;
Greene ls a senator's&#13;
daughter with a wild streak,&#13;
Sheen Is the senator's yuppie&#13;
yes man who's ordered to&#13;
drive Greene to a girl's&#13;
prison. Ruck Is a Maynard G .&#13;
Krebs Incarnate who ls just&#13;
along for the ride.&#13;
Greene ls both amusing and&#13;
terminally attractive as the&#13;
uninhibited lass with a taste&#13;
for the truly outrageous. Her&#13;
antics are ln rebellion of her&#13;
staid father's poutical status&#13;
and his Insistence that she act&#13;
llke a "real lady." Sheen,&#13;
who's come down from "Platoon"&#13;
here, ls appropriately&#13;
stiff as the brown-nosing&#13;
young bureaucrat, while&#13;
Ruck adds the necessary&#13;
character balance In a famll•&#13;
lar "trusted friend" role.&#13;
The script alternates from&#13;
amusing, to poignant, to soph•&#13;
omorlc, then back to amusing,&#13;
etc. It apparently Is at•&#13;
tempting an underlying&#13;
theme regarding teenage&#13;
girls who should not be afraid&#13;
to be themselves, along with&#13;
the genuine nastiness of the&#13;
suppressive parent role. That&#13;
It takes such a stand ls Impressive,&#13;
but the ensuing hijlnks&#13;
make the film more a&#13;
"cute•· Item U1an one to go&#13;
away pondering.&#13;
Sally Kellerman's substanlla.&#13;
l talents are wasted In the&#13;
small, thankless role of the&#13;
girl's estranged mother, especially&#13;
In comparison to a&#13;
similar role Kellerman had 1n&#13;
the 1979 feature "Foxes" with&#13;
Jodie Foster.&#13;
In some ways • 'Three For&#13;
The Road" makes the same&#13;
...page 14&#13;
Coming ..•&#13;
Friday, May 8th&#13;
PARTY ON&#13;
THE PAD&#13;
Live Band•&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Watch for it!&#13;
funny. However, nothing In aa a different way of photogh- not everyone la all that famll•&#13;
the rum Ls too terribly innova- raphing th1.s type of ft1m). lar with the Stooges. So per-&#13;
Uve, Joel's camera work the But can I recommend the hapa th1.s la a comedy for peoonly&#13;
genuinely original aspect movie? Upon my comparing pie who have never seen th~&#13;
(presenting not 80 much a lt to the Three Stooges, I had Three Stooges. They won t&#13;
new technique In photography a friend mention to me that know any better anyway.&#13;
14 Thursday, April 29, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Columbia Press releases cinema books&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Four new cinema studies&#13;
by Columbia University Press&#13;
can be considered somewhat&#13;
of a series on American film&#13;
studies.&#13;
The Classical Hollywood&#13;
Cinema by David Bordwell,&#13;
Janet Staiger, and Kristin&#13;
Thompson&#13;
This first tome deals with&#13;
film style and mode of production&#13;
to 1960. Encompassing&#13;
what many consider to be&#13;
Hollywood's "golden years,"&#13;
we can get an idea of various&#13;
technological changes that occured&#13;
in the film medium in&#13;
this country (which in turn&#13;
affected all other countries).&#13;
The final essays deal briefly&#13;
with the mode of f ilm practice&#13;
since 1960 (the previous&#13;
eras having already been&#13;
studied at extreme length). It&#13;
is here that the authors observe&#13;
alternate film practices&#13;
from this contemporary era.&#13;
The appendices, which include&#13;
things like brief synopses&#13;
of U.S. film industry&#13;
structures, are most helpful&#13;
for the film student.&#13;
POWER ANDPANANOIA&#13;
by Dane Polan&#13;
Subtitled "History, Narrative,&#13;
and the American Cinema,&#13;
1940-1950,' this study&#13;
closely examines a very pivotal&#13;
decade in American film&#13;
that is often overlooked.&#13;
This is the period that was&#13;
so deeply affected by World&#13;
War Two, the film offerings&#13;
balancing somewhere between&#13;
the blatant flag waving&#13;
propaganda of John Wayne&#13;
and the dark film noir with&#13;
actors like Humphry Bogart&#13;
and Robert Mitchum, the latter&#13;
having a tremendous influence&#13;
on the French New&#13;
Wave that spawned Francois&#13;
Truffaut and Jean Luc Goddard.&#13;
Scholarly film studies&#13;
rarely if ever touch upon the&#13;
historical significance that&#13;
American cinema exhibits.&#13;
That the author chooses to&#13;
concentrate on one decade,&#13;
allows for a more complete&#13;
analysis that covers every&#13;
aspect of that period's motion&#13;
picture output.&#13;
THE WORLD WAR TWO&#13;
COMBAT&#13;
by Jeanine Basinger&#13;
A perfect companion piece&#13;
to the "Power and Paranoia"&#13;
tome, and the best of the four&#13;
book reviewed here.&#13;
Basinger examines a&#13;
screen sub-genre in full, giving&#13;
attention to World War&#13;
One Films as a veritable&#13;
foundation for the basis of her&#13;
study, while commenting on&#13;
Korea and View Nam interpretations&#13;
to culminate her&#13;
Book review&#13;
Lorentz critical essays&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
"Lorentz on Film" (University&#13;
of Oklahoma Press) collects&#13;
some of the most important&#13;
critical essays from longtime&#13;
movie critic Pare Lorentz.&#13;
Focusing on the years from&#13;
1927 until Lorentz's retirement&#13;
in 1941, th is compilation&#13;
allows us to see period reviews&#13;
of some of the most&#13;
honored screen classics. What&#13;
is most fascinating about this&#13;
book, is that often the reviews&#13;
at the time of the film's initial&#13;
release belie its lasting&#13;
value. Good examples are Lorentz's&#13;
reviews of Laurel and&#13;
Hardy and The Marx Brothers;&#13;
two comedy teams that&#13;
have withstood the test of&#13;
time, but whom Lorentz&#13;
merely found quaint back&#13;
then.&#13;
That Lorentz became a fine&#13;
filmmaker in his own right&#13;
("The Plow That Broke The&#13;
Plains") makes his criticisms&#13;
all the more valid. But reviews&#13;
aren't all this book has&#13;
to offer. We also get articles&#13;
on film arts and commercialism&#13;
that are as topical now as&#13;
they were some fifty years&#13;
ago when first written.&#13;
"Lorentz on Film" is an engrossing&#13;
look at criticism&#13;
from an era when film genuinely&#13;
mattered, even from a&#13;
commercial aspect.&#13;
Open 7 days&#13;
857-7333&#13;
1-94 at 60th St,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
(1 mile north of&#13;
the Factory&#13;
Outlet Centre)&#13;
FACTORY OUTLCT&#13;
Shorts&#13;
from page 13&#13;
statement as Stanley&#13;
Kramer's thoughtful "Bless&#13;
The Beasts and the Children"&#13;
(1972), in which juveniles&#13;
were compared to beasts&#13;
being slaughtered as their&#13;
spirit is continually broken by&#13;
parental oppression. However&#13;
B.W.L. Norton's direction&#13;
paces the film so that the&#13;
comedy is pretty much at the&#13;
forefront, causing the whole&#13;
thing to look like "Doris Day&#13;
and Rock Hudson meet Lynette&#13;
'Squeaky' Fromme."&#13;
But Greene turns in a fine&#13;
performance (outclassing&#13;
"Goonies" and "Lucas"). She&#13;
thoughts on World War Two.&#13;
It is these films that are&#13;
most dismissed among all examples&#13;
popular American&#13;
motion picutes, in that they&#13;
are too often propogandafilled&#13;
and dated. Basinger&#13;
looks carefully at these works&#13;
(her essay on the 1948 John&#13;
Wayne feature "Sands of I wo&#13;
Jima" is most interesting),&#13;
understanding the underlying&#13;
substance that adds the&#13;
meaning and depth to the&#13;
often otherwise superficial&#13;
narratives.&#13;
These films were far different&#13;
during the war than afterward,&#13;
and have taken on a&#13;
whole new meaning in the aftermath&#13;
of Korea and Vietnam.&#13;
Basinger approaches&#13;
these points in her analysis.&#13;
Strongly recommended for all&#13;
libraries.&#13;
HOLLYWOOD FROM VIETNAM&#13;
TO REAGAN&#13;
by Robin Wood&#13;
Wood puts an indelible&#13;
stamp on all of his fiim&#13;
essays, so this book is no different.&#13;
A nice culmination to the&#13;
three afore mentioned books,&#13;
this bold look at changing&#13;
trends and ideas in the past&#13;
twenty or so years of American&#13;
cinema gives extensive&#13;
coverage to horror films,&#13;
while also looking at the&#13;
treatment of Women, the&#13;
buddy pictures, and important&#13;
works by Martin Scorcese&#13;
and Micael Cimino.&#13;
The radical political viewpoint&#13;
Wood has likes to weave&#13;
its way into the writings,&#13;
making them seem aU the&#13;
more personal and interesting.&#13;
It gives us a different,&#13;
more liberal understanding of&#13;
many trends within the&#13;
American screen system that&#13;
would often be shielded had&#13;
the author not carefully&#13;
pointed them out.&#13;
Cineaste interviews&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Cineaste has always been a&#13;
very politically oriented film&#13;
magazine, as attested to by&#13;
this compilation of interviews&#13;
from that periodical.&#13;
Editors Dan Georgakas and&#13;
Lenny Rubenstein have compiled&#13;
some of the most interesting&#13;
conversations for "The&#13;
Cineaste Interviews" (Lake&#13;
View Press). From Village&#13;
Voice critic Andrew Sarris to&#13;
German filmmaker Rainer&#13;
Werner Fassbinder to actress&#13;
Jane Fonda, the interviews&#13;
contained in this fascinating&#13;
compilation not only give the&#13;
reader a diverse look at several&#13;
aspects of film, but also&#13;
give an excellent idea of the&#13;
depth contained within the&#13;
pages of Cineaste.&#13;
The filmmakers discuss&#13;
their work with the perception&#13;
only they themselves can&#13;
have. The performers comment&#13;
on what they find film&#13;
should be from both commercial&#13;
and artistic perspectives.&#13;
is the antithesis of the apple&#13;
pie wholesomeness she had&#13;
projected in her other films,&#13;
and this difference is impressive&#13;
on more than a visceral&#13;
level. It is her character that&#13;
has the most potential to&#13;
make some sort of statement&#13;
through the narrative's underlying&#13;
intentions. Unfortunately,&#13;
this aspect is not explored&#13;
well enough to cause&#13;
"Three For The Road" to rise&#13;
above the commonplace.&#13;
THE ARISTOCATS&#13;
This 1970 Disney animation&#13;
is hampered by the fact that&#13;
it was not made under Walt's&#13;
» * &lt; » # i&#13;
* * * * *****************„* * * * *&#13;
POOL CENTER: 5102 Green Bay Rd., Kenosha *&#13;
THE SWIMMING POOL I&#13;
M M PROFESSIONALS&#13;
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• CHEMICALS T&#13;
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•&#13;
k&#13;
k&#13;
*&#13;
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•&#13;
* • SALES&#13;
J • INSTALLATION&#13;
PUS&#13;
supervison (he died in 1966),&#13;
but still manages to exhibit&#13;
some of the Disney magic.&#13;
All of the most desirable&#13;
aspects of Disney cartoon features&#13;
(amusing villians,&#13;
savvy heroes, slapstick,&#13;
colorful images) are present,&#13;
without a lot of preachiness.&#13;
But then there isn't a great&#13;
deal of true substance to&#13;
please more discerning adult&#13;
lovers of animated features.&#13;
Yet it should be successful in&#13;
keeping most small children&#13;
amused for an hour-and-ahalf.&#13;
Perhaps this is best recommended&#13;
as a good film to&#13;
take the kids to see. Since the&#13;
youngsters will be out of&#13;
school for spring break soon,&#13;
"The Aristocats" might be a&#13;
good way to keep them&#13;
amused for a short time.&#13;
SURPLUS GOODS&#13;
Stereos, TVs, Refrigerators,&#13;
Stoves, Furniture,&#13;
and Much More!&#13;
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SUPER SURPLUS OUTLET&#13;
5535 22ntf AV E.&#13;
OPEN 7 days a week&#13;
14 Thurad y, April 29, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Columbia Press releases cinema books&#13;
by Jim Nelb Ill'&#13;
Enterlalrunent Editor&#13;
Four new cinema studies&#13;
by Columbia University Press&#13;
can be considered somewhat&#13;
of a series on American tum&#13;
studies.&#13;
Tb Hollywood&#13;
ClneJD&amp; by David Bordwell,&#13;
Janet Staiger, and K.rlatln&#13;
omp on&#13;
This first tome deals with&#13;
film style and mode of production&#13;
to 1960. Encompass•&#13;
Ing what many consider to be&#13;
Hollywood's "golden years,"&#13;
we can get an idea of various&#13;
technological changes that occured&#13;
1n the !Um medium In&#13;
th18 country (which in tum&#13;
affected all other countries).&#13;
The final essays deal brief.&#13;
ly With the mode of film practice&#13;
ince 1960 (the previou&#13;
eras having already been&#13;
studied at extreme length). It&#13;
ls here that the authors ob-&#13;
Book review&#13;
serve alternate fllm practices&#13;
from thJs contemporary era.&#13;
The append.lees, which in•&#13;
elude ~gs llke brief synopses&#13;
of U.S. film industry&#13;
structures, are most helpful&#13;
for the film student.&#13;
POWER AND PANANOIA&#13;
by Dane Polan&#13;
SubtiUed "History. Narrative,&#13;
and the American Cinema,&#13;
19ffl-1960,' this study&#13;
closely examines a very pivotal&#13;
decade In American film&#13;
that ls often overlooked.&#13;
This ts the period that waa&#13;
so deeply affected by World&#13;
War Two, the film otferlngs&#13;
balancing somewhere between&#13;
the blatant flag waving&#13;
propaganda of John Wayne&#13;
and the dark film nolr wtlh&#13;
actors like Humphry Bogart&#13;
and Robert Mitchum. the latter&#13;
having a tremendous influence&#13;
on the French New&#13;
Wave that spawned Francola&#13;
Tnltta.ut and Jean Luc Goddard.&#13;
Scholarly film studies&#13;
rarely 1f ever touch upon the&#13;
historical significance th.at&#13;
American cinema exhibits.&#13;
That the author chooses to&#13;
concentrate on one decade,&#13;
allows for a. more complete&#13;
analysis that covens every&#13;
aspect of that period's motion&#13;
picture output.&#13;
THE WORLD WAR TWO&#13;
COMBAT&#13;
by Jea.nlne Ba.singer&#13;
A perfect companion piece&#13;
to the · 'Power and Para.nola''&#13;
tome, and the best of the four&#13;
book reviewed here.&#13;
Basinger examines a&#13;
screen sub-genre In full, giving&#13;
attention to World War&#13;
One Films as a veritable&#13;
foundation for the basis of her&#13;
study, while commenting on&#13;
Korea and View Nam interpretations&#13;
to culminate her&#13;
thoughts on World War TWo.&#13;
It is these Wms that are&#13;
most dismissed among all examples&#13;
popular American&#13;
moUon picutes, 1n that they&#13;
are too often propogandafilled&#13;
and dated. Basinger&#13;
looks carefully at these works&#13;
(her essay on the 1948 John&#13;
Wayne feature "Sande of Iwo&#13;
Jona" ts most interesting),&#13;
understanding the underlying&#13;
substance that addS the&#13;
meaning and depth to the&#13;
often otherwise superficial&#13;
narratives.&#13;
These films were far different&#13;
during the war than afterward,&#13;
and have ta.ken on a&#13;
whole new meaning In the aftermath&#13;
of Korea and Viet•&#13;
nam. Basinger approaches&#13;
these points In her analysis.&#13;
Strongly recommended for all&#13;
Hbrarles.&#13;
HOLLYWOOD FROM VIETNAM&#13;
TO REAGAN&#13;
by Robin Wood&#13;
Wood puts an lndellble&#13;
stamp on all of hls film&#13;
essays, so th1 book ls no dlf.&#13;
ferent.&#13;
A nice culmination to the&#13;
three afore mentioned books,&#13;
this bold look at changing&#13;
trends and ldea.s in the past&#13;
twenty or so years of Amert.&#13;
can cinema gives extensive&#13;
coverage to horror films,&#13;
while also looking at the&#13;
treatment of Women, the&#13;
buddy pictures, and lmpor.&#13;
tant works by Martin Scor.&#13;
cese and Mlcael Cimino.&#13;
The radical political View.&#13;
point Wood has likes to weave&#13;
its way into the writings,&#13;
making them seem all the&#13;
more personal and interest.&#13;
ing. It gives us a di!fer nt,&#13;
more liberal understanding of&#13;
many trends Within the&#13;
American screen system that&#13;
would often be shlelded had&#13;
the author not carefully&#13;
pointed them out.&#13;
Lorentz critical essays&#13;
Cineaste interviews&#13;
by Jim NelbBW'&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
.Jane Fonda, the Interviews&#13;
contained in th1s fascinating&#13;
compllation not only glve the&#13;
reader a diverse look at several&#13;
aspects of film, but alsO&#13;
give an excellent ldea ot the&#13;
depth contained within the&#13;
pages of Cineaste.&#13;
by Jlm Nelbaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
''Lorentz on Film" (University&#13;
of Oklahoma Pree•&gt; collects&#13;
some of the most important&#13;
critical essays from longt1rne&#13;
movl critic Pare Lorentz.&#13;
Focusing on the years from&#13;
1927 until Lorentz's retirement&#13;
in 1941, this compllatlon&#13;
allows us to see period reviews&#13;
of some of the most&#13;
honored screen classics. What&#13;
l8 most fascinating about this&#13;
book, ls that often the reviews&#13;
at the time of the film' lnltial&#13;
release belle its lasung&#13;
value. Good examples are Lorentz's&#13;
reviews of Laurel and&#13;
Hardy and The Man( Brothers;&#13;
two comedy teams that&#13;
have withstood the tellt of&#13;
t:lme, but whom Lorentz&#13;
merely found quaint back&#13;
then.&#13;
That Lorentz became a fine&#13;
filmmaker 1n h1a own right&#13;
Open7days&#13;
8.57-7333&#13;
1-M at 60th St.,.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
(1 mile north of&#13;
the F dory&#13;
Outlet Centre)&#13;
(' 'The Plow That Broke The&#13;
Pla1ns") makes his crttlclsms&#13;
all the more valld. But reviews&#13;
aren't all this book has&#13;
to otter. We also get articles&#13;
on film arts and commercialism&#13;
that are as topical now as&#13;
they were some fifty years&#13;
ago when first written.&#13;
"Lorentz on Film" 18 an en•&#13;
grossing look at criticism&#13;
from an era when film genuinely&#13;
mattered, even from a&#13;
commerc1al aspect.&#13;
Shorts&#13;
lrompage 13&#13;
statement as Stanley&#13;
Kramer's thoughtful "Bless&#13;
The Beasts and the Children"&#13;
(1972), in which juvenil s&#13;
were compared to beasts&#13;
being slaughtered as their&#13;
splrit ls continually broken by&#13;
parental oppression. However&#13;
B.W.L. Norton's direction&#13;
paces the film so that the&#13;
comedy 1s pretty much at the&#13;
forefront, causing the whole&#13;
thing to look llke ''Doris Day&#13;
and Rock Hudson meet Lynette&#13;
'Squeaky' Fromme."&#13;
Clneaste has alwaya been a&#13;
very politically oriented film&#13;
magazine, as attested to by&#13;
this compilation of interviews&#13;
from that periodical.&#13;
Editors Dan Georgakas and&#13;
Lenny Rubenstein have compiled&#13;
some of the most interesting&#13;
conversations for ''The&#13;
Cineaste Interviews" (Lake&#13;
View Preas), From Village&#13;
Voice critic Andrew Sarris to&#13;
German fllmmaker Rainer&#13;
Werner Fassbinder to actress&#13;
ls the antithesis of the apple&#13;
pie wholesomeness she had&#13;
projected in her other films,&#13;
and this difference ls impressive&#13;
on more than a visceral&#13;
level. It ls her character that&#13;
has the most potential to&#13;
make some sort of statement&#13;
through the narrative's un•&#13;
derlylng intentions. Unfortunately,&#13;
this aspect ls not explored&#13;
well enough to ca.use&#13;
"Three For The Road" to rlse&#13;
above the commonplace.&#13;
THE ARISTOCATS&#13;
But Greene turns in a fine This 1970 Disney animation&#13;
per!ormwice (outclassing Ls hampered by the fact that&#13;
"Goontes" and "Lucas"}. She lt was not made under Walt'&#13;
***************************~i*&#13;
! e · POOL CENTER: :1gs 5102 Green Bay Rd., Kenosha •&#13;
* THE SWIMMING POOL :&#13;
*. PROFESSIONALS •&#13;
: · IN-GROUND • ABOVE GROUND *&#13;
* *•SALES • CHEMICALS *&#13;
: • INSTALLATION • ACCESSORIES *&#13;
~ • SERVICE • EQUIPMENT :&#13;
* PHONE: KENOSHA 654-3341 RACINE 632-5223 !&#13;
****************************** .... . ,. , .. .. .... ....... ,, ..&#13;
The filmmakers discuss&#13;
their work with the perception&#13;
only they them elves can&#13;
have. The performers comm&#13;
nt on what they find film&#13;
should be from both commercial&#13;
and artistic perspectives.&#13;
supervison (he died in 1966},&#13;
but sWl manages to exhlblt&#13;
some of the Disney magic.&#13;
All of the most desirable&#13;
aspects of Disney cartoon features&#13;
( amusing vtlllans,&#13;
88.vvy heroes, slapstick,&#13;
colorful lmages) are present,&#13;
without a lot of preachiness.&#13;
But then there isn't a great&#13;
deal of true substance to&#13;
please more discernlng adult&#13;
lovers of animated features.&#13;
Yet 1t should be successful tn&#13;
k eping most mall children&#13;
amused for an hour-and-a•&#13;
half. Perhaps this ts best rec•&#13;
ommended as a good fUm to&#13;
take the kids to see. since the&#13;
young ler wlll be out of&#13;
school for spring break soon,&#13;
"The Aristocats" might be a&#13;
good way to keep them&#13;
amused for a short time.&#13;
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•&#13;
RANGER&#13;
•• 11" iS Thursday, April 2d, 1987 15&#13;
Athlete profile&#13;
Wrestler tries racewalking&#13;
by Michael J. Rohl&#13;
It is rare today for college&#13;
athletes to participate in two&#13;
different sports. The length of&#13;
the season and caliber of&#13;
skills required to compete at&#13;
the collegiate level are so&#13;
great they usually require the&#13;
specialization.&#13;
That is the case for most&#13;
athletes, but Ken Arend is not&#13;
like most athletes. The&#13;
twenty four year old senior&#13;
sociology major transferred&#13;
from Illinois University to&#13;
Parkside two years ago.&#13;
Since then he has qualified&#13;
for three National wrestling&#13;
tournaments, and now he has&#13;
qualified for his fourth national&#13;
meet - in track and field.&#13;
"An interest" got Arend&#13;
started in racewalking. "I&#13;
saw the Parkside guys do it&#13;
and I decided to try it just for&#13;
fun" said Arend.&#13;
"I have a knack for trying&#13;
new things,'' continued&#13;
Arend, "and seeing if I can&#13;
Ken Arend&#13;
win something out of it."&#13;
Trying different things is&#13;
nothing new to Arend. He was&#13;
a triple sport athlete in high&#13;
school where he was an allconference,&#13;
all-area offensive&#13;
guard and he placed at the Illinois&#13;
state wrestling meet.&#13;
He also played hockey, which&#13;
was his first sport.&#13;
"Hockey used to be my&#13;
main sport," said Arend "but&#13;
that got too expensive so I&#13;
made the transition to wrestling.&#13;
Wrestling is my main&#13;
sport now, but I decided to&#13;
try it (racewalking)."&#13;
The transition seemed natural&#13;
to Arend. "The big difference&#13;
is you're using different&#13;
muscles," said Arend. "I'd&#13;
also characterize wrestling&#13;
and racewalking as individual&#13;
sports."&#13;
Arend also recognizes another&#13;
similarity. "In wrestling&#13;
you have to be flexible;&#13;
in racewalking its the same.&#13;
That's the similarity."&#13;
Of course, many people&#13;
would want to know which is&#13;
more difficult, and Arend has&#13;
an answer. "Most people&#13;
think wrestling would be&#13;
harder, but racewalking is&#13;
very competitive. I wouldn't&#13;
say walking was a piece of&#13;
cake."&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Rangers sweep Concordia&#13;
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ROBB: NOW are you old and mature?&#13;
Happy Birthday!&#13;
MIKE SLIWA, love those legs! The&#13;
Female Society.&#13;
LET THE sunshine, let the sunshine,&#13;
let the peace flow. To my brothers, in&#13;
peace, Dave.&#13;
PEACE TO all the brothers-peace&#13;
brother Os, peace brother Jim, peace&#13;
brother Randy, peace brother Hung -&#13;
from brother Dave.&#13;
BROTHERS: JOIN me now in a silent&#13;
moment of peaceful&#13;
reflection Amen. I feel&#13;
sweetfully peaceful, peace brothers,&#13;
Dave.&#13;
TAKE YOUR best shots now, you&#13;
idiots! There's only one week left...&#13;
CHERRY B, the offer still stands.&#13;
Sucking on your?! Crank.&#13;
C.I., no snagging. You are now&#13;
SNAFU. Beaner.&#13;
"IF I had a penis, I'd still be a girl,&#13;
but I'd make more money and conquer&#13;
the world!"&#13;
MEATHEAD. MOANIN Winona&#13;
awaits you. You should prevail --on&#13;
top? Bean.&#13;
TENNESSEE IS not a state. You are&#13;
an impression. Elephant.&#13;
EDITOR DAILY: Gus Polack:&#13;
GREAT job, nice voice, too! Devotee&#13;
K.&#13;
ALL RIGHT, Dave. I won't say anything&#13;
nasty about your having 2 fiancees!&#13;
TO THE guy who used to have a multi-&#13;
colored carpet: you're so sexy!!&#13;
RUDY: I love you. Rainbow.&#13;
DON'T YOU have anything better to&#13;
do? Try taking a reading course here.&#13;
Snorts.&#13;
OF COURSE I don't. That's why it's&#13;
so much fun annoying you with these&#13;
ads 'dash' The masked kindergarten&#13;
crayon killer!&#13;
AND REMEMBER kids, only one&#13;
more issue of the Ranger is left to be&#13;
crude, offensive and suggestive. Let's&#13;
doit!&#13;
Personals&#13;
THE HARDER you work, the bigger&#13;
penis you become.&#13;
3J, DAVE missed Saturday night. He&#13;
knows what he did was wrong, and he&#13;
wont let it happen again.&#13;
KENOWHERE DID you lost your Red&#13;
Bandana lately?&#13;
KENNY, IS that toothpick all that&#13;
you're sucking on? Crunchy.&#13;
DOMINO'S DUDES: It was fun while&#13;
it lasted. I'll miss you. Love, Amy.&#13;
8COTT, THANK you for everything.&#13;
Love, Shelly.&#13;
KIM: IS one's theological flexibility&#13;
commensurate with the propensity to&#13;
get into a woman's pants?&#13;
HEARD IN the Ranger: "Steve's not&#13;
here, make me feel better."&#13;
BILL R. Thanks for last week's&#13;
Ranger. We couldn't have done it&#13;
without you, really.&#13;
JENNY CARR, do you spit or swallow?&#13;
JIM, IT'S definite swallow. You know&#13;
how power hungry I am! Jen.&#13;
JIM, LET me show you where real&#13;
power lies!&#13;
JENNY, I didn't write those above&#13;
classifieds; Terri did.&#13;
JILL: I am glad that there is at least&#13;
one thing that you have managed to&#13;
keep a secret.&#13;
ANN WILLEMS, you're finally free!!!&#13;
No more school! Congratulations!&#13;
Tim.&#13;
TAMMI P: Just remember when you&#13;
stare out at the moon it's the same&#13;
one that Mike sees on his lonely nights&#13;
without you, but I'm not sure about&#13;
the azmuth and altitude ... Mrs. B.&#13;
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by Randy LeCount&#13;
The men's baseball team&#13;
raised its record to 7-5 with&#13;
two victories at Concordia&#13;
College on Monday (Apr. 27)&#13;
by 12-4 and 9-5 scores.&#13;
The Rangers began paving&#13;
the road to their present record&#13;
with a 7-5 win a game&#13;
ended by rain after five innings&#13;
against Carroll College&#13;
back on Tuesday, April 21.&#13;
The Rangers then proceeded&#13;
to defeat Concordia at&#13;
home on April 25 (Sat.) with&#13;
2-1 and 7-4 victories. These&#13;
games were highlighted by&#13;
successive shutouts pitched&#13;
by Steve Leonhart and Joel&#13;
Bumgarner.&#13;
In Monday's 12-4 and 9-5&#13;
wins at Concordia, shutouts&#13;
were once again pitched by&#13;
Robb Peiffer and Doug&#13;
Londo.&#13;
As the recent wins have&#13;
shown, the Rangers have&#13;
been getting good pitching as&#13;
well as good hitting.&#13;
Catcher/outfielder Craig&#13;
Kealty leads the team in batting&#13;
with a .444 average. He&#13;
also leads in RBIs with 10 and&#13;
hits with 12. First baseman&#13;
Randy Spiegelhoff is not fir&#13;
behind with a .423 average, 4&#13;
RBIs, and 11 hits. Center&#13;
fielder Armond Bonofiglio&#13;
also sports a .344 average, as&#13;
well as 11 hits and 3 RBIs.&#13;
The Rangers next game&#13;
was on Wednesday, April 29&#13;
against Northwestern Illinois.&#13;
Results will be available in&#13;
next week's Ranger.&#13;
Men's track improving&#13;
Track from page 16&#13;
Rangers were Damkot, John&#13;
Hunt and Mike Nelson in the&#13;
5000 meters. Damkot placed&#13;
third in 15:22.7, however,&#13;
Rosa feels that he is "much&#13;
better than his time shows."&#13;
Hunt was 6th with his 15:37.9,&#13;
and once again Mike Nelson&#13;
raced to a personal best by 28&#13;
seconds with a time of 15:&#13;
49.5. He finished eighth.&#13;
With the constant progress&#13;
his team has been showing.&#13;
Coach Rosa is already looking&#13;
forward to the future.&#13;
"I'm really happy with&#13;
Brown and Nelson. For freshmen,&#13;
they are running good&#13;
times. Next year, we'll put together&#13;
a good two-mile relay&#13;
team."&#13;
RANGER Thursday, Aprtl 29, 1987 15&#13;
Baseball Athlete P.,rofile&#13;
Wrestler tries racewalking . Rangers sweep Concordia&#13;
by Mlebael I, Rohl&#13;
It Is rare today for college&#13;
athletes to participate In two&#13;
dllferent sports. The length ot&#13;
the season and caliber of&#13;
skills required to compete at&#13;
the colleglate level are so&#13;
great they usually require the&#13;
specla.llzation.&#13;
He also played hockey. which&#13;
was his first sport.&#13;
"Hockey used to be my&#13;
main sport," ll&amp;id Arend "but&#13;
that got too expensive so I&#13;
made the transitlon to wresUing.&#13;
Wrestl1ng ls my main&#13;
sport now, but I decided to&#13;
try it (racewalldng)."&#13;
The transition seemed natural&#13;
to Arend. "The blg difference&#13;
ls you're using dillerent&#13;
muscles," said Arend. "I'd&#13;
also characterize wresUing&#13;
and racewalklng as individual&#13;
sports."&#13;
That ls the case for most&#13;
athletes, but Ken Arend ls not&#13;
llke most athletes. The&#13;
twenty four year old senior&#13;
sociology ma.Jor transferred&#13;
from Illinois University to&#13;
Parkside two years ago.&#13;
Since then he has quallfied&#13;
for three National wrestling&#13;
tournaments, and now he has&#13;
quallfied for his fourth nation- '--....,........,':"':'" ______ ..._.....,;w&#13;
al meet • in track and field. Ken Arend&#13;
Arend also recognizes another&#13;
almllarlty. "In wresWng&#13;
you have to be flexible;&#13;
in racewalking its the same.&#13;
That's the simllar1ty."&#13;
"An interest" got Arend&#13;
started in racewalking. "I&#13;
saw the Parkside guys do it&#13;
and I decided to try tt just for&#13;
fun" said Arend.&#13;
"I have a knack for trying&#13;
new things," continued&#13;
Arend, "and seeing if I can&#13;
win something out of it."&#13;
Trying different things ts&#13;
nothlng new to Arend. He wu&#13;
a triple sport athlete in htgh&#13;
school where he was an allcon!&#13;
erence, all-area offensive&#13;
guard and he placed at the n.&#13;
llnols state wrestling meet.&#13;
Of course, many people&#13;
would want to know which ts&#13;
more difficult, and Arend has&#13;
an answer. "Most people&#13;
think wrestling would be&#13;
harder, but racewalklng la&#13;
very competitive. I wouldn't&#13;
say walking waa a piece of&#13;
cake."&#13;
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Personal&#13;
'111E HARDER you work, 1he bigger&#13;
~nit you become&#13;
SI, DA mlaaed Saturday night. He&#13;
what h dld waa wrong, and h&#13;
wont let It happen again.&#13;
KESOWHERJ!: DID you loet your Red&#13;
Bandan lat ly?&#13;
K s. y. I that toothpick all that&#13;
you're 1111ckln on? Crunchy.&#13;
OOMI. O' DL'D : It Wll■ tun whll&#13;
It la■ ted. I'll mll!I you. Lov • Amy.&#13;
!ICOTT, TH K you ror ev ryt.hinf&#13;
Love.Shelly&#13;
Kl:\!: l one•• theological flex.lb llty&#13;
commenaurate with the propen.elty to&#13;
g t Into womM'11 panlllf&#13;
HEARD I the Ranger: "St.eve•• not&#13;
here. mall.e me feel better."&#13;
BILL ft. Thanka for laat w k' ■&#13;
Ranger. We couldn' t hav done It&#13;
without you. really.&#13;
JE. • ·v RR, do you IIJ)ll or swal&#13;
low?&#13;
IM, IT' d rtnlt allow . You know&#13;
how power hungry 1 am! Jen.&#13;
JIM, LET me show y0u where real&#13;
power ilea!&#13;
' ·y, I didn't write thou above&#13;
claQl!I ds; T rri did.&#13;
Jll.L: I am glad tho.t there i. at 1ea11t&#13;
on thing that you h v managed to&#13;
ke p cret .&#13;
A, N WlLLEM, , you' re f1na.lly fl"ff !I !&#13;
Tio mo IC:hool 1 Congn,.tulationa!&#13;
m ,&#13;
T ~• P1 Just reme-mber wh n you&#13;
■ta.re out at ~ moon It's the aame&#13;
on that Mike on hl.!J ton Jy night.II&#13;
lhwlthout you. but I'm not lRltt about&#13;
&amp;2muth and n!Utud rs. B .&#13;
Tl.ooEJUU. VO . ·oER men hav btgg r&#13;
Is. AOWGT.&#13;
ROBB: NOW are you old and matureT&#13;
Happy Birthday!&#13;
MJKE SLIWA, love thole legal 'lbe&#13;
Female Society.&#13;
LET THI) sunahine. let the IWl&amp;h.lne&#13;
let th peace flow. To my broth rs, In&#13;
peace, Dave.&#13;
PEACE TO all the brothent-PN,Ce&#13;
brother 0.. peace broth(!r Jlm. ~&#13;
brot.Mr Randy, peace brother Hung.&#13;
from brother Dave.&#13;
B.ROTBERS: IOIN - now 1n a ■uent&#13;
moment of ~&#13;
reflectlon ... ... ............ .... Amen. I feel&#13;
sweettully peaceful, peac brothera,&#13;
T.&gt;ave.&#13;
TU YOU&amp; but ahot■ now, you&#13;
Idiot■ ! There•• only one week left. ..&#13;
CHERRY B. the offer ■till 1umd■ •&#13;
Sucldng on your?! Crank.&#13;
C.I., no 11nAffU1« You now&#13;
SNAFU. Bean r .&#13;
"IF I had a penil, I'd sWI be a prt&#13;
but I ' d maJr mo mon y and con'.&#13;
querthe world ! ' '&#13;
lllEAmEAD. MOANIN Winona&#13;
await■ you. You ahould prevail -on&#13;
top! Bean.&#13;
TENNESSEE 18 not a state. You are&#13;
an lmpreaslon. ltlephanl.&#13;
EDITOR DAILY: Oua Pow:JI·&#13;
GREAT Job. nice voice. too! Devotee&#13;
K.&#13;
ALL BIGHT, Dave. I won't aay any&#13;
thin~ naaty about your having 2 Oan·&#13;
ceu.&#13;
TO THE guy who u■ed lo have a mul,&#13;
U·COIO~ carpet: you' re ao JQ'I I&#13;
RUDY: I lov you. Rainbow.&#13;
DO 'T YOO have anything tter to&#13;
do? Try taking a reading courae here.&#13;
Snort.I.&#13;
OF OOVR81l I don't. That'■ hy It's&#13;
10 much tun annoying you with theae&#13;
ads ' duh' The masked kindergarten&#13;
crayon kWer!&#13;
A.ND . R kl , only one&#13;
more lUue ot the Ranger S. left to be&#13;
cnide. offen■lve and augge■Uve Let's&#13;
do It' .&#13;
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304 6th St., Downtown Racfne • 633-:3022&#13;
by Randy LeCount&#13;
The men's baseball team&#13;
raised tta record to 7.5 with&#13;
two victories at Concordia&#13;
College on Monday (Apr 27)&#13;
by 12-4 and 9-5 acor a.&#13;
The Rangers began pa vlng&#13;
the road to their present record&#13;
wlth a 7-5 win a game&#13;
ended by rain after five innings&#13;
against Carroll College&#13;
back on Tue day, April 21.&#13;
The Rangers then proceeded&#13;
to defeat Concordia at&#13;
home on April 26 (Sat.) with&#13;
2-1 and 7 ◄ victories. These&#13;
games were highlighted by&#13;
successive shutouts pitched&#13;
by Steve Leonhart and Joel&#13;
Bumgarner.&#13;
In Monday's 12., and 9-5&#13;
wins at Concordia, shutouts&#13;
were once again pitched by&#13;
Robb Peuter and Doug •&#13;
Londo.&#13;
A8 the recent wins have&#13;
shown, the Rangers have&#13;
been getting good pitching as&#13;
well aa good hitting.&#13;
Catcher/outfielder Craig&#13;
Kealty leadS the team In batting&#13;
with a .«4 verage. H&#13;
also leads In RBIs with 10 and&#13;
hits with 12. First baseman&#13;
Randy SplegelhoU la not ...r&#13;
behind with a .t28 verag • 4,&#13;
RBIs, and 11 hits. nter&#13;
fielder Armond BonofigUo&#13;
also sports a .s« averag .&#13;
well aa 11 hlts and S RBIs.&#13;
The Rang ra next gam&#13;
was on Wednesday, Aprll 29&#13;
against Northwestern Illinois.&#13;
Results will be available ln&#13;
next week's Ranger.&#13;
Men's track improving-&#13;
Track ttom page 16&#13;
Rangers were Damkot, John&#13;
Hunt and Mike Nelson in the&#13;
~ meters. Damkot placed&#13;
third in 15: 22 . 7. however,&#13;
Rosa feels that he la "much&#13;
better than hl8 tlme shows."&#13;
Hunt was 6th with hl8 115:87.9,&#13;
and once again Mike Nelson&#13;
raced to a personal best by 28&#13;
seconds with a time of lG:&#13;
•9.15. He f1n1 bed eighth.&#13;
With the constant progre&#13;
hl8 team has been showing,&#13;
Coach Rosa la already lookIng&#13;
forward to the future.&#13;
"I'm really happy with&#13;
Brown and Nelson. For fresh•&#13;
men, they are running good&#13;
time■. Next year, we'll put together&#13;
a good two-mile relay&#13;
team."&#13;
•&#13;
Women s, men's track teams showing progress&#13;
Marter sisters lead squad&#13;
by Michael J. Rohl&#13;
In track and field, unlike&#13;
other sports, the relative improvement&#13;
an athlete makes&#13;
can be accurately measured.&#13;
The competition may change,&#13;
the course may change, but&#13;
on a track a mile is a mile&#13;
any where you go.&#13;
Because of this ability to&#13;
accurately gauge performance&#13;
pr's or personal bests&#13;
are very important to the athletes.&#13;
If nothing else, the&#13;
Parkside women's track team&#13;
is good at getting pr's. This&#13;
past weekend the women&#13;
traveled to Elmhurst, Illinois&#13;
to run on one of the fastest&#13;
tracks in the midwest.&#13;
There were some very noteworthy&#13;
performances. Nancy&#13;
and Michelle Marter both&#13;
came away with victories in&#13;
the 800 and 1500 and ran their&#13;
personal bests. Sarah Hiett&#13;
ran second to the Marter sisters&#13;
in both the 800 and 1500.&#13;
Hiett too, ran her best time in&#13;
the 1500.&#13;
In the 5000, Colleen Wismer,&#13;
Patty Tweork and Stacy&#13;
Kisting placed third, fourth,&#13;
and fifth.&#13;
The Parkside relays also&#13;
placed very well. The 4x100&#13;
and Sprint Medelay relay&#13;
teams of Jacuquline Cotton,&#13;
Veronica Chamlee, Rebbeca&#13;
Scott and Yolanda Finely&#13;
placed second and first respectively.&#13;
In all, ten women have now&#13;
qualified for the NAIA National&#13;
Championship to be&#13;
held in Arkedephia, Arkansas&#13;
May 20-23.&#13;
Complete Parkside Results:&#13;
100 - Jacquline Cotton 3rd,&#13;
12.1; Rebbeca Scott 4th, 12.2.&#13;
800 - Nancy Narter 1st, 2:14.7&#13;
pr; Sarah Hiett 2nd, 2:15.6;&#13;
Anne Rietter 1st (unseeded)&#13;
2:29.7.&#13;
1500 - Michelle Marter 1st, 4:&#13;
28.5 sr; Sarah Hiett 2nd, 4:&#13;
32.0 pr; Jill Fobair 3rd, 4:40.3&#13;
pr; Laura Kauffman 4:49.6&#13;
pr; Jackie Melotick 4:55.5 pr;&#13;
Kristan Alioto 5:00.6 pr.&#13;
5000 - Colleen Wismer 3rd,&#13;
19:00.0; Patty Tweork 4th, 19:&#13;
26; Stacy Kisring 5th, 19.38.&#13;
10,000 walk - Carol Romano&#13;
1st, 53:50; Val Smith 2nd 54:&#13;
07; Julie Wunrow 3rd, 55:03.&#13;
4x100 - Cotton, Chamlee,&#13;
Scott and Finely 2nd, 49.4.&#13;
Sprint Medally Sames as&#13;
above 1st time not available.&#13;
Rosa "happy" with team&#13;
by Sarah Hiett&#13;
It was a perfect day for&#13;
running, and it showed in the&#13;
results of the men's track&#13;
team as they competed in Illinois&#13;
at the Elmhurst Relays.&#13;
The sun was warm, but&#13;
didn't begin to slow the men&#13;
down as the walkers began&#13;
the day of competition for the&#13;
Rangers. Once again, Parkside&#13;
dominated the track.&#13;
Mike Stauch, the team's premier&#13;
walker, finished first in&#13;
the 10,000 m. race in 42:11.&#13;
Doug Fournier walked to a&#13;
strong second place with a&#13;
44:22. Mike Rohl, in training&#13;
for the 50 kilometer (a race&#13;
covering over 31 miles) finished&#13;
third in 48:26. In a solid&#13;
effort, Ken Arend, walked 53:&#13;
55, getting a personal best by&#13;
over three minutes and finish&#13;
ing fourth in the process.&#13;
The next place winner for&#13;
the Rangers was Dan Vogt.&#13;
His time of 15:8 in the 110m.&#13;
high hurdles earned him a&#13;
sixth place.&#13;
As a relay meet, Elmhurst&#13;
offered competitors the&#13;
chance to race in some different&#13;
events. In the distance&#13;
medley, runners are required&#13;
to run a half, quarter, three&#13;
quarters and finally a mile.&#13;
Parkside's team of Derek&#13;
Brown, Dan Vogt, Robb&#13;
White, and Randy Damkot&#13;
proved equal to the challenge&#13;
as they came from behind to&#13;
place second in 10:28.04.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa was&#13;
"very happy with their performance."&#13;
Finishing up the day for the&#13;
_ . Ti rraacckx see ppai ge 15&#13;
Lady Ranger softball team's troubles continue&#13;
bbyy RRoobbbb LLuueehhrr hall tanm'a wnac onnt&lt;n,in^ *&lt;&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside women's soft&#13;
ball team's woes continued&#13;
this past week as they lost&#13;
seven straight games, five of&#13;
the&#13;
the&#13;
an&#13;
photo by Leo Boss ttrtsttsuszsrtss rr&#13;
lost 6-5,&#13;
SOFTBALL&#13;
Sat., May 2 - Home vs. Alumni, 10:30 p.m.&#13;
Sun., May 3 - Home vs. St. Francis, noon&#13;
Mon., May 4 - At St. Xavier, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Tue., May 5 - Home vs. UW-Whitewater, 4 p.m.&#13;
All dates are doubleheaders&#13;
TENNIS&#13;
Today - At Concordia College,-3 p.m.&#13;
Fri., May 1 -Home vs. UW-Whitewater, 3pm&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Fri. and Sat., May 1-2 - Wisconsin Independent College&#13;
Association playoffs&#13;
, _ WOMEN'S TRACK&#13;
Sat., May 2 - At the Illinois State U. Redbird Invitational&#13;
Normal, 111., 10 a.m. *&#13;
them by just one run, to drop&#13;
their record to 25-17.&#13;
Tuesday, April 21, the&#13;
Rangers hosted DePaul University,&#13;
a team they've had&#13;
trouble with all year long.&#13;
Once again, the Lady Blue&#13;
Demons took the double-header,&#13;
this time by scores of 6-5&#13;
and 1-0.&#13;
This past weekend,&#13;
Rangers participated in&#13;
I.U.P.U.I. tournament,&#13;
event the team has done well&#13;
in in recent years, but it&#13;
wasn't to be this time. Parkside&#13;
lost all five games of the&#13;
tournament, three of them&#13;
heartbreaking one-run&#13;
defeats.&#13;
In the first game Friday,&#13;
the Rangers took a six-run&#13;
lead in the second inning, but&#13;
a breakdown of pitching in&#13;
the middle innings by Parkside&#13;
led to eight St. Xavier&#13;
runs to send the Rangers to&#13;
an 8-6 defeat.&#13;
In the second game, against&#13;
Spring Arbor (Mich.), all the&#13;
scoring was done by both&#13;
teams in the first inning.&#13;
Parkside, playing as the visitors,&#13;
opened the game with&#13;
one run. Then Spring Arbor&#13;
tallied two in the bottom of&#13;
the inning. Pitching then took&#13;
over. The Rangers actually&#13;
outhit their opponent 12-2, but&#13;
couldn't put anything together&#13;
to score. The final was 2-1&#13;
tn favor of Spring Arbor.&#13;
The next morning, Butler of&#13;
Indiana was the Rangers' foe&#13;
and once again, the result&#13;
was a 2-1 loss. They had a&#13;
chance to win the game in the&#13;
seventh when Parkside loaded&#13;
the bases with two out, but&#13;
a line shot by Karen Livesey&#13;
was speared on a pure reaction&#13;
play by the third baseman&#13;
for the game-ending out.&#13;
The fourth game of the&#13;
tournament, against the host&#13;
I.U.P.U.I. team, was a disaster&#13;
for the Rangers as they&#13;
lost 13-3 in six innings due to&#13;
the 10-run rule. According to&#13;
coach Linda Draft, she&#13;
couldn't remember the last&#13;
time one of her teams lost a&#13;
game due to the rule.&#13;
In the last game of the tournament,&#13;
Parkside took on&#13;
Valparaiso University and&#13;
played well, but lost 1-0.&#13;
Draft was disappointed by&#13;
the results of the week, but&#13;
remained optimistic. "We&#13;
were in almost every ball&#13;
game, but we had some pitching&#13;
problems," Draft said.&#13;
"We're playing well."&#13;
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MERBITT'S RUNNING CENTER&#13;
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WASHINGTON SQUARE&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN&#13;
. PHONE: 632-4699&#13;
HOURS: Dtity 10-8; Sit. 105; Sun. 12-4&#13;
Women's, men's track teams showing progress&#13;
Marter sisters lead DeWitt's squad&#13;
by MJchaeJ J. RohJ&#13;
In track and field, unlike&#13;
other sports, the relative lmprovement&#13;
an athlete makes&#13;
can be accurately measured.&#13;
The competition may change,&#13;
the course may change, but&#13;
on a track a mile ls a mile&#13;
any where you go.&#13;
Because of this ability to&#13;
accurately gauge performance&#13;
pr' or p rsonal be ts&#13;
are very important to the athletes.&#13;
U nothing else, the&#13;
Parkside women's track team&#13;
is good at gettlng pr's. This&#13;
past weekend the women&#13;
traveled to Elmhurst, lllinois&#13;
to run on one of the fastest&#13;
tracks 1n the mldwest.&#13;
There were some very noteworthy&#13;
performances. Nancy&#13;
and Michelle Marter both&#13;
came away with victories 1n&#13;
the 800 and ll500 and ran their&#13;
personal bests. Sarah Hiett&#13;
ran second to the Marter lsters&#13;
in both the 800 and 1500.&#13;
Hiett too, ran her best time 1n&#13;
the ll500.&#13;
In the 5000, Colleen Wismer,&#13;
Patty Tweork a.nd Stacy&#13;
Klstlng placed third, fourth,&#13;
and fifth.&#13;
The Parkside relay also&#13;
placed very well. The 4xl00&#13;
and Sprint Medelay relay&#13;
teams of Jacuqullne Cotton,&#13;
Veronica Chamlee, Rebbeca&#13;
Scott and Yolanda Flnely&#13;
placed second and first respectively.&#13;
In all, ten women have now&#13;
qualified for the NAIA National&#13;
Champlonshlp to be&#13;
held in Arkedephia, Arkansas&#13;
May 20-23.&#13;
Complete Parkside Results:&#13;
100 - Jacquline Cotton 3rd,&#13;
12.1; Rebbeca Scott 4th, 12.2.&#13;
800 - Nancy Narter 1st, 2:14.7&#13;
pr; Sarah Hiett 2nd, 2:115.6;&#13;
Anne Rletter 1st (unseeded)&#13;
2:29.7.&#13;
ll500 - Michelle Marter lat, 4:&#13;
28.IS sr; Sarah Hiett 2nd, 4:&#13;
32.0 pr: Jlli Foba!r Srd, 4:40.S&#13;
pr; Laura Kauffman 4:49.6&#13;
pr; Jackie Melotlck 4:51S.IS pr:&#13;
KrlStan AUoto IS:00.6 pr.&#13;
l5000 - Colleen Wismer Srd,&#13;
19:00.0; Patty Tweork 4th, 19:&#13;
26; Stacy Klsrlng 5th, 19.38.&#13;
10,000 walk - Carol Romano&#13;
1st, 153:l50; Val Smith 2nd M;&#13;
07; Julie Wunrow 3rd, 51S:03.&#13;
4.xlOO • Cotton, Chamlee,&#13;
Scott and Finely 2nd, 49.4.&#13;
Sprint Medally sames as&#13;
above 1st tlme not available.&#13;
Rosa ''happy'' with team&#13;
b · rah Hiett&#13;
It was a perfect day for&#13;
running, and lt showed in the&#13;
r suit of the men's track&#13;
team as they comp ted in Ill1•&#13;
nols at the Elmhur t Relays.&#13;
The sun was warm, but&#13;
dldn 't begln to slow the men&#13;
down the walker began&#13;
the day of competition for the&#13;
Rangers. Once again. Parkside&#13;
dominated the track.&#13;
Mike Stauch, the team's pre&#13;
mier walker, flnlshed flrst in&#13;
the 10,000 m. race in 42:11.&#13;
Doug FournJer walked to&#13;
strong second place with a&#13;
«:22. Mike Rohl, in training&#13;
for the l50 kilometer (a race&#13;
covering over 31 mil s) finished&#13;
third in 48: 26. In a solid&#13;
effort. Ken Arend, walked 153:&#13;
M, getting personal b t by&#13;
over three minutes and flnlshing&#13;
fourth ln the process.&#13;
The next pface winner for&#13;
the Rangers was Dan 'ogt.&#13;
Hi Ume of llS:8 in th 11 m.&#13;
hi h hurdle earned him o.&#13;
sixth place.&#13;
A a r lay meet, Elmhur t&#13;
offered comp tito th&#13;
chance to race in some differ- 1&#13;
ent even . In the distance&#13;
medley, runne ar requlr d&#13;
to run a half, quarter, thr e&#13;
quarter and finally a mu .&#13;
arkslde's team of Derek&#13;
Brown, Dan Vogt, Robb&#13;
Wlute, and Randy Damkot&#13;
proved equal to the cha.ll nge&#13;
as th y cam from b hlnd to&#13;
plac second ln 10:28.04.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa was&#13;
" ery happy with th tr performance."&#13;
flnl h1n up the day for the&#13;
Track see page 15&#13;
Lady Ranger softball team's troubles continue&#13;
by Robb Loehr&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside women's soft.&#13;
ball team's woes continued&#13;
this past week as they lost&#13;
seven straight games, ,five of&#13;
phofobyLaoBote&#13;
Parltskle'• Julie Gaestel alleles home safely In the first gam&#13;
o. if • doUblehead r against DePaul on Aprtl 21. Unfortar&#13;
nately, the run wasn't enough u the Lady ~gera loat 6-5&#13;
then fell 1-0 In the second game. •&#13;
Sports Schedule&#13;
SOFTBALL&#13;
Sat., May 2. Home vs. Alumni, 10:so p.m.&#13;
Sun., Mays. Home vs. St. Francis. noon&#13;
Mon., May t • At st. 'Xavier, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Tue., May rs - Home vs. UW-Whltewater, 4 p.m.&#13;
All dates are doubleheaders&#13;
TENNIS&#13;
Today - At Ooncordla Ooll ge;S p.m.&#13;
Fri., May 1 -Home vs. UW-Whltewater, S p.m.&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Fri. and Sat., May 1-2 • Wisconsin Independent College&#13;
~ssociation playoffs&#13;
, WOMEN'S TRACK&#13;
Sat., May 2 - At the Winois State U. Redbird Invitational,&#13;
Normal, Ill., 10 a.m.&#13;
them by just one run, to drop&#13;
their record to 25-17.&#13;
Tuesday, April 21, the&#13;
Rangers hosted DePaul University,&#13;
a team they've had&#13;
trouble with all year long.&#13;
Once again, the Lady Blue&#13;
Demons took the double-header,&#13;
this time by scores of 6-IS&#13;
and 1-0.&#13;
Th.ls past weekend, the&#13;
Rangers participated 1n the&#13;
I.U.P.U.I. tournament, an&#13;
event the team has done well&#13;
1n in recent years, but it&#13;
wasn't to be this time. Parkside&#13;
lost all five games of the&#13;
tournament. three of them&#13;
heartbreaking one-run&#13;
defeats.&#13;
In the first game Friday,&#13;
the Rangers took a six-run&#13;
lead in the second ilmfng, but&#13;
a breakdown of pitching 1n&#13;
the middle tnnings by Park•&#13;
slde led to eight St. xavler&#13;
runs to send the Rangers to&#13;
an s.e defeat.&#13;
In the second game, against&#13;
Spring ArbOr (Mich.), all the&#13;
scoring was one by both&#13;
teams in the first lnning.&#13;
Parkside, playing as the visitors,&#13;
opened the game wlth&#13;
one nm. Then Spring ArbOr&#13;
tallled two in the bottom of&#13;
the ilmfng. Pitching then took&#13;
over. The Rangers actually&#13;
outhit their opponent 12-2, but&#13;
couldn't put anything together&#13;
to score. The final was 2-1&#13;
In favor of Spring Arbor.&#13;
The next morning, BuUer of&#13;
Indiana was the Rangers' foe&#13;
and once again, the re ult&#13;
was ·a 2-1 loss. They had a&#13;
chance to win the game in the&#13;
seventh when Parkside loaded&#13;
the bases with two out, but&#13;
a Une shot by Karen Livesey&#13;
was speared on a pure reaction&#13;
play by the third bas -&#13;
man for the game-ending out.&#13;
The fourth game of th&#13;
tournament, against the host&#13;
I.U.P.U.I. team, was a disaster&#13;
for the Rangers as they&#13;
lost 13-3 in slx lnnlngs due to&#13;
the 10-run rule. According to&#13;
coach Linda Draft, she&#13;
couldn't remember the last&#13;
time one of her te ms lost a&#13;
g me due to the rule.&#13;
In the last ame of the tournament,&#13;
Park lde took on&#13;
Valpara.tso University Md&#13;
plf\Y d well, but lost 1-0.&#13;
Draft w disappoint d by&#13;
th results of the we k, but&#13;
r maJn d opllml tic. "W&#13;
wer in o.lmo t every b 1&#13;
game, but we had me pit hing&#13;
problems," Ora.ft aid.&#13;
"We'r playing well."&#13;
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• Le Cog Sportif&#13;
$psclalist In Athlellc FoolwHr 1111d&#13;
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MERRln'S RUNNING CENTER&#13;
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WASHINGTON SQUARE&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN&#13;
PHONE: 632-4699&#13;
HOURS: 0., IN: Sat 10-$; Sc#!. 1Z-4</text>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78810">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 29, April 30, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78811">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78812">
                <text>1987-04-30</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78815">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78816">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78817">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78818">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78819">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78820">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
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            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78823">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2621">
        <name>national security council</name>
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      <tag tagId="234">
        <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
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      <tag tagId="1271">
        <name>racism</name>
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