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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Budgets finalized for 85-86</text>
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              <text>Terry Tunks,  PSGA  (Parkside&#13;
Student Government  Association)&#13;
president, announced  Monday  her&#13;
candidacyfor president  of United  .&#13;
Councilof UW Student  Govern-&#13;
ments.&#13;
UnitedCouncil serves as a lobby-&#13;
ing&#13;
group for student rights and is a&#13;
Iiasonbetween state  student  gov-&#13;
ernments, the University  Chancel-,&#13;
lars,&#13;
the&#13;
Board&#13;
of Regents  and&#13;
ex-&#13;
ecutivebranches  of   state   govern-&#13;
ment.&#13;
Ole Otto, Student  government&#13;
President, Uw-whltewater,   is also&#13;
vyingfor the UC president  position.&#13;
The UC presidency is a one year&#13;
tenn with a $10,000 salary.  Presi-&#13;
dential elections will be held  on&#13;
March30 at UW-Superior.  -&#13;
£SGA&#13;
Housing discussed&#13;
not they would be able to justify&#13;
asking for a computer. "I'm not&#13;
sure we'll be able to do that, since&#13;
we did already have funding for a&#13;
computer&#13;
this&#13;
year. and. we gave&#13;
it&#13;
back to SUFAC," he said.&#13;
Tunks said, "I think SUFAC un-&#13;
derstands  that one of the key rea-&#13;
sons we gave that money back ~&#13;
to help out with the shortfall  this&#13;
past year. That certainly wasn't our&#13;
way of saying we don't need a com-&#13;
puter."&#13;
.&#13;
Approval  was given for Jackie&#13;
Sutherlin to join the Senate. Suther-&#13;
lin completed  her Senate mternshlp&#13;
and reported  the results of .her sur-&#13;
vey, which addressed  the ISSue of&#13;
student  retention  at Parkslde.&#13;
Sutherlin reported  that most of the&#13;
students  she surveyed feel they at-&#13;
tend a quality Institution.  Most of&#13;
those who are pleased WIth the urn-&#13;
versity are so because of the good&#13;
rapport  they can develop WIth fac-&#13;
ulty and staff. Several students ~d&#13;
in the survey that a key factor 10&#13;
students leaving this campus&#13;
IS&#13;
.that&#13;
they cannot fully experien~  urnver-&#13;
'ty lifestyle because there&#13;
IS&#13;
no on-&#13;
~pus  housingavailable.  _&#13;
CoDliDued ou Pille 4&#13;
Thurs., Feb. 7, 1985&#13;
Tunks&#13;
runs&#13;
for&#13;
UC&#13;
post&#13;
by JeDDie Tnnkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
PSGA(Parkside Student Govern-&#13;
!'lent Association) brought  several&#13;
issaes of vital concern to the floor&#13;
of the senate for discussion.&#13;
During her president's   report,&#13;
Terry Tunks discussed  the idea of&#13;
~n-campushousing. "The plans are&#13;
?'&#13;
the&#13;
works for- on campus  hous-&#13;
mg,&#13;
·things are still in the rough&#13;
draft stage, but as it stands  now,&#13;
the&#13;
project will be In three phases.&#13;
FIrSt. single student housing proj-&#13;
ect&#13;
would&#13;
be built with each room&#13;
haVing&#13;
a separate bath, then down&#13;
the road there would family nous-&#13;
Ingconslructed and third would be&#13;
hOUSingfor senior citizens who are&#13;
stUdents here."&#13;
.The Senate discussed  the&#13;
possi-&#13;
bility of regaining  access  to pur-&#13;
chase&#13;
a computer. Tunks said, "My&#13;
Intentions are to go to SUF AC at&#13;
some point next week with a com-&#13;
plete rationale  and ask them  for&#13;
rnoney from reserves so we can ob-&#13;
lain a computer. I really think this&#13;
~ll be a vital move for the senate.&#13;
In terms of stepping up productiv-&#13;
Ity."&#13;
Andrew  Buchanan    Senator,&#13;
questioned&#13;
Tunks&#13;
as to' whether  or&#13;
-&#13;
.Terry Tunks&#13;
Tunks has been involved in many&#13;
organizations  and  committees  on&#13;
campus for the past four years. She&#13;
has held many leadership positions,&#13;
besides her current PSGA president&#13;
position, and has been intrumental&#13;
in policy development  on campus.&#13;
Tunks feels that the competition&#13;
for the presidency'  will be tough,&#13;
but she is looking forward  to the&#13;
race.&#13;
"I&#13;
look forward to this chal-&#13;
lenge and hope to obtain the oppor-&#13;
tunity to, through  the help of the&#13;
members  of United  Council, lead&#13;
that organization  to a beller repre-&#13;
sentation  of our  students,"   said&#13;
Tunks.&#13;
Women's track team&#13;
off&#13;
to&#13;
running start&#13;
Page 16&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Vol. 13, No. 18&#13;
Budgets finalized for 85-86&#13;
by Jennie TuDkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
percent over the 1984-85fiscal year.&#13;
"That's  not  completely  accurate&#13;
due to •&#13;
budgetary&#13;
shortfall in the&#13;
Fall  of&#13;
1984.&#13;
But  increases  In&#13;
budgets have not been extreme and&#13;
there  have  been  substantial  de-&#13;
creases," she said.&#13;
A shortfall between&#13;
$30,000&#13;
and&#13;
$40,000&#13;
plagued SUFAC early this&#13;
fall. Hensiak said that the shortfall&#13;
occured because the student projec-&#13;
tion&#13;
was&#13;
higher&#13;
than&#13;
the actual stu-&#13;
dent enrollment.&#13;
Enrollment  was low because the&#13;
economy  improved  causing  more&#13;
students to go away to school, feels&#13;
Hensiak.&#13;
To ollset  the shortfall,  SUF AC&#13;
asked each group, which had re-&#13;
quested funds last year, to "put a&#13;
little  hack in the  pot."  Hensiak&#13;
said,  "People  were  exceptionally&#13;
responsive.  Almost  every  group&#13;
gave something hack so almost the&#13;
entire shortfall amount  was made&#13;
up."&#13;
Hensiak feels that there&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
greater  budgetary  awareness  and&#13;
understanding  this year which she&#13;
attributes  to the shortfall.&#13;
But not  everyone  was&#13;
under-&#13;
standing&#13;
and&#13;
cooperative.  Hensiak&#13;
received&#13;
several&#13;
threatening  phone&#13;
calls&#13;
concerning  the posibilities  of&#13;
cutting budgets during the shortfall&#13;
"One&#13;
caller&#13;
said, 'There is going&#13;
to be hell&#13;
10&#13;
pay'&#13;
if&#13;
their&#13;
budget&#13;
was cut."  Hensiak:  is sure  she&#13;
knows&#13;
who the&#13;
threats&#13;
came from.&#13;
but she refused to name the assail-&#13;
ant, and she looks back on the situ-&#13;
ation laughingly.&#13;
"SUFAC  didn't  look  at  the&#13;
budgets&#13;
with gleaming silver&#13;
scis-&#13;
sors in our hands.&#13;
I&#13;
was&#13;
astounded&#13;
that someone would feel so fright-&#13;
ened about  giving&#13;
back&#13;
parts  of&#13;
their budget. Yet,&#13;
I&#13;
understand  that&#13;
budgeting&#13;
can&#13;
be&#13;
very&#13;
emotional&#13;
and personal -  it could be some--&#13;
ones job, or their entire mcorne.&#13;
an&#13;
the hands of&#13;
six&#13;
committee  mem-&#13;
bers,"&#13;
said Hensiak.&#13;
SUFAC,&#13;
in&#13;
cooperation   with&#13;
Jenny  Price,  Interim  Director  of&#13;
Student Life, created a post-bacbe-&#13;
lorette  internship  position  in the&#13;
CoDliDu'"&#13;
OD&#13;
Page 4&#13;
The budgeting process for service&#13;
groups for the&#13;
19B5-a8&#13;
liscal&#13;
year is&#13;
over.&#13;
.SUFAC  (Segregated  University&#13;
Fees  Allocations  Committee)&#13;
has&#13;
approved  the  allocation  of over&#13;
$500,000&#13;
to&#13;
clubs, organizations and&#13;
student services, ie. Health Center,&#13;
Child Care and Phy&#13;
Ed,&#13;
etc.  A&#13;
segregated fee is the&#13;
$164.50&#13;
assess-&#13;
ed per students  per semester&#13;
In-&#13;
cluded in tuition payments.&#13;
Budgets were  approved  by the&#13;
PSGA Senate on Friday and were&#13;
submitted for approval to the Chan-&#13;
eellor and David Holley, Controller.&#13;
The budgets will then be sent to the&#13;
Board  of Regents  for final  ap-&#13;
proval.&#13;
SUF AC is made up of six student&#13;
Senators  and two student-at-large&#13;
seals, although the committee  cur-&#13;
rently is not full.&#13;
Pat Hensiak, SUF AC chair. said&#13;
that it appears that the total budget&#13;
increase  is only about  two-thirds&#13;
SUFAC   BUDGET&#13;
rIlOrOSEII&#13;
~-&#13;
-..sfIDEaIWE   ,_&#13;
~&#13;
1914-85&#13;
1_&#13;
IDOllMSI&#13;
lDOllMSI&#13;
/RIAl1&#13;
Athletics&#13;
$58,083&#13;
$58.083&#13;
SO&#13;
O.lJOtII&#13;
$58.083&#13;
Auxiliary Servica  AccolInlilll&#13;
7.700&#13;
8.600&#13;
9lIlI&#13;
11.69lIlI&#13;
8.600&#13;
Clrild&#13;
Care&#13;
C81ter&#13;
20.855&#13;
20,855&#13;
0&#13;
O.lJOtII   20.855&#13;
11IIIIService (Union)&#13;
90,500&#13;
90,500&#13;
0&#13;
O,lJOtII&#13;
90.500&#13;
HlIII1II&#13;
lIlIlce&#13;
&amp;7.524    71.834&#13;
4,310&#13;
&amp;,38tII&#13;
&amp;7,524&#13;
H_II&#13;
33.725&#13;
33.725&#13;
0&#13;
O.lJOtII   33.725&#13;
!'Irksl*&#13;
Aclivllles&#13;
IoIni&#13;
51.8&amp;0    53.741&#13;
1.881&#13;
3.&amp;3fIiI&#13;
53.141&#13;
PS8A&#13;
15,810&#13;
12.711&#13;
(3,099)&#13;
-19.60"&#13;
12.711&#13;
!'Irbi*&#13;
Ullion&#13;
1&amp;&amp;.426  184.542&#13;
18,11&amp;&#13;
10,M&#13;
182,146&#13;
PIer&#13;
SlIpport&#13;
4.&amp;24&#13;
4,465&#13;
(159)&#13;
-3.44"&#13;
4.465&#13;
_r&#13;
17,880&#13;
17.880&#13;
0&#13;
O.lJOtII&#13;
17.880&#13;
1IIcl1ltion/llllnMI1Is&#13;
44.419&#13;
45,727&#13;
1,308&#13;
2.94l\1a   45,727&#13;
SbHIetIl&#13;
Activities&#13;
81111I111&#13;
4,800&#13;
3,959&#13;
(841)&#13;
-17,52'ia&#13;
3,959&#13;
StIdetII&#13;
AcIIvIIiIS&#13;
lIlIlce&#13;
97.548&#13;
100,201&#13;
2,&amp;53&#13;
2.72'ia&#13;
100.201&#13;
StMlt&#13;
OrplliZlllOl CoIIlCiI  24.745&#13;
22,471&#13;
(2,274)&#13;
-9,19l1i&#13;
21.871&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
&amp;&amp;0&#13;
510&#13;
(150)&#13;
-22,73ft11&#13;
510&#13;
W1l118r&#13;
CarllinI/HoM.C  ••&#13;
illl&#13;
&amp;,425&#13;
0&#13;
(&amp;.425)&#13;
-I00,lJOtII&#13;
0&#13;
AU-c.pa    Evllls&#13;
11.425&#13;
11.425&#13;
11.425&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
S713,584&#13;
S741.229&#13;
SZ7.&amp;45&#13;
3.87l\1a&#13;
S718.323&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday,   Feb.  7, 1985&#13;
Am&#13;
CU'fS&#13;
IN OUR MILITARY&#13;
BUDGET  WOULD,&#13;
X&#13;
FEEL,&#13;
NECESSITATE&#13;
OUR&#13;
NOT&#13;
PROVIDING&#13;
ANY&#13;
DEFENSE   FOR, Sl\Y,&#13;
NEBRASKA.&#13;
Letters&#13;
to&#13;
Editor&#13;
Changing locks&#13;
becomes SNAFU&#13;
partment  informed  me that no ODe&#13;
was&#13;
on duty in the Security  office&#13;
yet,  but  that  they  would  infonn&#13;
them of my dilema when someone&#13;
came in&#13;
to&#13;
work. While I was on&#13;
'the  phone  with  the  Sheriff's&#13;
De-&#13;
partment&#13;
in&#13;
Greenquist   the  fire&#13;
alanns  started  going off. 1 had no&#13;
idea&#13;
if&#13;
there was an actual emer-&#13;
gency or&#13;
if&#13;
it&#13;
was&#13;
only a test.  .&#13;
Eventually,  a Security&#13;
person&#13;
ar-&#13;
rived&#13;
with&#13;
a&#13;
key&#13;
and  opened  the&#13;
PSGA door, but a lot of time was&#13;
wasted   because   of  a  Security&#13;
SNAFU. Blame  also should go out&#13;
to Pbysical Plant.&#13;
wbo&#13;
was suppos-&#13;
ed to make the keys. and the Stu-&#13;
dent Services, who&#13;
failed&#13;
to pass on&#13;
the names of office key holders and'&#13;
the number of keys needed for stu-&#13;
dent offices.&#13;
This&#13;
problem  could  have easily&#13;
been  avoided&#13;
if&#13;
keys would  have&#13;
been  issued  to  key  holders  BE-&#13;
FORE  the locks were changed,  or&#13;
if&#13;
Security   personnel   would  be&#13;
around to open offices when requir-&#13;
ed, like&#13;
in&#13;
this situation.&#13;
Barbara  Johnson&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Talk about campus foul-ups, this&#13;
is one (or the record&#13;
books!&#13;
Mon-&#13;
day&#13;
morning at&#13;
7:25&#13;
a.m.,&#13;
my hus-&#13;
band  and  I  arrived  on  campus.&#13;
WIlen we tried to enter the building&#13;
through  the doors at&#13;
WLLC&#13;
by the&#13;
Coffee Shoppee we found the doors&#13;
were&#13;
still&#13;
locked. The campus offi-&#13;
cially opens at&#13;
7&#13;
a.m .• so why was&#13;
the door locked?&#13;
Well, we went  up,  around  and&#13;
down in&#13;
Comm&#13;
Arts to get&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
PSGA&#13;
office. My&#13;
husband,&#13;
who is&#13;
PSGA vice-president,&#13;
tried to open&#13;
the&#13;
PSGA&#13;
office door with&#13;
his&#13;
key.&#13;
but  it did  not  work.  Apparently.&#13;
Campus Security lost a master  key&#13;
ring&#13;
quite a while ago and are just&#13;
now replacing all the locks.&#13;
So&#13;
I&#13;
called Secunty  to come and&#13;
open&#13;
the&#13;
PSGA&#13;
office&#13;
door,  since&#13;
they were  the only ones who had&#13;
the keys. The phone&#13;
rang&#13;
at least&#13;
10&#13;
times before someone  answered  it,&#13;
and it wasn't answered  by Security.&#13;
but  by the  Kenosha  County&#13;
Sher-&#13;
ill's Department.  The Sherilf's&#13;
De-&#13;
me, but ...&#13;
harassment&#13;
Nobody&#13;
asked&#13;
"Insatiable"  was not&#13;
ing. When the lights came up. some&#13;
of  those  same  people  were anx-&#13;
iously  looking  around  to see who&#13;
saw them,  and who they could see.&#13;
1 think  the. film,  and  other&#13;
por-&#13;
nography,  for some serves' as a way&#13;
to deal  with  the  emotional,&#13;
sensi-&#13;
tive&#13;
and embarrassing  issue of&#13;
sex.&#13;
I  really&#13;
can't&#13;
see  what, harm&#13;
films  like  "Insatiable"   can&#13;
do.&#13;
If&#13;
they are made by consenting&#13;
adults&#13;
and seen by consenting  adults,&#13;
the&#13;
choice should be left up to the indio&#13;
vidual.  Personally,  during&#13;
"Insati-&#13;
able".1  kept waiting for something&#13;
different  to happen.&#13;
It&#13;
didn't. And,&#13;
while&#13;
"I&#13;
was 'waiting,  a line from a&#13;
"MASH"   show  popped  into my&#13;
head that  sums up the whole&#13;
expe-&#13;
rience  pretty  well.  "Why all&#13;
the&#13;
preoccupation&#13;
with&#13;
sex,"som~ne&#13;
asked&#13;
B,J.&#13;
"Lack  of occupation&#13;
with&#13;
sex," 'he-answered.  ,Bingo.&#13;
In&#13;
short, even when considered  as a&#13;
porn  film, ."Insatiable"    was  not&#13;
well-crafted.&#13;
On the more  positive  side, there&#13;
was no real&#13;
violence&#13;
against women&#13;
in the film. Sex, yes. Violence, 'no.&#13;
The crux of the "story"  involved  a&#13;
woman who simply could not have&#13;
her  sexual  needs  fulfilled.   This&#13;
story line pleased me a little.&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
refreshing  to see a woman  seeking&#13;
her own sexual satisfaction.  This is&#13;
one of the main aims  of the femi-&#13;
nist movement,  and while the film&#13;
is no masterpiece,   at least  it con-&#13;
tained a little seed of progress.&#13;
What actually  interested  me the&#13;
most was the' fact that most  of&#13;
the&#13;
audience  at  the  show  1 attended&#13;
was male ..&#13;
During&#13;
the  film;' some&#13;
vocal  viewers   showed   just&#13;
how&#13;
much they were  enjoying&#13;
the&#13;
Iilm.&#13;
That was w!Ule the. film Was play-&#13;
hy&#13;
Karl&#13;
DixoD&#13;
Writer states&#13;
he's not a&#13;
'slaue holder'&#13;
After  two  weeks  of discussing&#13;
pornography  with almost  everyone&#13;
that&#13;
I&#13;
know,&#13;
I&#13;
swallowd  my femi-&#13;
nist pride, and against the wishes of&#13;
my  mother  went  to  see&#13;
"Insati-&#13;
able"  because  1 feU that&#13;
I&#13;
couldn't&#13;
form an opinion about something&#13;
I&#13;
knew nothing about.&#13;
I&#13;
left the film&#13;
wondering  what  all  the  fuss  was&#13;
about.  After enduring  what had to&#13;
be one of the most  boring  films&#13;
I&#13;
have ever seen, my desire  to have&#13;
anything  further  to  do  with  por-&#13;
nography was definitely  satiated.&#13;
The acting  in the&#13;
film&#13;
(that  re-&#13;
quired  dialogue)  was  laughable.&#13;
The scenery (not to mention  costu-&#13;
mes) was bland and easily forgetta-&#13;
ble.  The  editing  and  the  pacing&#13;
could have been done more profes-&#13;
sionally by a first-year film student.&#13;
is&#13;
her right? Can we expect  that a&#13;
mother of five who doesn't  want or&#13;
can't  afford another  child to prop-&#13;
erly care  and&#13;
raise&#13;
the  unwanted&#13;
child?&#13;
I&#13;
think  we  already  know&#13;
about  the  effects  of neglect  and&#13;
frustration.  especiaUy by the time&#13;
one reaches adolescence.  Each per.&#13;
son&#13;
has  personal  reasons  which&#13;
they feel are legitimate.  Let&#13;
God&#13;
be&#13;
the judge  not man.  Who's  to say&#13;
what we've missed.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Bliss. I find your parallel&#13;
be-&#13;
tween myself (and others who bold&#13;
my view) and the&#13;
Nazis&#13;
and slave-&#13;
holders  to be offensive.  I'm  sure&#13;
you meant  it that  way.  How can&#13;
you judge  when you clearly  don't&#13;
know me!  Arguing one's  point  of&#13;
view&#13;
is&#13;
fine but drawing such&#13;
paral-&#13;
leIs  is  crass,  irresponsible    and&#13;
shortsighted.&#13;
I&#13;
can assure&#13;
you that&#13;
I&#13;
embrace&#13;
We&#13;
with&#13;
as&#13;
much passion&#13;
as you do.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I&#13;
wish&#13;
10&#13;
respond  to&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Bliss'&#13;
letter  to the editor&#13;
in the Jan.&#13;
17&#13;
issue of the Ranger.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Bliss,&#13;
nobody  gave me  (or&#13;
others)  the  rigbt  to  impose  my&#13;
views on "the&#13;
15&#13;
million  unborn."&#13;
Nobody gave you the right either.&#13;
it's the individual's  right.&#13;
I&#13;
do not&#13;
think&#13;
it's&#13;
a&#13;
moral issue either,  it's a&#13;
philosophical  issue. At what  point&#13;
IS&#13;
the unborn a thinking and feeling&#13;
human  being?&#13;
I&#13;
do&#13;
agree&#13;
that&#13;
an&#13;
unborn&#13;
child&#13;
is&#13;
genetically  capable&#13;
of developing  into  adulthood  but&#13;
reality&#13;
seems&#13;
to&#13;
always&#13;
intercede&#13;
our  idealistic   fantasies.   Who  is&#13;
going to love the haby between  a&#13;
rapist  and&#13;
his&#13;
victim?  Would you&#13;
want your wife to&#13;
carry&#13;
around the&#13;
reminder   of  her  rape  for  nine&#13;
months?   Why  should  a  woman&#13;
when&#13;
confronted  with the real&#13;
pes-&#13;
sibility of death  from  giving birth&#13;
not be able to choose what she feels&#13;
.J&#13;
Bock named system special assistant&#13;
The former dean of the Madison&#13;
School  of  Business,   Robert&#13;
H.&#13;
Bock,&#13;
has accepted an appointment&#13;
as Special Assistant to the UW-Sys-&#13;
tern President  for Economic  Devel-&#13;
opment.&#13;
Bock&#13;
will help develop "increas-&#13;
ed  and  enhanced  communication&#13;
and  relationships   with  Wisconsin&#13;
business  and  industry,"  according&#13;
to UW-System President&#13;
Robert&#13;
M.&#13;
School   of  Busin~ss,   where&#13;
he&#13;
served  as dean  from&#13;
1972&#13;
to&#13;
1984.&#13;
His areas of special academic i~t~~·&#13;
est  include  corporate  responslblli·&#13;
ties and Wiconsin business develop-&#13;
ment.&#13;
.&#13;
Before   coming  to&#13;
wlscons'e.&#13;
Bock  was  dean  of the School&#13;
01&#13;
Business  Administration  at the&#13;
Uni-&#13;
versity of Miami (Fla.).&#13;
O'Neil, "He  will work closely with&#13;
the new assistant  vice president  for&#13;
government  and business  relations&#13;
David Martin,  and assist in a&#13;
varie-&#13;
ty of special projects."&#13;
Bock.&#13;
52.&#13;
will serve  System  Ad-&#13;
ministration&#13;
one  day&#13;
a'&#13;
week&#13;
through  June  of  this  year.  The&#13;
r~mainder  of the week, he&#13;
will&#13;
con-&#13;
tinue on the faculty of the Madison&#13;
e&#13;
o&#13;
Q&#13;
(&#13;
9&#13;
•&#13;
d&#13;
F&#13;
Sincerely&#13;
Dan Stublaskl&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
_  'J'e._&#13;
&amp;lito&lt;&#13;
Pal B&#13;
Campus&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
~ ==:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::.~.':~~'=:::&#13;
f.:idl:&#13;
Laebr&#13;
AlII.&#13;
F_   EdIto&lt;&#13;
Carol KorteDdIct&#13;
Spor\I EdItor&#13;
~w:=.~~.~::~:::.:.::.:::::::::::::::.:::::::::::.:::::::::::.':==&#13;
MIke FarrdI&#13;
Ad&gt;alllbi&amp;  ~&#13;
Pal Zlrtdbocb&#13;
···•···•······~&#13;
Mauce&lt;&#13;
Ilrado BadllDu&#13;
AlII. -&#13;
Maucer&#13;
RII~g~r is written  lind edited by students  lit UW.Psrl&lt;side  and they are solelY re-&#13;
SPonsibl.e for its editorilll  policy  lind content.  Publish6d  every Thursday during the&#13;
IIclldemlC  Y6llr except during  bresks  snd holidsys.&#13;
Range,- is&#13;
printed&#13;
by the Racine Joutmll  Times.&#13;
f&#13;
All  C~""sPondence   should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed  to: PlJTkside Ranger.&#13;
University&#13;
0&#13;
Wl$consin-Pwkside.   Box No.&#13;
2000.&#13;
Kenosha.  WI&#13;
53141.&#13;
Tslephone&#13;
(414) 553-&#13;
2295&#13;
or&#13;
(414/&#13;
553-2287.&#13;
_ Letters to the ed;'or  wm&#13;
be&#13;
BCcepted if tYPflwrittsn.  double-spaced  on standard&#13;
size PBpe,. Lett~rs should&#13;
be&#13;
less thlln 350 words and must be signsd. with&#13;
8&#13;
tele-&#13;
phone&#13;
numb';'&#13;
mcludfld  for vermcatiOn  pUTpOSflS. NlImtI$  will be withheld  upon&#13;
(t-&#13;
tlUfIst. De«lline  for letters  is Tuesday at&#13;
10&#13;
a.m. for publication  Thursday. Rang"&#13;
ressrves the right to edit letters and refuse lettsrs  contBining  fBlsa and dafam&#13;
storv&#13;
content.&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim  Burge,  Konise  Cassity   Jay&#13;
Crapser,  Mike  Froeblte,   N~talie&#13;
Haberman.&#13;
Darryl&#13;
Hahn.  Kimberlie&#13;
Kr.anicb.  Steve  KratochVil,   Jeff&#13;
=":I,;~J~~~&#13;
L...,....&#13;
•&#13;
.~.&#13;
Chris&#13;
Pappe,   Laureen   Wa"ro   Kevin&#13;
Zirkelbach.&#13;
•&#13;
-&#13;
.&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 13, issue 18, February 7, 1985</text>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1985-02-07</text>
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            <name>Subject</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
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              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="71420">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="38">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="71422">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="71425">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>New Parking lot opens</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90039">
              <text>an er&#13;
Wednesday, November 23, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 13&#13;
()() We are all robots when uncrltl- $)~&#13;
cally involved with our&#13;
technologies.&#13;
Marshall McLuhan&#13;
Quentin Flore&#13;
War and Peace In the Global&#13;
VIiiage&#13;
New parking lot opens&#13;
The new Physical Education Parking Lot opened&#13;
lot has&#13;
last&#13;
two&#13;
Monday&#13;
entrances&#13;
to both red and&#13;
white parking permit bearers. The on County 'JR'.&#13;
Image survey suggests&#13;
. c~a-nges at UW-P Library&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Parkside's library image survey, recently distributed to&#13;
approximately 7500 students, faculty and staff, and special&#13;
borrowers, has concluded that respondents would like to receive&#13;
more designated quiet work areas in the library, the need for&#13;
additional recreational readings and periodicals, and more sufficent&#13;
information in the way of maps, posters, pamphlets, etc .&#13;
Respondents also criticized in the form of written comments, the&#13;
library's delay in shelving books, and the library's limited hours of&#13;
service.&#13;
The intention of the questionnaire was to gather data concerning&#13;
the community-awareness of the Parkside library and the services it&#13;
has to offer. Through the tabulated responses, analyze data was&#13;
obtain and calculated into mathematical means and standard&#13;
deviations.&#13;
Nine hundred fifty-six questionnaires were returned, tabulated,&#13;
and broken down as follows : 118 freshmen , 111 sophomores, 60&#13;
juniors, 102 seniors, 94 special students, 66 faculty, 62 staff, 307&#13;
special borrowers, and 36 giving no identification. Of the faculty an.d&#13;
' students, 475 were full time, and 144 part time. Of all the gro_ups,&#13;
special borrowers were the most positive in their responses about the&#13;
library's image and students were the least Overall, the survey's&#13;
results showed a positive image of the library&#13;
Due to the survey's results, members of the library study team have&#13;
begun changes requested by survey respondents . Now there are&#13;
rooms available to accommodate students needs for quietness&#13;
Respondents felt a strong need for materials not related for&#13;
curriculum study . The library administration is now m the process of&#13;
investigating approaches for providing recreational reading material&#13;
In the near future, both the Kenosha and Racine public libraries,&#13;
along with Parkside's library, will be involved in a paperback&#13;
book exchange. Library users will be permitted to exchange a paperback&#13;
book of theirs for one in the library's paperback collection .&#13;
Further investigation includes the possibility of a joint rental&#13;
current fiction collection between Kenosha, Racine, and Parkside&#13;
libraries . All three library institutions would rent a sizable wllection&#13;
and circulate the books among themselves&#13;
Another survey of library services will be enclosed in the spring&#13;
semester registrational packets. The survey's main goal is to&#13;
determine new services which library users believe Parkside might&#13;
provide. The survey will also determine how successful Parkside is in&#13;
providing existing services . &#13;
education . ,&#13;
Breadth and academic&#13;
advising become&#13;
university policy&#13;
The Faculty Senate has given final approval to the breadth and&#13;
academic advising requirements. The breadth of knowledge rule,&#13;
~hich will apply only to new students entering during and after the&#13;
fall of 1978, will require the students to successfully complete a&#13;
required core of 30 credits.&#13;
The specific areas from which the courses mtrst be selected is&#13;
outlined below.&#13;
The academic advising rule will require all students to meet with a&#13;
volunteer faculty advisor before they register ......for school. Summer&#13;
sessions won't be included. This poticy also becomes effective with&#13;
the fall registration.&#13;
Under the academic advising rule, all students must also declare an&#13;
area of interest before completing 45 credits, and a major before 60&#13;
credits are completed. If the student fails to declare a major before 60&#13;
"credits are finished, he will be transferred to special student status.&#13;
The Senate also approved a proposal to form an Interim Committee&#13;
on Graduate Programming which will handle academic, educational&#13;
and scholastic matters which pertain to graduate programming, until&#13;
these functions are permanently transferred to standing committees.&#13;
The final rules qn academic advising and the breadth requirement&#13;
follow:&#13;
30 cr&#13;
*The total of 9 credits per unit must include work in at least two&#13;
disciplines. No more than 6 credits iri anyone discipline may be&#13;
counted toward fuffifling the Breadth of Knowledge requirement.&#13;
Academic Skills courses, English 090, 100, &amp; 100, O-Ievel mathematics&#13;
courses and foreign language courses taken to fulfiJI the language&#13;
requirement, will not count toward the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
Requirement.&#13;
This policy is in effect for students first entering Parkside in the fall&#13;
semester of 1978. Other students may opt to graduate under this&#13;
policy by specific request.&#13;
3 cr&#13;
POLICY ON ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
The UWP Faculty is committed to the belief that academic&#13;
advising of students should be done by the faculty, and hereby enacts&#13;
the following policy: .&#13;
[1] Formal declaration of an area of interest must be made upon&#13;
completion of 45 credits. Formal declaration of a major is required&#13;
upon completion ot 60 credits. A student who fails to make such&#13;
formal declarations by these deadlines will be transferred to&#13;
special student status and will be so notified. Students are&#13;
encouraged to identify an area of interest as early as possible in&#13;
·their academic careers, but they are free, of course, to change the&#13;
area of interest or major.&#13;
[2] Every student shall have an assigned advisor or advising officer as&#13;
provided below:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors or area of interest shall be&#13;
advised by faculty members in theit major or area of interest.&#13;
It is the responsibility of the divisions to decide the advising&#13;
format for their unit.&#13;
(b) Students ...who have not declared a major or area of interest&#13;
shall be assigned faculty advisors bv-the Office of the Dean of&#13;
the Faculty. These advisors will be assigned according to the&#13;
students' preliminary interests, if any. All such assignments&#13;
will be made with the prior -'consent of the proposed&#13;
faculty advisor.&#13;
[3] A student who is a candidate for a degree must secure his advisor's&#13;
signature, or the signature of the advisor's designee, prior to each&#13;
registration, excluding summer session. The signature indicates&#13;
only that the opportunity for advising has occurred.&#13;
[4] These policies shall become effective with the fall registration of&#13;
1978 .&#13;
POLICY ON THE BREADTH OF KNOWLEDGE REQUIREMENT&#13;
To insure that the degree programs of UW-Parkside students&#13;
include study in a variety of academic fields, the following&#13;
requirements are established. To obtain a UWP degree, a student&#13;
must accumulate 9 credits in each of 3 designated areas of study and&#13;
3 credits in the 4th area, making the core of studies of 30 credits.&#13;
The areas are defined by courses offered by the following academic&#13;
divisions:&#13;
1. Fine Arts and Humanities&#13;
2. Social and Behavioral Sciences&#13;
3. Science&#13;
4. Management Science, Engineering Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and Education (excluding Physical&#13;
Education courses)&#13;
9 cr"&#13;
9 cr"&#13;
9 cr"&#13;
...&#13;
_~an~er is w~tten a.no edited by students 01 the&#13;
University 01 'WIsconsln·Parkside and they are solely&#13;
re,sponsible lor its editorial polley and content.&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University 01 'Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year lor U.S.A.&#13;
education .,&#13;
,,&#13;
Breadth and academic&#13;
advisillg beCo-me&#13;
unive&#13;
_rsity policy&#13;
The Faculty Senate has given final approval to the breadth and&#13;
academic advising requirements. The breadth of knowledge rule,&#13;
which will apply only to new students entering during and after the&#13;
fall of 1978, will require the students to successfully complete a&#13;
required core of 30 credits .&#13;
The specific areas from which the courses mtJst be selected is&#13;
outlined below.&#13;
The academic advising rule will require all students to meet with a&#13;
volunteer faculty advisor befoce they register- for school. Summer&#13;
sessions won't be included . This policy also becomes effective with&#13;
the fall registration .&#13;
POLICY ON THE BREADTH OF KNOWLEDGE REQUIREMENT&#13;
To insure that the degree programs of UW-Parkside students&#13;
include study in a variety of academic fields, the following&#13;
requirements are established . To obtain a UWP degree, a student&#13;
must accumulate 9 credits in each of 3 designated areas of study and&#13;
3 credits in the 4th area, making the core of studies of 30 Cfedits .&#13;
The areas are defined by courses offered by the following academic&#13;
divisions:&#13;
1. Fine Arts and Humanities&#13;
2. Social.and Behavioral Sciences&#13;
3. Science&#13;
4. Management Science, Engineering Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and Education (excluding Physical&#13;
Education courses)&#13;
9 er*&#13;
9 er*&#13;
9 er*&#13;
3 er&#13;
30 er&#13;
*The total of 9 credits per unit must include work in at least two&#13;
disciplines . No more than 6 credits in any one discipline may be&#13;
counted toward fulfilling the Breadth of Knowledge requirement.&#13;
Academic Skills courses, English 090, 100, &amp; 100, 0-/eve/ matliematics&#13;
courses and foreign language courses taken to fulfill the language&#13;
requirement, will not count toward the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
Requirement.&#13;
This policy is in effect for students first entering Parkside in the fall&#13;
semester of 1978. Other students may opt to graduate under this&#13;
policy by specific request.&#13;
1&#13;
Under the academic advising rule, all students must also declare an&#13;
area of interest before completing 45 credits, and a major before 60&#13;
credits are completed. If the student fails to declare a major before 60&#13;
-credits are finished, he will be transferred to special student status .&#13;
The Senate also approved a proposal to form an Interim Committee&#13;
on Graduate Programming which will handle academic, educational&#13;
and scholastic matters which pertain to graduate programming, until&#13;
these functions are permanently transferred to standing committees .&#13;
The f inal rules ~n acadell)ic advising and the breadth requirement&#13;
follow :&#13;
POLICY ON ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
The UWP Faculty is committed to the belief that academic&#13;
advising of students should be done by the faculty , and hereby enacts&#13;
the following policy : ·&#13;
[1] Formal declaration of an area of interest must be made upon&#13;
completion of 45 credits . Formal declaration of a major is required&#13;
upon completion ot 60 credits. A student who fails to make such&#13;
formal declarations by these deadlines will be transferred to&#13;
special student status and will be so notified. Students are&#13;
en·couraged to identify an area of interest as early as possible in&#13;
their academic careers, but they are free, of course, to change the&#13;
area of interest or major.&#13;
[2] Every student shall have an assigned advisor or advising officer as&#13;
provided below:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors or area of interest shall be&#13;
advised by faculty members in their major or area of interest.&#13;
It is the responsibility of the divisions to decide the advising&#13;
format for their unit.&#13;
(bl Students, who have not declared a major or area of interest&#13;
shall be assigned faculty advisors by the Office of the Dean of&#13;
the Faculty . These advisors will be assigned according to the&#13;
students' preliminary interests, if any. All such assignments&#13;
will be made with the prior ' consent of the proposed&#13;
faculty advisor.&#13;
[3] A student who is a candidate for a degree must secure his advisor's&#13;
signature, or the signature of the advisor's designee, prior to each&#13;
registration, excluding summer session. The signature indicates&#13;
only that the opportunity for advising has occurred.&#13;
[ 4] These policies shall become effective with the fall registration of&#13;
1978.&#13;
-~an~er is wr!tten a_nd edited by students of the&#13;
University ~I Wisc~nsin-~ar~side and they are solely&#13;
re,sponsible for its editorial policy and cont ent.&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A. &#13;
•&#13;
views&#13;
"Viewing humans"&#13;
criticize review&#13;
Dear Editor: minimal appeal. Also, a&#13;
specialization was not "canned"&#13;
as indicated in your editorial.&#13;
Rather, labels were replaced,&#13;
courses added and deleted, to&#13;
provide a rather clear sense of&#13;
purpose to the Mass Communication&#13;
option, which was not'&#13;
present under the Public&#13;
Information heading.&#13;
Second, we are not equivalent&#13;
in school size, facilities, or&#13;
number of faculty to provide&#13;
programs comparable in scope&#13;
to those offered by Madison,&#13;
Minnesota, or Northwestern.&#13;
Third, the work load in Mass&#13;
Communication is currently&#13;
shared by one tenure track&#13;
professor in Communication and&#13;
one lecturer in Humanities. The&#13;
discipline has recognized the&#13;
need for an additional tenure&#13;
track position in Mass Communication.&#13;
And, contrary to the&#13;
statement or implication in your&#13;
editorial, we did try for such a&#13;
position, but were denied it by&#13;
the administration.&#13;
And fourth, our new professor&#13;
slot in Organizational Communication&#13;
evidences our "common&#13;
sense" because the interest of&#13;
'the students and the mission of&#13;
the University call for an&#13;
extended Organizational Communication&#13;
program. With the&#13;
help of a senior person,&#13;
Communication will increase its&#13;
chances for faculty expansion in&#13;
the future.&#13;
As mentioned earlier, we&#13;
appreciate the coverage given&#13;
Communication by the Ranger.&#13;
We just ask that such coverage&#13;
be fair, be based on complete&#13;
information, and take into&#13;
consideration the realities of&#13;
financing and program development.&#13;
Bruce Weaver, Coordinator&#13;
Alan Rubin&#13;
Re6ecc~ Rubin&#13;
The Communication Discipline&#13;
would like to thank the&#13;
Ranger for publicizing recent&#13;
changes in the Communication&#13;
program. As' these changes&#13;
suggest, our faculty has spent&#13;
long hours in clarifying and&#13;
adding internal order to the&#13;
~Communication major. Your&#13;
November 16 editorial does not&#13;
reflect the merits of these&#13;
changes, however, as you fail to&#13;
consider the following points.&#13;
First, a new program is rarely&#13;
designed to meet the needs or&#13;
desiresof one or two individuals.&#13;
Instead, it is usually created to&#13;
provide a good number of&#13;
students with basic knowledge in&#13;
the field and the opportunity to&#13;
make choices in that field. We&#13;
feel that the new Mass&#13;
Communication option allows&#13;
students to pursue different&#13;
goals as is evidenced by our&#13;
television, radio, and yes even,&#13;
journalism courses. Certainly,&#13;
the "publishing" major proposed&#13;
',., your editorial would have&#13;
interacting with humans In a&#13;
production that stresseda reality&#13;
of the human condition,&#13;
estrangement. The alienation of&#13;
friends and family by a common&#13;
fallibility of mankind, a lie.&#13;
Hellman wasn't asking, "Can&#13;
two friends love each other too&#13;
much?" Ms. Ratner is selling&#13;
Hellman short by suggesting her&#13;
only concern in writing this play&#13;
was to answer questions about&#13;
homosexuality, or even human&#13;
sexuality.&#13;
Ms. Ratner did give credit to&#13;
both Deborah Bell and John&#13;
Dickson in what may have been&#13;
a compliment. We would like to&#13;
give credit to Rhoda-Calle&#13;
Pollack, as well as Deborah Bell&#13;
and John Dickson and all the&#13;
members of Parkside Theatre, for&#13;
giving to us a performance that&#13;
was neither phony nor artificial.&#13;
- Mil", Lynn M.ki&#13;
Sunn unwn&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Wendy Ratner's review (in the&#13;
Nov.9 issue)of lillian Hellman's&#13;
The Children's Hour, a Parkside&#13;
Theatre production, compels us&#13;
to write.&#13;
Ms. Ratner "witnessed a&#13;
courageous effort by the&#13;
members of the Parkside&#13;
Theatre, to perform. . (a) complicated&#13;
play, ... " Ms. Ratner&#13;
also "thought that the theatre&#13;
members knew their roles well."&#13;
But she asks, "why then did the&#13;
play seem so phony and&#13;
artificial?" Opening night was&#13;
"compared to a typical dress&#13;
rehearsal", mistake laden, in&#13;
other words.&#13;
We also viewed the play on&#13;
opening night and sensed some&#13;
opening night jitters. But we did&#13;
not let that interfere with our&#13;
experience of the players or the&#13;
play. We were viewing humans&#13;
Fair, shmair, if the Mass&#13;
Communication specialization&#13;
was more developed, we would&#13;
probably attract more than six&#13;
students to put out a weekly&#13;
newspaper. -Editor&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
YOUNGSTER&#13;
IN YOUR LIFE&#13;
IDEAL&#13;
CHRISTMAS GIFTS&#13;
Kf \Tf R FOOl)&#13;
M1' f R 1lIi. \\ rH&#13;
Best Selection Ever!!&#13;
. over&#13;
1000&#13;
.,Juvenile Titles In Stock&#13;
An Ideal&#13;
Christmas G~ft UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore "ONLY .$150 MUdl! - Ihmdl! 9 1.1. - 1 p.II.&#13;
fridlY 9 1.11. - • p.I.&#13;
Silurdl! 10 1.11. - 1 p.llI.&#13;
CLOSED THANKSGIYIIG WEmlD&#13;
• views D&#13;
Communication discip.line ~ . ~,,,&#13;
k R • -Ai-~ H.~ as . s anger to be fair =,o::-~.-.:~~ -w·~ : ~ : ..-...&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
The Communication Discipline&#13;
would like to thank the&#13;
Ranger for publicizing recent&#13;
changes in the Communication&#13;
program . As• these changes&#13;
suggest, our faculty ~as spent&#13;
long hours in clarifying and&#13;
adding internal order to the&#13;
, Communication major. Your&#13;
November 16 editorial does not&#13;
reflect the merits of these&#13;
changes, however, as you fail to&#13;
consider the following points .&#13;
First, a new program is rarely&#13;
designed to meet the needs or&#13;
desires of one or two individuals.&#13;
Instead, it is usually created to&#13;
provide a good number of&#13;
students with basic knowledge in&#13;
the field and the opportunity to&#13;
make choices in that field . We&#13;
feel that the new Mass&#13;
Communication option allows&#13;
students to pursue different&#13;
goals as is evidenced by our&#13;
television, radio, and yes even,&#13;
journalism courses . Certainly,&#13;
the "publishing" major proposed&#13;
'." your editorial would have&#13;
minimal appeal. Also, a&#13;
specialization was not "canned"&#13;
as indicated in your editorial.&#13;
Rather, labels were replaced,&#13;
courses added and deleted, to&#13;
provide a rather clear sense of&#13;
purpose to the Mass Communication&#13;
option, which was not&#13;
present under the Public&#13;
Information heading.&#13;
Second, we are not equivalent&#13;
in school size, facilities, or&#13;
number of faculty to provide&#13;
programs comparable in scope&#13;
to those offered by Madison,&#13;
Minnesota, or Northwestern .&#13;
Third, the work load in Mass&#13;
Communication is currently&#13;
shared by one tenure track&#13;
professor in Communication and&#13;
one lecturer in Humanities. The&#13;
discipline has recognized the&#13;
need for an additional tenure&#13;
track position in Mass Communication.&#13;
And, contrary to the&#13;
statement or implication in your&#13;
editorial, we did try for such a&#13;
position, but were denied it by&#13;
the administration.&#13;
And fourth, our new professor&#13;
slot in Organizational CommuniIDEAL&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTMAS GIFTS&#13;
cation evidences our "common&#13;
sense" because the interest of&#13;
the students and the mission of&#13;
the University call for an&#13;
extended Organizational Communication&#13;
program. With the&#13;
help of a senior person,&#13;
Communication will increase its&#13;
chances for faculty expansion in&#13;
the future.&#13;
As mentioned earlier, we&#13;
appreciate the coverage given&#13;
Communication by the Ranger.&#13;
We just ask that such coverage&#13;
be fair, be based on complete&#13;
information, and take into&#13;
consideration the realities of&#13;
financing and program development.&#13;
&#13;
Bruce Weaver, Coordinator&#13;
Alan Rubin&#13;
Rebecca Rubin&#13;
Fair, shmair, if the Mass&#13;
Communication specialization&#13;
was more developed, we would&#13;
probably attract more than six&#13;
students to put out a weekly&#13;
newspaper. -Editor&#13;
'~Viewing humans''&#13;
• • • • cr1t1c1ze review&#13;
Jo the Editor:&#13;
Wendy Ratner's review (in the&#13;
ov. 9 issue) of Lillian Hellman's&#13;
The Children's Hour, a Parkside&#13;
Theatre production, compels us&#13;
to write.&#13;
Ms . Ratner " witnessed a&#13;
courageous effort by the&#13;
members of the Parkside&#13;
Theatre, to perform (a) complicated&#13;
play, " Ms . Ratner&#13;
also "thought that the theatre&#13;
members knew their roles well."&#13;
But she asks, "why then did the&#13;
play seem so phony and&#13;
artificial?" Opening night was&#13;
" compared to a typical dress&#13;
rehearsal" , mistake laden, in&#13;
other words.&#13;
We also viewed the play on&#13;
opening night and sensed some&#13;
opening night jitters. But we did&#13;
not let that interfere with our&#13;
experience of the players or the&#13;
play. We were viewing humans&#13;
interacting with humans in a&#13;
production that stressed a reality&#13;
of the human cond1t1on ,&#13;
estrangement The alienation of&#13;
friends and family by a common&#13;
fallibility of mankind, a lie&#13;
Hellman wasn't asking, "Can&#13;
two friends love each other too&#13;
much?" Ms Ratner 1s selling&#13;
Hellman short by suggesting her&#13;
only concern in writing this play&#13;
was to answer questions about&#13;
homosexuality, or even human&#13;
sexuality&#13;
Ms. Ratner did give credit to&#13;
both Deborah Bell and John&#13;
Dickson in what may have been&#13;
a compliment. We would like to&#13;
give credit to Rhoda-Galle&#13;
Pollack, as well as Deborah Bell&#13;
and John Dickson and all the&#13;
members of Parkside Theatre, for&#13;
giving to us a performance that&#13;
was neither phony nor art1f1c1al&#13;
-Mary Lynn Maid&#13;
Susan Larsen&#13;
BOOKTI-RIFT FOR THE&#13;
YOUNGSTER HARDCOVER IN YOUR LIFE&#13;
l \7f&#13;
~ Best Selection Ever!! . over&#13;
1000&#13;
, Juvenile Titles In Stock&#13;
An Ideal&#13;
Christmas G~ft&#13;
ONLY&#13;
*I so&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Monday - Thursday 9 a. . - 7 p.&#13;
f riday 9 a.m. - 4 p. .&#13;
Saturday 10 a.m. - 1 p.m.&#13;
CLOSED THANKSGIVING WEEKEND &#13;
arts&#13;
Concert- date changed&#13;
Enrichment&#13;
near total&#13;
rejoin his&#13;
1977 -78 Accent on&#13;
series. He is now&#13;
recovery and will&#13;
orchestra in January.&#13;
The university had the option&#13;
of cancelling the concert but&#13;
decided that series subscribers&#13;
who had purchased tickets&#13;
expecting Kenton would prefer&#13;
to delay the concert to insure his&#13;
appearance. The January date&#13;
also will enable Kenton, and his&#13;
musicians to conduct an&#13;
afternoon clinic here for area&#13;
high school students.&#13;
The Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series is sold out. &lt;, )~&#13;
Da Vinci fest continues&#13;
The Parks ide Accent on&#13;
Enrichment concert by Stan&#13;
Kenton and his orchestra&#13;
scheduled for Dec. 13 has been&#13;
moved to Thursday, Jan. 26, the&#13;
university announced today.&#13;
Series season ticket holders have.&#13;
been notified.&#13;
The concert was moved to&#13;
January at Kenton's request, so&#13;
that he could appear personally&#13;
with his orchestra, an Accent on&#13;
Enrichment spokesman said.&#13;
Kenton's orchestra has been&#13;
conducted by others since he&#13;
'suffered a head injury in a fall&#13;
earlier this year, after the time he&#13;
had been booked into the&#13;
The Leonardo Da Vinci&#13;
Festival at Parkside will include&#13;
several lectures by visiting&#13;
Leonardists, films on the&#13;
Renaissance genius' work and&#13;
displays, in addition to the&#13;
gallery exhibit of models of his&#13;
drawings.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Quality co-crerctct printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci: Profile of&#13;
the Artist will be the topic of a&#13;
lecture by JamesBeck, professor&#13;
of art history at Columbia&#13;
University at 8 p.m. on Dec. 8 in&#13;
the theater.&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
festival, the academv-awardwinning&#13;
film I, Leonardo will be&#13;
shown at the Colden Rondelle&#13;
Theater in Racine at 7:30 p.m. on&#13;
Nov. 28, and the film Leonardo,&#13;
Giant of the Renaissance will be&#13;
shown at the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum at 2:00 p.m. on Dec. 4.&#13;
The Parks ide library will&#13;
display materials from its&#13;
Leonardo collection through&#13;
December 15and a video display&#13;
featuring art works by Leonardo&#13;
will be in operation in Main&#13;
Place of the Library-Learning&#13;
Center during the festival.&#13;
All festival events are free and&#13;
open to -the public Persons&#13;
wishing to attend the film at the&#13;
Rondelle should call the box&#13;
office for free reservations.&#13;
The festival had its formal&#13;
opening November 13 in the&#13;
Parkside Union, which was the&#13;
setting for "Arr Evening With&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci," a Renaissance&#13;
style dinner and entertainment.&#13;
OPEl 8 U1. TIL 10:30 P.•.&#13;
2615 WI.hil"toll IWt. 6M-217S&#13;
Ladle,Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
o. tIIo C.r ... r&#13;
.f 57t11&amp; 23 A.o&#13;
,Graciella 'to perform&#13;
at Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
Cracteta, considered one of&#13;
the foremost female mimes, will&#13;
perform Wednesday, Dec. 7, at 8&#13;
p.m., in the Communication Arts&#13;
theater.&#13;
A former pupil of the great&#13;
french mime Marcel Marceau,&#13;
Graciela is 29-year old Graciela&#13;
Binaghi, a native of Argentina.&#13;
Her one-woman show is in two&#13;
acts, 'featuring a variety of&#13;
routines. that showcase her&#13;
talents as an actress, comedienne,&#13;
dancer, mimic, choreographer&#13;
and clown, all in&#13;
pantomime.&#13;
Her characters range from&#13;
comic to tragic, including a&#13;
faint-hearted bullfighter, punchdrunk&#13;
boxer, fidgety school girl,&#13;
tough Apache dancer, sultry&#13;
stripper, panhandling drunk and&#13;
terrified adult.&#13;
Tickets are a,vailable in&#13;
advance at Sears in Kenosha,&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine and&#13;
at the UW-Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center ($2.50 in advance,&#13;
$3 at the door, $2 in advance for&#13;
UW-P students}. Her appearance&#13;
is being sponsored by the&#13;
student Parks ide Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Marceau has written of&#13;
Graciela: "She has a great poetic&#13;
force and one finds in her the&#13;
elegance of the gazelle combined&#13;
with the impetuosity of a&#13;
lioness. I am pound to present to&#13;
you my pupil who has become&#13;
the very talented Graciela, who&#13;
will go further and further on&#13;
that marvelous road we call&#13;
pantomime."&#13;
She was originally a dancer.&#13;
Why mime?&#13;
"I believe that the most&#13;
important moments in our lives&#13;
happen in silence," she says. "A&#13;
look is more eloquent than a&#13;
thousand words; a gesture is&#13;
more truthful than a brilliant&#13;
dissertation "&#13;
Graciela began the study of&#13;
ballet at the age of five. By the&#13;
time she was 18 she had become&#13;
sertouslv interested in modern'&#13;
dance. Three years of work with&#13;
Rodolfo Danton and Cecilia&#13;
Bullaude plus several performances&#13;
convinced her to leave&#13;
Argentina to study in Europe.&#13;
In 1969 she moved to Paris and&#13;
studied modern dance with&#13;
Jerome Andrews and Michele&#13;
Tvar and joined the dance-mime&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the SlIhmlrine&#13;
San.wfieh&#13;
i~_; ..'·"&amp;'i:&#13;
~&#13;
HAYE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
Wltll Tlals c••p•••&#13;
1 Por C.st •• or YOWIII&#13;
Noun&#13;
M-T&#13;
7 p.m ••&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
T_"on&#13;
25'&#13;
Mle.&#13;
35"&#13;
MI.oll Dri.ks,&#13;
40"&#13;
workshop at Carcassone. She&#13;
then attended the Ecole International&#13;
de Mime Marcel&#13;
Marceau. While at school she&#13;
joined the Compagnie International&#13;
de Mime directed by&#13;
Ella Jarosewicz, with whom she&#13;
toured in France.&#13;
At Marceau's school Graciela&#13;
joined forces with fellow mime&#13;
Jack Hill to form the Mask and&#13;
Mime Theatre which came to the&#13;
United States in 1970 and&#13;
received a grant from the New&#13;
York Council of the Arts while&#13;
they were artists in residence at&#13;
the State University of New York&#13;
at New Paltz. They toured t~&#13;
US. and Argentina, including&#13;
appearances at New York's&#13;
Cubiculo Theatre, for the next&#13;
two years.&#13;
Graciela was artist in&#13;
residence at 'the North Carolina&#13;
School of the Arts, winstonSalem,&#13;
North Carolina, during&#13;
the summer of 1976 where she&#13;
began performing her one&#13;
woman show. Since then she has&#13;
toured extensively and served&#13;
residencies at a number of&#13;
college.s and communi'ty&#13;
theaters.&#13;
arts&#13;
Concert date changed&#13;
The Parkside Accent on&#13;
Enrichment conceft by Stan&#13;
Kenton and his orchestra&#13;
scheduled for Dec . 13 has been&#13;
moved to Thursday, Jan . 26, the&#13;
un iversity announced today .&#13;
Series season ticket holders have.&#13;
been notified .&#13;
The concert was moved to&#13;
January at Kenton's request, so&#13;
that he could appear personally&#13;
with his orchestra, an Accent on&#13;
Enrichment spokesman said .&#13;
Kenton's orchestra has been&#13;
conducted by others since he&#13;
-suffered a head injury in a fall&#13;
earlier this year, after the time he&#13;
had been booked into the&#13;
1977-78 Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series. He is now near total&#13;
recovery and will rejoin his&#13;
orchestra in January.&#13;
The university had the option&#13;
of cancelling the concert but&#13;
decided that series subscribers&#13;
who nad purchased tickets&#13;
expecting Kenton would prefer&#13;
to delay the concer:_t to insure his&#13;
appear:.ance. The January date&#13;
also will enable Kenton, and his&#13;
musicians to conduct an&#13;
afternoon clinic here for area&#13;
high school students. ,&#13;
The Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series is sold out. '\ /.&#13;
Da Vinci fest continues&#13;
The Leonardo Da Vinci&#13;
Festival at Parkside will include&#13;
several lectures by visiting&#13;
Leonardists , films on the&#13;
Renaissance genius' work and&#13;
displays, in addition to the&#13;
gallery exhibit of models of his&#13;
drawings .&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
quality corrmerciol printers&#13;
1417 50th street - 658-8990&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci: Profile of&#13;
the Artist will be the topic of a&#13;
lectu·re by James Beck, professor&#13;
of art history at Columbia&#13;
University at 8 p .m. on Dec. 8 in&#13;
the theater. ,&#13;
In conjunction - with the&#13;
festival , the academy--awardwinning&#13;
film /, Leonardo will be&#13;
shown at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater in Racine at 7:30 p.m . on&#13;
Nov. 28, and the film Leonardo,&#13;
Giant of the Renaissance will be&#13;
shown at the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum at 2:00 p.m . on Dec. 4.&#13;
The Parkside Library will&#13;
display materials from its&#13;
Leorsiardo collection through&#13;
December 15 and a video display&#13;
featuring art works by Leonardo&#13;
will be in operation in Main&#13;
Place of the Library-Learning&#13;
Center during the festival.&#13;
All festival events are free and&#13;
open to ·the publ]J: Persons&#13;
wishing to attend the film at the&#13;
Rondelle should call the box&#13;
office for free reservations.&#13;
The festival had its formal&#13;
opening November 13 in the&#13;
Parkside Union, whkh was the&#13;
setting for "Arr Evening With&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci," a Renaissance&#13;
style dinner and entertainment,&#13;
&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
San~l1ieh&#13;
;-~m"~:&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
261S W11hlngton IWe. 634-2373&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With This Coupon -&#13;
1 Per Customer YOW ZAA&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Ont•ecorner&#13;
of 57tll &amp; 23 Ave.&#13;
Hours&#13;
M-T&#13;
7 p.m. - 10p.m.&#13;
Tappers&#13;
25t&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35c&#13;
Mixed Drinks&#13;
40c "&#13;
_,&#13;
_Gracie Ila -to Perform&#13;
at Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
Graciela, considered one of&#13;
the foremost female mimes, will&#13;
perform Wednesday, Dec. 7, at 8&#13;
p.m ., in the Communication Arts&#13;
theater.&#13;
A former pupil of the great&#13;
French mime Marcel Marceau,&#13;
Graciela is 29-year old Graciela&#13;
Binaghi, a native of Argentina.&#13;
Her one-woman show is in two&#13;
acts, featuring a variety of&#13;
routines that showcase her&#13;
talents as an actress, comedienne,&#13;
dancer, mImIc, choreographer&#13;
and clown, all in&#13;
pantomime.&#13;
Her characters range from&#13;
comic to tragic, including a&#13;
faint-hearted bullfighter, punchdrunk&#13;
boxer, fidgety school girl,&#13;
tough Apache dancer, sultry&#13;
stripper, panhandling drunk and&#13;
terrified adult.&#13;
Tickets are a_vailable in&#13;
advance at Sears in Kenosha,&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine and&#13;
at the UW-Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center ($2.50 in advance,&#13;
$3 at the door, $2 in advance for&#13;
UW-P students). Her appearance&#13;
is being sponsored by the&#13;
student Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Marceau has written of&#13;
Graciela: "She has a great poetic&#13;
force and one finds in her the&#13;
elegance of the gazelle combined&#13;
with the impetuosity of a&#13;
lioness . I am pound to present to&#13;
you my pupil who has become&#13;
the very talented Graciela, who&#13;
will go further and further on&#13;
that marvelous road we call&#13;
pantomime."&#13;
She was originally a dancer. -&#13;
Why mime?&#13;
"I believe that the most&#13;
important moments in our lives&#13;
happen in silence," she says . "A&#13;
look is more eloqyent than a&#13;
thousand words; a gesture is&#13;
more truthful than a brilliant&#13;
dissertation ."&#13;
Graciela began the study of&#13;
ballet at the age of five. By the&#13;
time she was 18 she had become&#13;
serio_usly interested in modern'&#13;
dance. Three years of work with&#13;
Rodolfo Danton and Cecilia&#13;
Bullaude plus several -performances&#13;
convinced her to leave&#13;
Argentina to study in Europe.&#13;
In 1969 she moved to Paris and&#13;
studied modern dance with&#13;
Jerome Andrews and Michele&#13;
Tyar and joined the danc_e-mime&#13;
workshop at Carcassone. ·she&#13;
then attended the Ecole International&#13;
de Mime Marcel&#13;
Marceau . While at school she&#13;
joined the Compagnie International&#13;
de Mime directed by&#13;
Ella Jarosewicz, with whom she&#13;
toured in France.&#13;
At Marceau's school Graciela&#13;
joined forces with fellow mime&#13;
Jack Hill to form the Mask and&#13;
Mime Theatre which came to the&#13;
United States in 1970 and&#13;
received a grant from the New&#13;
York Council of the Arts while&#13;
they were artists in residence at&#13;
the State University of New York&#13;
at New Paltz . They toured tht?&#13;
U.S.. and Argentina, including&#13;
appearances at New York's&#13;
Cubiculo Theatre, for the next&#13;
two years.&#13;
Graciela was artist in&#13;
residence at 'the North Carolina&#13;
School of the Arts, WinstonSalem,&#13;
North Carolina, during&#13;
the summer of 1976 where she&#13;
began performing her one&#13;
woman show. Since then she has&#13;
toured extensively and served&#13;
residencies at a number of&#13;
college.s and community&#13;
theaters . &#13;
news&#13;
'Close Encounters'&#13;
deals with 'them'&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
the other day, a serous movie tan was overheard&#13;
saying; "Hev. what's happening with that Speilberg&#13;
movie, you know, Third Encounters of a Close&#13;
News reports on Close En~ounters of the Third kind?"&#13;
Kind-Steven Spielberg's science fiction/facti And then there are stories from those who have&#13;
speculation extravaganza scheduled for release this served on the film crew and who know a whole lot&#13;
coming Christmas-are almost unavoidably comical. more about the movie than we do. These reports&#13;
Take for example an early "scoop" on the interviewed Vilmos Zaigmond, who photographed&#13;
production in that same publication that cracked the movie, and who speaks at length in the&#13;
the Watergate story, The Washington Post. This interview about some of the other films he has&#13;
report, published in the summer of 1976, tells all: photographed (McCabe and Mrs. Miller,&#13;
how the movie begins, how the plot thickens, Deliverance, Cinderella Liberty, Obsession, and&#13;
practically how the movie ends-plus what it was Speilberg's The Sugarland Express) until he is asked&#13;
like to watch the shooting of the picture on the to name the most difficult filming sequence he has&#13;
closed set in Mobile, Alabama, last year. "The ever done, His answer: "The final scene of Close&#13;
Washington Post tried everything to get onto our Encounters that was shot in Alabama." Asked why:&#13;
set," says Stephen Speilberg in a recent interview in "Because we had the biggest set of all times to light.&#13;
Sight and Sound magazine. "Their reporter, who - The site was so big that when 1 turned one brute on&#13;
likened himself to Bob Woodward, decided that it was like lighting a match. I had to turn on four or&#13;
the best way to break our security was to interview five brutes on together to make a noticable change&#13;
some of the extras at night in bars when they're on the set.c Asked whether this problem was finally&#13;
loose and fancy free, and then write his story in the solved, Zsigrncnd delivers the following intriguing&#13;
first person, as though he had been there reporting statement: "Oh, I think we finally conquered it. It&#13;
the whole thing himself. It was printed, and it was was very, very difficult not only because of the&#13;
the most erroneous, far-fetched encounter of the hugeness of the set but also because we were&#13;
fifth kind I had ever read." dealing with something we had to believe in. We&#13;
Other papers trying, too didn't want to go into a science-fiction treatment&#13;
More often, reports on Close Encounters of the where anything goes. We had to handle it like it can&#13;
Third Kind are far less brazen than The Washington really happen and if you see the movie you would&#13;
Post's, and just a little off-key, echoing the gentle believe in them. So we had to deal with the fantasy&#13;
uncertainty- felt by most of us-when we venture to basically, but at the same time it had to be real." No&#13;
speak of a production shrouded in mystery. An item explanation is' given of what he means by "them".&#13;
in Cue magazine for example, states that Dr. J. Spielberg, in order to be able to film the final&#13;
Allen Hyneck, an investigator of UFO phenomena scenes of the movie, had to rent the "world's largest&#13;
and the former associate director of the aircraft hangar" which just happens to be at&#13;
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory at Harvard, ......Mobile, Alabama. A 24-hour guard_ was posted at&#13;
"recently served as the technical advisor for the the hangar because some of the special effects of&#13;
soon-to-be-released Columbia picture, Close the final scenes were labeled as being "extremely&#13;
Encounters of the Third Kind." That's all right. Just dangerous".&#13;
Punishment&#13;
beats&#13;
Monday&#13;
nigh.t sports&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap Al Union Square&#13;
by Bob Hensen&#13;
_ Ranger Staff&#13;
Monday, November 14th, the&#13;
Parkside Philosophical Society&#13;
and Richard Wasserstrom took&#13;
on Monday night football and&#13;
Won. 78 students, lawyers, and&#13;
other community people showed&#13;
up to hear P..r.of.Wasserstrom&#13;
give a talk on Punishment.&#13;
Wasserstrom, a professor of law&#13;
and philosophy at U.CLA.,&#13;
lectured on the rightness of&#13;
punishing people on moral and&#13;
utilitarian grounds and came to&#13;
~ the conclusion that since there is&#13;
no one theory that covers all&#13;
instances where punishment is&#13;
used, it is not right to punish&#13;
people.'&#13;
Tuesday there was an informal&#13;
discussion on sexism. 44 people&#13;
were in attendance to hear&#13;
Wasserstrom make statements to&#13;
the effect that sex and race&#13;
should be treated no differently&#13;
than eye color. "In all 122 people&#13;
heard an intelligent man give&#13;
two talks that had relevance to&#13;
today's society, spoken in&#13;
language they could understand,&#13;
and they were able to ask any&#13;
questions they had on the issues,&#13;
said a society spokesman.&#13;
,&#13;
"Light&#13;
UW·pinvited to Winterim '78'&#13;
Parkside students have been&#13;
invited to participate in&#13;
"Washington Winterim '78" next&#13;
January in the nation's capital.&#13;
The three-week concentrated&#13;
program examines the making of&#13;
national policy and laws through&#13;
briefings at government offices,&#13;
lectures, topical discussions, and&#13;
meetings with people and&#13;
organizations that have an&#13;
impact on national decisionmaking.&#13;
The Washington program is a&#13;
project of the Washington&#13;
Center for Learning Alternatives,&#13;
a non-profit, independent 00·&#13;
cational organizatTon which&#13;
arranges academic programs&#13;
Cocaine. may not be&#13;
classified 'narcotic'&#13;
Court cases in states where&#13;
cocaine is classified as a narcotic&#13;
are challenging that classification.&#13;
They say that since narcotic&#13;
drugs are so classified because of&#13;
their physically addictive properties&#13;
(such as the opiates -&#13;
heroin, morphine and methadone),&#13;
cocaine, as a psvcbologically&#13;
addictive drug, should&#13;
not be in the same class.&#13;
In Illinois, attorneys for three&#13;
men arrested last winter on&#13;
charges of alleged sale of&#13;
cocaine say that charges should&#13;
be dropped because the Illinois&#13;
Controlled Substances law&#13;
"erroneously" labels cocaine a&#13;
narcotic. At the hearing, the&#13;
lawyers produced three affidavits&#13;
from accredited doctors with&#13;
supporting evidence.&#13;
with field experience components&#13;
for college and university&#13;
students&#13;
Prof Samuel J. Pernacciaro,&#13;
who is coordinating the program&#13;
at UW-Parkside, said it offers&#13;
students an opportunity to turn&#13;
the break between semesters&#13;
into a rewarding, educational&#13;
off-campus experience The&#13;
program cernes three UW-P&#13;
political science credits. Pernacciero&#13;
said the S325 fee includes&#13;
housing accommodations. Persons&#13;
interested in registering for&#13;
the program should contact him&#13;
at Greenquist Hall Room 313&#13;
(telephone 553-2427 or 553-2316)&#13;
Statement, filed by Dr. Robert&#13;
G Newman, associate general&#13;
director of operations at Beth&#13;
Israel Medical Center in New&#13;
York City, said that cocaine,&#13;
even when used repeatedly and&#13;
with large doses does not cause&#13;
physical dependence, and that it&#13;
has a very low Incidence of&#13;
medical complications In sharp&#13;
contrast with narcotics&#13;
Richard Trais, student attorney&#13;
at Western tlhnots University,&#13;
said that cases of thts type "will&#13;
make waves, just as the majonty&#13;
of people changed their views&#13;
about marijuana in the last ten&#13;
years. Cultural attitudes, political&#13;
attitudes - the whole thing IS&#13;
symbolic, a reaction to certain&#13;
American norms"&#13;
ONLy'1595&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
~)c&gt;&#13;
v.&#13;
Up Your Life!!&#13;
with the&#13;
Versatile Lamp From Luxo&#13;
use it anywhere- tables, desks, workbenches, headboards, shelves,&#13;
, ladders, drafting tables, sewing machines, or chairs!&#13;
:' -, ~ ...&#13;
..~...&#13;
. .&#13;
1lIIU, - nllYI, , u. -1 , .•.&#13;
friO, , u. - 4 , .•.&#13;
Sllml' 11U. - 1 , .•.&#13;
CLOSED THAMKSGIYlIC IEmlD&#13;
···&#13;
news&#13;
'Close Encounters' UW-P invited to Winterim '78'&#13;
deals with 'them'&#13;
Parkside students have been&#13;
invited to partIcIpate in&#13;
"Washington Winterim 78" next&#13;
January in the nation's capital.&#13;
The three-week concentrated&#13;
program examines the making of&#13;
national policy and laws through&#13;
briefings at government offices,&#13;
lectures, topical discussions, and&#13;
meetings with people and&#13;
organizations that have an&#13;
impact on national decisionwith&#13;
field experience components&#13;
for college and unIversIty&#13;
students .&#13;
Prof Samuel J. Pernacciaro,&#13;
who Is coordinating the program&#13;
at UW-Parks1d , said It offers&#13;
students an opportunity to turn&#13;
the break between semesters&#13;
into a rewarding, educational&#13;
off-campus experience. The&#13;
program ames three UW-P&#13;
political science credits . Pernacciaro&#13;
said the S325 fee includes&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
News reports on Close Encounters of the Third&#13;
Kind-Steven Spielberg' s science fiction / fact/&#13;
speculation extravaganza scheduled for release this&#13;
coming Christmas-are almost unavoidably comical.&#13;
Take for example an early "scoop" on the&#13;
production in that same publication that cracked&#13;
the Watergate story, The Washington Post. This&#13;
report, published in the summer of 1976, tells all :&#13;
how the movie begins, how the plot thickens,&#13;
practically how the movie ends-plus what it was&#13;
like to watch the shooting of the picture on the&#13;
closed set in Mobile, Alabama, last year. "The&#13;
Washington Post tried everything to get onto our&#13;
set," says Stephen Speilberg in a recent interview in&#13;
Sight and Sound magazine. "Their reporter, who&#13;
likened himself to Bob Woodward, decided that&#13;
the best way to break our security was to interview&#13;
some of the extras at night in bars when they're&#13;
loose and fancy free, and- then write his story in the&#13;
first person, as though he had been there reporting&#13;
the whole thing himself. It was printed, and it was&#13;
the most erroneous, far-fetched encounter of the&#13;
fifth kind I had ever read."&#13;
Other papers trying, too&#13;
More often, reports on Close Encounters of the&#13;
Third Kind are far less brazen than The Washington&#13;
Post's, and just a little off-key, echoing the gentle&#13;
uncertainty felt by most of us-When we venture to&#13;
speak of a production shrouded in mystery . An item&#13;
in Cue magazine for example, states that Dr. J.&#13;
Allen Hyneck, an investigator of UFO phenomena&#13;
and the former associate director of the&#13;
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory at Harvard,&#13;
"recently served as the technical advisor for the&#13;
soon-to-be-released Columbia picture, Close&#13;
Encounters of the Third Kind." That's all right . Just&#13;
Punishment&#13;
beats&#13;
Monday&#13;
nigh_t sports&#13;
by Bob Hansen&#13;
_ Ranger Staff&#13;
the other day, a serous movie fa11 was overheard&#13;
saying; "'Hey, what's happening with that Speilberg&#13;
movie, you know, Third Encounters of a Close&#13;
kind?"&#13;
And then there are stories from those who have&#13;
served on the film crew and who know a whole lot&#13;
more about the movie than we do. These reports&#13;
interviewed Vilmos Zsigmond, who photographed&#13;
the movie, and who speaks at length in the&#13;
intervi€w about some of the other films he has&#13;
photographed (McCabe and Mrs. Miller,&#13;
Deliverance, Cinderella Liberty, Obsession, and&#13;
Speilberg's The Sugarland Express) until he' is asked&#13;
to name the most difficult filming sequence he has&#13;
ever done, His answer: "The final scene of Close&#13;
Encounters that was shot in Alabama ." Asked why :&#13;
" Because we had the biggest set of all times to light.&#13;
• The site was so big that when I turned one brute on&#13;
it was like lighting a match. I had to turn on four or&#13;
five brutes on together to make a noticable change&#13;
on the set." Asked whether this problem was finally&#13;
solved, Zsigmond delivers the following intriguing&#13;
statement: "Oh, I think we finally conquered it. It&#13;
was very, very difficult not only because of the&#13;
hugeness of the set but also because we were&#13;
dealing with something we had to believe in. We&#13;
didn't want to go into a science-fiction treatment&#13;
where anything goes. We had to handle it like it can&#13;
really happen and if you see the movie you would&#13;
believe in them . So we had to deal with the fantasy&#13;
basically, but at the same time it had to be real." No&#13;
explanation is' given of what he means by "them".&#13;
Spielberg, in order to be able to film the final&#13;
scenes of the movie, had to rent the " world's largest&#13;
aircraft hangar" which just happens to be at&#13;
Mobile, Alabama . A 24-hour guard was posted at&#13;
the hangar because some of the special effects of&#13;
the final scenes were labeled as being "extremely&#13;
dangerous".&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
Oa Tap At Union Square ~--.&#13;
..., .,&#13;
making.&#13;
The Washington program is a&#13;
project of the Washington&#13;
Center for Learning Alternatives,&#13;
a non-profit, independent edcational&#13;
organization which&#13;
arranges academic programs&#13;
housing accommodations. Persons&#13;
interested in registering for&#13;
the program should contact him&#13;
at Greenquist Hall Room 313&#13;
(telephone 553-2427 or 553-2316)&#13;
•&#13;
Cocaine. may not be&#13;
classified 'narcotic'&#13;
Court cases in states where&#13;
cocaine is classified as a narcotic&#13;
are challenging that classification&#13;
. They say that since narcotic&#13;
drugs are so classified because of&#13;
their physically addictive properties&#13;
(such as the opiates -&#13;
heroin, morphine and methadone),&#13;
cocaine, as a psychologically&#13;
addictive drug, should&#13;
not be in the same class&#13;
In Illinois, attorneys for three&#13;
men arrested last winter on&#13;
charges of alleged sale of&#13;
cocaine say that charges should&#13;
be dropped because the Illinois&#13;
Controlled Substances Law&#13;
"erroneously" labels cocaine a&#13;
narcotic. At the hearing, the&#13;
lawyers produced three affidavits&#13;
from accredited doctors with&#13;
supporting evidence.&#13;
Statements filed by Dr Robert&#13;
G ewman, associate general&#13;
director of operations at Beth&#13;
Israel Medical Center in New&#13;
York City, said that cocaine,&#13;
even when used repeatedly and&#13;
with large doses does not cause&#13;
physical dependence, and that It&#13;
has a very low incidence of&#13;
medical complications in sharp&#13;
contrast with narcotics.&#13;
Richard Tra1s , student attorney&#13;
at Western Illinois University,&#13;
said that cases of this type "will&#13;
make waves, ju t as th ma1onty&#13;
of people changed their views&#13;
about marijuana in the last ten&#13;
years Cultural attitudes, political&#13;
attitudes - the whole thing is&#13;
symbolic , a reaction to certain&#13;
American norms "&#13;
~- N\~u,c ~ o~ill\O S\ree~3&#13;
Open 32,\ . ~\~ 5 .@63&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fr, . " ?\IC.\oe, 1 ,qA,) @4- Noon til 9 ~~,._..&#13;
Sat. Noon ti/ 5&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS- JOKES - NOVELTIES&#13;
.. - .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. . . . . ., .. •••• , t •&#13;
\_." _:&#13;
:· . .. . . .&#13;
··tight Up Your Life!!&#13;
with the&#13;
Versatile Lamp From Luxo&#13;
Monday, November 14th, the&#13;
Parkside Philosophical Society&#13;
and Richard Wasserstrom took&#13;
on Monday night football and&#13;
won . 78 students, lawyers, and&#13;
other community people showed&#13;
up to hear Prof. Wasserstrom&#13;
give a talk on Punishment.&#13;
Wasserstrom, a professor of law&#13;
and philosophy at U.C.L.A.,&#13;
lectured on the rightness of&#13;
punishing people on moral and&#13;
utilitarian grounds and came to&#13;
the conclusion that since there is&#13;
no one theory that covers all&#13;
instances where punishJ"Q_ent is&#13;
used, it is not right to punish&#13;
people. ·&#13;
Tuesday there was an informal&#13;
discussion on sexism . 44 people&#13;
were in attendance to hear&#13;
Wasserstrom make statements to&#13;
the effect that sex and race&#13;
should be treated no differently&#13;
than eye color. " In all 122 people&#13;
heard an intelligent man give&#13;
two talks that had relevance to&#13;
today's society, spoken in&#13;
language they could understand,&#13;
and they were able to ask any&#13;
questions they had on the issues,&#13;
said a society spokesman.&#13;
use it anywhere- tables, desks, workbenches, headboards,&#13;
, ladders, drafting tables-, sewing machines, or chair !&#13;
helve&#13;
ONLY$ 1595&#13;
UW Parkside ~o ~ay - n,ruay 9 a.a. - 7 ,.a.&#13;
F ri~ay 9 a.a. - 4 ,.a.&#13;
Bo kstore Sat1rby 10 a.a. - 1 ,.a.&#13;
CLOSED THANKSGIVING WEEKEND&#13;
' &#13;
news&#13;
Dow' Chemical. not indebted&#13;
to Freedom of Spee,ch gt CMU&#13;
(CPS) - "WE have a new body of rulers; tyrants whose names you&#13;
don't know and faces you don't recognize, but who control your life."&#13;
It didn't take long for Jane Fonda's rhetorical villain to assume a&#13;
definite person. Hours after 1300 students heard her October 10&#13;
speech, Central Michigan University (eMU) president Harold Abel&#13;
opened a letter expressing regret that eMU had permitted&#13;
"communist sympathiser" Fonda to "spread her venom against free&#13;
enterprise." Written by Paul Oreffice, president of Dow Chemical&#13;
USA, the letter advised that "support of any kind from Dow Chemical&#13;
to eMU has been stopped."&#13;
"We must be certain that our funds are never used to support.&#13;
people intent upon destruction of freedom," wrote Oreffice.&#13;
Dow bankrolls eMU to the annual tune of 'about $70,000 dollars. ,&#13;
While the bulk is targeted for specific, scientific projects, a small&#13;
portion is funneled into the general fund from which Fonda drew her&#13;
$3500 dollar fee. .&#13;
It wasn't her speech&#13;
Fonda's speech - basically a pitch for greater economic diversity&#13;
and democracy - mentioned Dow Chemical only in an aside. When&#13;
pressed for examples of what Oreffice found particularly venomous&#13;
in her remarks, Dow spokesman Phil Schneider admitted that it&#13;
wasn't Fonda's speech per se, but the anti-business aura now&#13;
permeating the universities that Dow found objectionable.&#13;
Dow's action reflects a growing philosophy of industrial&#13;
non-support to colleges critical of 'free enterprise'. In ·1976, then&#13;
Treasury Secretary William E. Simon warned that unless industry&#13;
consider economic sanctions against liberal colleges, the "largesse of&#13;
Where&#13;
are they&#13;
now?&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT.PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658·2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
More than half of all the men&#13;
and women who fought in&#13;
America's wars, from the&#13;
Revolution to the Vietnam&#13;
conflict, are still alive, the&#13;
Veterans Administration reports.&#13;
Atotal 44.5 million persons have&#13;
worn their country's uniform&#13;
during periods of conflict, and&#13;
VA estimates some 29.8 million&#13;
are still living.&#13;
•&#13;
Mention this odl&#13;
Member Porkside 200&#13;
Notionol Vorsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha ,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
.~~ 'tIP&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
Kenoshll'. DI8mond center&#13;
5617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
Phone 858·2525 Kenosha,Wisconsin&#13;
the free enterprise system will continue to finance its own&#13;
destruction ."&#13;
Without money collapse&#13;
Simon's argument wasn't original. In 1972, disgruntled Princeton&#13;
alumni formed an organization advocating the use of financial&#13;
leverage to maintain traditional academic standard~. Dubbed the&#13;
r "Concerned Alumni of Princeton", they spearheaded a letter writing&#13;
campaign urging business leaders to adopt guidelines insuring that&#13;
their gifts would. not be used in "any _way, shape of fashion to&#13;
undercut the free enterprise system." They theorize that without&#13;
. industrial support, universities will collapse.&#13;
According to Bailey Brower (Princeton 1949), the group has&#13;
received only one "uncomplimentary response". That sour note was&#13;
sounded by Gulf &amp; Western president Samuel J. Silberman who noted&#13;
that, "economic arm-twisting of education is a dangerous path."&#13;
While most critics of Simon and" the Princeton group agree that the&#13;
movement is a reaction to recent polls indicating student skepticism&#13;
of the ethical, moral and public service records of the private sector,&#13;
they suggest that business look for the key under their own doormat.&#13;
On November 4, Abel and Oreffice issued a joint statement saying&#13;
that future Dow money will be used only for approved programs such&#13;
as "sponsorship of a program on free enterprise." Abel went on to add&#13;
that CMU was not asked "to make any 'promises concerning our&#13;
future behavior nor did we make any." They announced that CMU&#13;
students, who reacted angrily' to what they interpreted as an attempt&#13;
by Dow to gag first amendment rights, will be able to hear Oreffice&#13;
rebut Fonda sometime in 1978.&#13;
I&#13;
Art: for&#13;
brain's sake&#13;
[CPS] According to&#13;
Saturday Review last month,&#13;
children deprived of art may&#13;
suffer brain damage.&#13;
Written by Roger Williams, the&#13;
article is based on the/work of&#13;
husban,d and wife team Dr.&#13;
Robert Masters and Dr. Jean&#13;
Houston.&#13;
A child deprived of art&#13;
stimulation is "systematically cut&#13;
off from the ways he can&#13;
perceive the world ... his brain is&#13;
systematically damaged," says&#13;
Houston.&#13;
Dr. Masters explained that if&#13;
"current thinking is correct, that&#13;
arts come out of the right side or&#13;
visual side of the brain, you are&#13;
obviously damaging the brain if&#13;
you do not cultivate that side as&#13;
well as the analytic side."&#13;
The researchers see the deemphasizing&#13;
of the arts in early&#13;
education as a retardent to brain&#13;
development.&#13;
This kind of stunting may&#13;
effect the child's ability to grasp&#13;
abstract concepts in math and&#13;
science.&#13;
"Inevitably," writes Williams,&#13;
"the arts are among the first&#13;
victims of scalpel wielding&#13;
administrators."&#13;
Evil influence, at&#13;
Beachy Head&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
. The chalk cliffs of Beachy Head tower nearly 600&#13;
feet above the gray water of the English Channel. It&#13;
is the loftiest headland in Southern England, a&#13;
lonely spot in the midst of the Sussex Downs, where&#13;
few people care to loiter.&#13;
High among the chalk crags where the wind&#13;
always howls even on the balmiest summer days,&#13;
dwells the most malevolent spirit in Britain.&#13;
It is an evil influence which, it is claimed, has in&#13;
the last 20 years, hurled more than 100 victims over&#13;
the edge to their deaths on the cruel wave-washed&#13;
rocks below.&#13;
"- Many people have stated positively(some under&#13;
oath) that they have felt the evil influence on the,&#13;
cliffs. They said they had to combat violently a&#13;
power which attempted to force them over the&#13;
precipice.&#13;
Hypnotic power&#13;
Few can stand near the edge of Beachy Head&#13;
without being aware that some almost hypnotic&#13;
power lurks in its towering cliffs. A 'ew years ago a&#13;
young girl stumbled hysterically over the downs&#13;
leading from the Head and up to a patrolling&#13;
policeman. She.said that while resting on the cliffs,&#13;
a dark shadow-had suddenly descended around her.&#13;
She said she felt herself in a strange, dark&#13;
atmosphere although the sun 'was shinning brightly&#13;
at the time.&#13;
She got up and began to run, and "some huge,&#13;
menacing form seemed to follow her toward the&#13;
edge of the cliffs," Screaming for help, she turned&#13;
and ran away from the cliffs - to safety.&#13;
Area residents agree that the cliffs have a strange&#13;
and menacing atmosphere. But the influence of the&#13;
mysterious power extends even beyond the cliffs. A&#13;
nearby manor house for centuries has regularly&#13;
been visited by disaster and plagues which have&#13;
killed off scores of animals and people. _&#13;
In fact, it is from this house that the trouble is&#13;
said to stem. When Britain's monasteries were&#13;
dissolved in 1538, monks from a nearby priory took&#13;
refuge in the manor.&#13;
The owner of the manor is said to have betrayed&#13;
their hiding place. The monks laid a curse on the&#13;
man, his family, and his possessions; and this, it is&#13;
claimed, is the cause of the mysterious influence on&#13;
the cliffs and surrounding districts.&#13;
Exorcism works?&#13;
For centuries people in the district have left the&#13;
phenomenon alone. But at midnight in February,&#13;
1952, a grou~of people gathered on the cliff top&#13;
intending to exorcise the evil s urtt once and for all.&#13;
In a macabre scene, unprecendentsd in occult&#13;
research, the presence attacked the medium in&#13;
charge of the investigation and urged him to jump&#13;
over the cliff himself.&#13;
About 100 people accompanied the medium, Ray&#13;
de Vekey, to the top of Beachy Head on a wild&#13;
night in February. By the light of pressure lamps,&#13;
they gathered to try to contact the spirits of some of&#13;
the people who had committed suicide over the&#13;
Head.&#13;
De Vekey said afterward that the spirit that&#13;
seized him was fully visible to him. It was of an&#13;
elderly bearded man wearing an ankle-length robe&#13;
like a monks habit, with a black mark on his back.&#13;
After the seance, De Vekey explained:&#13;
"This was the strongest influence I have ever&#13;
encountered. I seemed impelled toward the cliff&#13;
edge. The specter was of someone who was&#13;
chained, perhaps the victim of a sacrifice who has&#13;
hated, and wished ill to all ever since." ,&#13;
A week later, the group again climbed the cliff,&#13;
and De Vekey said prayers. This time, nothing&#13;
unusual happened. Afterward the medium said:&#13;
"I think the unquiet spirit has been laid to rest&#13;
forever."&#13;
• Malign presence&#13;
But has it?, on-ly recently, two climbers felt a&#13;
"malign presence" hovering over them as they&#13;
walked along the downs behind Beachy Head. Is&#13;
the mysterious evil thing which lurks above the sea&#13;
again ready to claim more victims?&#13;
...&#13;
/&#13;
news&#13;
/&#13;
Dow Chemical riot indebted Art: ·for&#13;
brain's sake -;&#13;
[CPS] According to&#13;
to Freedom of Speech ~t CMU Saturday Review last month,&#13;
children deprived of art may&#13;
suffer brain damage.&#13;
Written by Roger Williams, the&#13;
article is based on theJwork of&#13;
husband and wife team Dr. (CPS) - "WE have a new body of rulers; tyrants whose names you&#13;
don't know and faces you don't recognize, but who control your life."&#13;
It didn't take long for Jane Fonda's rhetorical villain to assume a&#13;
definite person . Hours after 1300 students heard her October 10&#13;
speech, Central Michigan University (CMU) president Harold Abel&#13;
opened a letter expressing regret that CMU had permitted&#13;
" communist sympathiser" Fonda to " spread her venom against free&#13;
enterprise." Written by Paul Oreffice, president of Dow Chemical&#13;
USA, the letter advised that " support of any kind from Dow Chemical&#13;
to CMU has been stopped ."&#13;
"We must be certain that our funds are never used to support&#13;
people intent upon destruction of freedom," wrote Oreffice. ·&#13;
Dow bankrolls CMU to the annual tune of about $70,000 dollars .&#13;
While the bulk is targeted for specific, scientific projects, a s~all&#13;
portion is funneled into the general fund from which Fonda drew her&#13;
$3500 dollar fee . ·&#13;
~ It wasn't her speech&#13;
Fonda's speech - basically a pitch for greater economic diversity&#13;
and democracy - mentioned Dow Chemical or-ily in an aside. When&#13;
pressed for examples of what Oreffice found particularly venomous&#13;
in her remarks, Dow spokesman Phil Schneider admitted that it&#13;
wasn't Fonda's speech per se, but the anti-business aura now&#13;
permeating the universities that Dow found objectionable.&#13;
Dow's action reflects a growing philosophy of industrial&#13;
non-support to colleges critical of 'free enterprise'. In · 1976, then&#13;
Treasury Secretary William E. Simon warned that unless industry&#13;
consider economic sanctions against liberal colleges, the "largesse of&#13;
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the free enterprise system will continue to finance its own&#13;
destruction."&#13;
I&#13;
Robert Masters and Dr. Jean&#13;
Houston . Without money collapse&#13;
Simon's argument wasn't original. In 1972, disgruntled Princeton&#13;
alumni formed an organization advocating the use of financial&#13;
leverage to maintain traditional academic standard\. Dubbed the&#13;
A child deprived of art&#13;
stimulation is " systematically cut&#13;
off from the ways he can&#13;
perceive the world .. . his brain is&#13;
systematically damaged," says&#13;
Houston.&#13;
, "Concerned Alumni of Princeton", they spearheaded a letter writing&#13;
campaign urging business leaders to adopt guidelines insuring that&#13;
their gifts would . not be used in "any .way, shape of fashion to&#13;
undercut the free enterprise system." They theorize that without Dr. Masters explained that if&#13;
" current thinking is correct, that&#13;
arts come out of the right side or&#13;
visual side of the brain, you are&#13;
obviously damaging the brain if&#13;
you do not cultivate that side as&#13;
well as the analytic side."&#13;
. industrial support, universities will collapse.&#13;
According to Bailey Brower (Princeton 1949), the group has&#13;
recelved only one "uncomplimentary response". That sour note was&#13;
sounded by Gulf &amp; Western president Samuel J. Silberman who noted&#13;
that, "economic arm-twisting of education is a dangerous path."&#13;
While most critics of Simon and the Princeton group agree that the&#13;
movement is a reaction to recent polls indicating student skepticism&#13;
of the ethical, moral and public service records of the private sector,&#13;
they suggest that business look for the key under their own doormat.&#13;
The researchers see the deemphasizing&#13;
of the arts in early&#13;
education as a retardent to brain&#13;
development. On November 4, Abel and Oreffice issued a joint statement saying&#13;
that future Dow money will be used only for approved prog~ams sµch&#13;
as "sponsorship of a program on free enterprise." Abel went on to add&#13;
that CMU was not asked "to make any ·promises concerning our&#13;
future behavior nor did we make any." They announced that CMU&#13;
students, who reacted angrily· to what they interpret~ as an attempt&#13;
by Dow to gag first amendment rights, will be able to hear Oreffice&#13;
rebut Fonda sometime in 1978.&#13;
This kind of stunting may&#13;
effect the child's ability to grasp&#13;
abstract concepts in math and&#13;
science.&#13;
"Inevitably," writes Williams,&#13;
"the arts are among the first&#13;
victims of scalpel wielding&#13;
administrators ."&#13;
Evil influence at&#13;
.Beachy Head&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The chalk cliffs of Beachy Head tower nearly 600&#13;
feet above the gray water of the Engl ish Channel. It&#13;
is the loftiest headland in Southern England, a&#13;
lonely spot in the midst of the Sussex Downs, where&#13;
few people care to loiter.&#13;
High among the chalk ~rags where the wind&#13;
always howls even on the b~lmiest summer days,&#13;
dwells the most malevolent spirit in Britain .&#13;
It is an evil influence which, it is claimed, has in&#13;
the last 20 years, hurled more than 100 victims over&#13;
the edge to their deaths on the cruel wave-washed&#13;
rocks below. ....__&#13;
Many people have stated positively(some under&#13;
oath) that they have felt the evil influence on the ,&#13;
cliffs . They said they had to combat violently a&#13;
power which attempted to force them over the&#13;
precipice.&#13;
Hypnotic power&#13;
Few can stand near the edgP of Beachy Head&#13;
without being aware that some almost hypnotic&#13;
power lurks in its towering cliffs. A 'ew years ago a&#13;
young girl stumbled hysterically over the dow'ns&#13;
leading from the He.ad and up to a patrolling&#13;
policeman. She_ said that while resting on the cliffs&#13;
a dark shadow had suddenly descended around her'.&#13;
She said she felt herself in a strange, dark&#13;
atmosphere although the sun was shinning brightly&#13;
at the time.&#13;
She got up and began to run, and " some huge,&#13;
menacing form seemed to follow her toward the&#13;
edge of the cliffs," Screaming for help, she turned&#13;
and ran away from the cliffs - to safety .&#13;
Area residents agree that the cliffs have a strange&#13;
and menacing atmosphere. But the influence of the&#13;
mysterious power extends even beyond the cliffs . A&#13;
nearby manor house for centuries has regularly&#13;
been visited by disaster and plagues which have&#13;
kill~d off scores 'of an·imals and people.&#13;
In fact, it is from this house that the trouble is&#13;
said to stem. When Britain's monasteries were&#13;
dissolved in 1538, monks from a nearby priory took&#13;
refuge in the manor.&#13;
The owner of the manor is said to have betrayed&#13;
their hiding place. The monks laid a curse on the&#13;
man , his family, and his possessions · and this it is&#13;
claimed , is the ~ause of the mysterio~s influen~e on&#13;
the cliffs and surrounding distri cts .&#13;
Exorcism works?&#13;
For centuries people in the district have left the&#13;
phen~menon alone. But at midn ight in February,&#13;
1952, a group of people gathered on the cl iff top&#13;
intending to ex'orcise the evils )irit once and for all .&#13;
In a macabre scene, unprecendented in occult&#13;
research, the presence attacked t he medium in&#13;
charge of the investigation and urged him to jump&#13;
over the cliff himself.&#13;
About 100 people accompanied the medium, Ray&#13;
de Vekey, to the top of Beachy Head on a wild&#13;
night in February . By the light of pressure lamps,&#13;
they gathered to try to contact the spirits of some of&#13;
the people who had committed suicide over the&#13;
Head .&#13;
De Vekey said afterward that the spirit that&#13;
seized him was fully visible to him . It was of an&#13;
elderly bearded man wearing an ankle-length robe&#13;
like a monks habit, with a black mark on his back .&#13;
After the seance, De Vekey explained :&#13;
"This was the strongest influence I have ever&#13;
encountered . I seemed impelled toward the cliff&#13;
edge. The specter was of someone who was&#13;
chained, perhaps the victim of a sacrifice who has&#13;
hated, and wished ill to all ever since." '&#13;
A week later, the group again climbed the cliff,&#13;
and De Vekey said prayers . This time, nothing&#13;
unusual happened . Afterward the medium said:&#13;
"I think the unquiet spirit has been laid to rest&#13;
forever."&#13;
• Malign presence&#13;
But has it?, only recently, two climbers felt a&#13;
" malign presence" hovering over them as they&#13;
walked along the downs behind Beachy Head . Is&#13;
the mysterious evil thing which lurks above the sea&#13;
again ready to claim more victims? &#13;
sports&#13;
Ranger Relays hosted twelve schools&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Friday, November 18, the&#13;
Uw-Parksfde Men's and Women's&#13;
Swim teams held the fifth&#13;
annual Ranger Relays. This is a&#13;
co-ed swim meet which consists&#13;
entirely of relays, plus the one&#13;
meter dive. In the relay events&#13;
there are two men and two&#13;
women together on a relay team.&#13;
The first year the Relays were&#13;
held was in 1973 with six teams&#13;
attending. By 1977 the Ranger&#13;
Relays have expanded to twelve&#13;
competing teams, from Carroll&#13;
College, Carthage, Univ. of&#13;
Chicago, George Williams,&#13;
Illinois Benedictine, Chicago&#13;
Circle, Lake Forrest, lawrence,&#13;
Valpraiso, UW-Milwaukee, UWWhitewater,&#13;
and UW-Parkside.&#13;
Taking first place in the Relays&#13;
this year with 111 points was&#13;
University of Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Circle, by capturing first place in&#13;
seven of the ten events, and also&#13;
taking one second and one third.&#13;
In second overall was lake&#13;
Forrest College with 89 points,&#13;
including two firsts and three&#13;
second place finishes. Close&#13;
behind in third was UW-Milwaukee&#13;
with 87 points overall,&#13;
including three seconds and two&#13;
thirds. UW-Parkside made a fine&#13;
showing by coming in eighth out&#13;
of twelve with 45 points, beating&#13;
out Carroll College, Illinois&#13;
Benedictine, lawrence University,&#13;
and University of Chicago;&#13;
to make 1977 their highest&#13;
scoring and best overall finish in&#13;
the history of the Relays.&#13;
Parkside's highest placing relay&#13;
wasin the 450 Breastroke, with a&#13;
fourth place' finish, team&#13;
membersconsisted of Kauffman,&#13;
Haas,Melotik, and Wtipil.&#13;
Nader KO's the sports industry&#13;
[CPS] - "Ralph Nader KO's the sports industry." "Mail is 99.9% in support," Ford said. "Everyone&#13;
Such may be future headlines as the consumer is complaining about bad treatment by stadium&#13;
saviors' latest venture revs up for action. managers or feeling ripped off."&#13;
Nader'snew consumer protection group, Fight to Another challenge to FANSwill be destroying the&#13;
Advance the Nation's Sports (FANS) will take on myth that sports is a non-profit entity. A look at&#13;
organized sports with traditional Nader tactics. And figures show otherwise. Television network&#13;
what a fight it promises to be with sports fans revenues for last year alone were $656 million.&#13;
'providing the action instead of players. Football fans pay the highest ticket prices which&#13;
Tackling organized sports will be Nader's biggest average $9.67, going as high as $11.79.&#13;
challenge to date. Fans (the traditional kind) are a Terming sportsa "monopoly industry," Ford said&#13;
diverse group but have one quirk in common. that "like all monopolies it breeds arrogance." He&#13;
They're junkies about sports. like all junkies they've proposesthat FANSattempt to curb that arrogance&#13;
passivelypaid the rising costs of their addiction. So by demanding public disclosure of profits. The&#13;
passively that the average fan may eventually be consumer group has already begun a campaign&#13;
priced out of the arena. against the National Football league to regulate&#13;
Nader's challenge will be to convince once next year's ticket prices by imposing a ceiling that&#13;
passivefans to become militant FANS. The major would_be lower than this year's highest prices.&#13;
goal of the consumer group will be to lower ticket FANS contends that the public pays for sports&#13;
prices, but it's questionable if S" arts enthusiasts will whether or not they attend sports events. For&#13;
be willing (or able) to apply Nader's tactics. Can instance, the Washington Redskins stadium was&#13;
they go cold turkey with a boycott if the industry built with public funds. Tickets are sold on a&#13;
proves hard nosed? seasonal basis with corporations buying up huge&#13;
Spokesperson Jim Ford from FANS headquarters blocks of seats. Ten thousand members of the&#13;
in Washington Dt thinks so. taxpaying public are on a waiting list for seats.&#13;
"Response had been slow at first because of Adding to public inaccessibility TV blackouts of&#13;
negative media coverage. But membership and local games is standard in numerous cities.&#13;
inquiry letters have tripled in the last tWQweeks. A Therefore a large segment of the public is denied&#13;
second wave started." any accessto a sporting event, FANS claim.&#13;
Ford is optimistic about meeting FANS goal for Then there's those cold hot dogs and warm&#13;
10-20,000 members (at $9 a membership) by suds.&#13;
January.&#13;
Trading sex for grades&#13;
(CPS) The scenario: a&#13;
darkened campus except for the&#13;
sporadic office lights of this or&#13;
that professor logging overtime&#13;
helping students with their&#13;
scholarly pursuits. They've just&#13;
exhausted the literary implications&#13;
of Melville, or perhaps the&#13;
funeral practices of the Bantu.&#13;
Papers are shuffled, throats&#13;
e- cleared, books closed and the&#13;
professor swivels around to face&#13;
tbe answer to his/her proposition.&#13;
It is, in the phrase of the&#13;
Southern Illinois University at&#13;
Edwardsville Alestle, another&#13;
case of "sex for grades."&#13;
Although no formal grievance&#13;
has ever been filed by an SlUE&#13;
student, Vice President C.&#13;
'Scully' Stikes considers sex in&#13;
academia a commonplace ocCurrence.&#13;
"I suspect its like the&#13;
iceberg phenomena," he said;&#13;
"only the tip is showing."&#13;
Professors engaging in such&#13;
activity could incur dismissal&#13;
under the sexual misconduct and&#13;
moral turpitude provisions of the&#13;
school statutes.&#13;
Earllazerson, provost at SlUE,&#13;
feels that students are wary of&#13;
engaging in formal grievance&#13;
procedures because "there's a&#13;
possibility of harassment."&#13;
Philosophy professor Sheila Ruth&#13;
attributes it to fear. "Its almost&#13;
impossible to get a conviction on&#13;
rape or sexual abuse," she said.&#13;
Ruth-drew an analogy between&#13;
the university and industry,&#13;
where women have to "put out&#13;
to improve their position."&#13;
Women's volleyball second at WWIAC&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
SportsEditor&#13;
The 1977 ParkSIde Women's&#13;
Volleyball Team took a second&#13;
place finish in the WWIAC State&#13;
Volleyball Tournament, November&#13;
11 an_d 12. On Sunday&#13;
afternoon, November 13, Parkside's&#13;
Coach linda Draft&#13;
received an 'at large bid' to the&#13;
1977 Midwest Regionals at Ohio&#13;
Northern, on November 19 and&#13;
20. At regionals the team&#13;
finished sixth out of twelve&#13;
schools and beat out lewis&#13;
College (7th place). whose beat&#13;
them twice, earlier in the season.&#13;
In the finals at state, Parkside&#13;
was defeated by Carroll College&#13;
in a three out of five match, 15-9,&#13;
16-14,15-9. Thus Carroll won the&#13;
right to the Midwest Regionals,&#13;
but Parkside also won the right&#13;
through an 'at large bid'.&#13;
I'l, regionals competition,&#13;
Parkside's first opponent was&#13;
Spring Arbor (Michigan's state&#13;
champs); whom the Rangers&#13;
defeated 15-7, 15-9 Their next&#13;
opponent was Mount St. Josephs&#13;
(Ohio's state champs and last&#13;
year's regional champs), whom&#13;
they lost to 15-5, 15-10 Though&#13;
they lost Parksrde played well&#13;
and proved to be one of St.&#13;
Joseph's toughest competitors,&#13;
asSt. Joe'swent on to regain the&#13;
1977 Regtonals title Parkside&#13;
made it to the quarterfinals,&#13;
where they played George&#13;
Williams College (Hlinors' state&#13;
champs). and were defeated&#13;
15-13, 15-4. George Williams&#13;
went on to capture second place&#13;
and Carroll College (Wisconsin&#13;
state champs) took third, which&#13;
will gain them a bid to Nationals.&#13;
"The team really peaked at the&#13;
right time". commented volleyball&#13;
Coach Linda Draft. "They&#13;
turned in their best performance&#13;
ever this weekend and were&#13;
paved many compliments by&#13;
other coaches and officials on&#13;
their fine teamwork. You can&#13;
look for the team to be back at&#13;
Regronalsagain next year"&#13;
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sport~&#13;
Ranger Relays hosted twelve schools&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Friday, November 18, the&#13;
UW-Parkside Men's and Women's&#13;
Swim teams held the fifth&#13;
annual Ranger Relays . This is a&#13;
co-ed swim meet which consists&#13;
entirely of relays, plus the one&#13;
meter dive. In the relay events&#13;
there are two men and two&#13;
women together on a relay team .&#13;
The first year the Relays were&#13;
held was in 1973 with six teams&#13;
attending. By 1977 the Ranger&#13;
Relays have expanded to twelve&#13;
competing teams, from Carroll&#13;
College, Carthage, Univ . of&#13;
Chicago, George Williams ,&#13;
Illinois Benedictine, Chicago&#13;
Circle, Lake Forrest, Lawrence,&#13;
Valpraiso, UW-Milwaukee, UWWhitewater,&#13;
and UW-Parkside.&#13;
Taking first place in the Relays&#13;
this year with 111 points was&#13;
University of Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Circle, by capturing first place in&#13;
seven of the ten events, and also&#13;
taking one second and one third .&#13;
In second overall was Lake&#13;
Forrest College with 89 points,&#13;
including two firsts and three&#13;
second place finishes . Close&#13;
behind in third was UW-Milwaukee&#13;
with 87 points overall,&#13;
including three seconds and two&#13;
thirds . UW-Parkside made a fine&#13;
showing by coming in eighth out&#13;
of twelve with 45 points, beating&#13;
out Carroll College, Illinois&#13;
Benedictine, Lawrence University,&#13;
and University of Chicago;&#13;
to make 1977 their highest&#13;
scoring and best overall finish in&#13;
the history of the Relays .&#13;
Parkside's highest placing relay&#13;
was in the 450 Breastroke, with a&#13;
fourth place finish, team&#13;
members consisted of Kauffman,&#13;
Haas, Melotik, and Wtipil.&#13;
Nader KO' s the sports industry [CPS] - "Ralph Nader KO's the sports inrJustry ." "Mail is 99.9% in support," Ford said " Everyone&#13;
Such may be future headlines as the consumer is complaining about bad treatment by stadium&#13;
saviors' latest venture revs up for action . managers or feeling ripped off."&#13;
Nader's new consumer protection group, Fight to Anoth~r challenge to FANS will be destroying the&#13;
Advance the Nation's Sports (FANS) will take on myth that sports is a non-profit entity . A look at&#13;
organized sports with traditional Nader tactics.And figures show otherw ise . Television network&#13;
what a fight it prom ises to be with sports fans revenues for last year alone were $656 mill ion&#13;
• providing the action instead of players . Football fans pay the highest t icket prices which&#13;
Tackling organized sports will be Nader's biggest average $9.67, going as high as $11.79.&#13;
challenge to date. Fans (the traditional l&lt;.ind) are a Terming sports a "monopoly industry," Ford said&#13;
diverse group but have one quirk in common. that " like all monopolies it breeds arrogance." He&#13;
They're junkies about sports. Like all junkies they've proposes that FANS attempt to curb that arrogance&#13;
passively paid the rising costs of their addiction . So by demanding publ ic disclosure of profits. The&#13;
passively that the average fan may eventually be consumer group has already begun a campaign&#13;
priced out of the arena. against the National Football League to regulate&#13;
Nader's challenge will be to convince once next year's ticket prices by imposing a ceiling that&#13;
passive fans to become militant FANS. The major would be lower than this year's highest prices .&#13;
goal of the consumer group will be to lower ticket FANS contends that the public pays for sports&#13;
prices, but it's questionable ifs· orts enthusiasts will whether or not they attend sports events . For&#13;
be willing (or able) to apply Nader's tactics . Can instance, the Washington Redskins stadium was&#13;
they go cold turkey with a boycott if the industry built with public funds. Tickets are sold on a&#13;
proves hard nosed? seasonal basis with corporations buying up huge&#13;
Spokesperson Jim Ford from FANS headquarters blocks of seats . Ten thousand members of the&#13;
in Washington DC thinks so. taxpaying public are on a waiting list for seats .&#13;
" Response had been slow at first because of Adding to public inaccessibility TV blackouts of&#13;
negative media coverage . But membership and local games is standard in numerous cities .&#13;
inquiry letters have tripled in the last two weeks . A Therefore a large segment of the public is denied&#13;
second wave started ." any access to a sporting event, FANS claim .&#13;
Ford is optimistic about meeting FANS goal for Then there's those cold hot dogs and warm&#13;
10-20,000 members (at $9 a membership) by suds ...&#13;
Jil'ading sex for grades&#13;
Philosophy professor Sheila Ruth&#13;
attributes it to fear. "Its almost&#13;
impossible to get a conviction on&#13;
rape or sexual abuse," she said.&#13;
Ruth drew an analogy between&#13;
the university and industry,&#13;
where women have to "put out&#13;
to improve their position."&#13;
Women's volleyball second at WWIAC&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The 1977 Parkside Women's&#13;
Volleyball Team took a second&#13;
place finish in the WWIAC State&#13;
Volleyball Tournament, ovember&#13;
11 and 12. On Sunday&#13;
afternoon, November 13, Parkside'&#13;
s Coach Linda Draft&#13;
received an 'at large bid' to the&#13;
1977 Midwest Regionals at Ohio&#13;
Northern, on ovember 19 and&#13;
20 . At regionals the team&#13;
finished sixth out of twelve&#13;
schools and beat out lewis&#13;
College (7th place), whose beat&#13;
them twice, earlier in the season.&#13;
In the finals at state, Parkside&#13;
was defeated by Carroll College&#13;
in a three out of five match, 15-9,&#13;
16-14, 15-9. Thus Carroll won the&#13;
right to the Midwest Regionals,&#13;
but Parkside also won the right&#13;
through an 'at large bid'&#13;
lrt regionals competition ,&#13;
Parkside's first opponent was&#13;
Spring Arbor (Michigan's state&#13;
champs ), whom the Rangers&#13;
defeated 15-7, 15·9. Their next&#13;
- opponent was Mount St. Jo phs&#13;
(Ohio's state champ and la t&#13;
year's regional champs); whom&#13;
they lost to 15-5, 15-.10 Though&#13;
they lost Parkside played well&#13;
and proved to be one of St.&#13;
Joseph's toughest competitors,&#13;
as St. Joe's went on to regain the&#13;
1977 Regionals title. Parkside&#13;
made it to the quarterfinals,&#13;
where they played George&#13;
Williams College (Illinois' state&#13;
champs), and were defeated&#13;
15-13, 15-4. George Williams&#13;
went on to capture second place&#13;
and Carroll College (Wisconsin&#13;
state champs) took third, which&#13;
will gain them a bid to Nationals&#13;
"The team really peaked at the&#13;
right tame" , commented volleyball&#13;
Coach Linda Draft "They&#13;
turned an their best performance&#13;
ever this weekend and were&#13;
payed many compliments by&#13;
other coaches and officials on&#13;
their fine teamwork. You can&#13;
look for the team to be back at&#13;
Regionals again next year "&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639-6662&#13;
Oper.i Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday 9am-5: 30pm&#13;
:• .. ·:&#13;
·. : .... •&#13;
(CPS) - The scenario: a&#13;
darkened campus except for the&#13;
sporadic office lights of this or&#13;
that professor logging overtime&#13;
helping students with their&#13;
scholarly pursuits. They've just&#13;
exhausted the literary implications&#13;
of Melville, or perhaps the&#13;
funeral practices of the Bantu.&#13;
Papers are shuffled, throats&#13;
cleared, books closed and the&#13;
professor swivels around to face&#13;
tbe answer to his/her proposition.&#13;
It is, in the phr.ase of the&#13;
Southern Illinois University at&#13;
Edwardsville Alestle, another&#13;
case of "sex for grades."&#13;
Although no formal grievance&#13;
has ever been filed by an SIUE&#13;
student, Vice President C.&#13;
, 'Scully' Stikes considers sex in&#13;
academia a commonplace occurrence.&#13;
"I suspect its like the&#13;
iceberg phenomena," he said,&#13;
"only the tip is showing."&#13;
BooD l,y f/,e Pound&#13;
Professors engaging in such&#13;
activity could incur dismissal&#13;
under the sexual misconduct and&#13;
moral turpitude provisions of the&#13;
school statutes.&#13;
Earl Lazerson, provost at SIUE,&#13;
feels that students are wary of&#13;
engaging in formal grievance&#13;
procedures because "there's a&#13;
possibility of harassment."&#13;
49D -UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
lll1Nay - n1ruay 9 a.1. - 7 ,.1.&#13;
Fri•ay 9 a.1. - 4 ,.1.&#13;
Sat1r•ay 11 a.1. - 1 J.1.&#13;
CLOSED THANKSGIVING WEEKEND &#13;
events&#13;
Little Matthew Malza n gets an ear y introduction&#13;
to a microscope in the University of&#13;
wisconsin-Patkside classroom where his mother&#13;
Marianne [Mrs. Mark Malzahn] felt her first labor&#13;
pains just six weeks ago. They're shown with Prof.&#13;
Anna Maria Williams, left, who teaches the&#13;
microbiology class which was -in .progress when&#13;
Matthew announced his imminent arrival. Mrs.&#13;
Malzahn, a nursing student, missed only one class&#13;
before returning to school. The Malzahns live at&#13;
6731 32nd Ave., Kenosha; .&#13;
Wednesday, November 23&#13;
Turkey Dance with the Crystals at 9:00 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission $1.00 students and $1.50&#13;
guests. ID's required.&#13;
Friday, November 25&#13;
Basketball Season Opener Rangers vs. Milton at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the P.E. Building.&#13;
Saturday, November 26&#13;
Basketball Rangers vs. Wayne State' at 2:00 p.rn. in&#13;
the P.E. Building.&#13;
Tuesday, November 27&#13;
Concert Parkside Percussion Ensemble at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre:&#13;
Wednesday, November 30&#13;
Concert student recitals at 3:00 p.m. in CA D-118.&#13;
Basl&lt;etball Rangers vs. St. Xavier in Chicago at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
classified&#13;
Need Rid_II Need a tall gOod-lookIng guy&#13;
with a Monte Carlo (red preferably) to&#13;
chauffer me from the. main concourse to&#13;
Tallent partdng lot. call: 654--5308.&#13;
1973 Klwaukl 175 cern, 7000 miles,&#13;
excellent condition. S280. with helment.&#13;
Further Information call Goetz, Burlington,&#13;
763-ll564.&#13;
Host hmlly ¥i.ntlld Helpl, I'm 20 years old&#13;
and looking for a host family In Kenosha. I&#13;
am an I.C.Y.E. exchange student from&#13;
Germany. If yOUare inter'88ted. please call&#13;
652-8620.&#13;
NeIld Ride Student from Burlington wants&#13;
rider to share driving &amp; expenses. Call Jim&#13;
(414) 534-6232.&#13;
Friday, December 2&#13;
Movie Dog Day Afternoon at 8:00 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Rt 5 TRI CljED&#13;
PMKIN(,&#13;
Sunday, December 4&#13;
Fall Sports Banquet&#13;
.&#13;
in the Union Cafeteria at&#13;
.,&#13;
6:00&#13;
p.m. Tickets are $5.00 on sale in the P.E. Office.&#13;
,&#13;
Women and law ,&#13;
discussed today&#13;
Attorney Mary Sfasciotti will talk on "Women and the Law" at a&#13;
brown bag lunch at the University of Wisconsin-Parks ide at noon on&#13;
Wednesday, November 23, in the Union, Room 207. The program,&#13;
sponsored by the office of Community Student Services, is open to&#13;
the public as well as the campus community. '&#13;
Ms. Sfasciotti is in private practice in Kenosha and Chicago and is&#13;
chairman of the Chicago Bar Association Committee on Immigration&#13;
and- Naturalization and a member of the National Association of&#13;
Immigration and-Naturalization Lawyers. She previously was senior&#13;
trial attorney for the Equal Opportunity Commission Chicago&#13;
Litigation Center. She received her JD degree from Northwestern&#13;
University and has been a faculty member at John Marshall Law&#13;
School of Chicago.&#13;
UNION&#13;
SGUARE&#13;
PRESENTS :&#13;
THANKSfJlVlNfJ&#13;
_HAPWHOUR&#13;
W ay 3-6 Pm&#13;
BEER 2S~&#13;
PITCHER BEER'&#13;
~1.2S&#13;
P.A.B.'S PERFORMING ARTS &amp; LECTURE&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
NATIONAL TOUR-BROADWAY CAST&#13;
CABARET&#13;
TH.URS., DEC. 1 8:00 p.m.&#13;
COMM. ARTS THEATRE'&#13;
Adm, U.W. P. Students 53.00·&#13;
General 55.00&#13;
......................................................&#13;
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS FAIR&#13;
SATURDAl, DECEMBER 3&#13;
10-9&#13;
MAIN PLACE I&#13;
r&#13;
FREE&#13;
events&#13;
Little Matthew Ma za n gets an ear y introduction&#13;
to a microscope in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside classroom where his mother&#13;
Mar.ianne [Mrs. Mark Malzahn] felt her first labor&#13;
pains just six weeks ago. They're shown with Prof.&#13;
Anna Maria Williams, left, who teaches the&#13;
microbiology class which was in progress when&#13;
Matthew announced his imminent arrival. Mrs.&#13;
Malzahn, a nursing student, missed only one class&#13;
before returning to school. The Malzahns live at&#13;
6731 32nd Ave., Kenosha;&#13;
Wednesday, November 23&#13;
Turkey Dance with the Crystals at 9:00 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission $1.00 students and $1.50&#13;
guests. ID's required.&#13;
Friday, November 25&#13;
Basketball Season Opener Rangers vs. Milton at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the P.E. Building.&#13;
Saturday, November 26&#13;
Basketball Rangers vs. Wayne State· at 2:00 p.m . in&#13;
the P.E. Building.&#13;
Tuesday, November 27&#13;
Concert Parkside Percussion Ensemble at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Wednesday, November 30&#13;
Concert student recitals at 3:00 p.m. in CA D-118.&#13;
Basketball Rangers vs. St. Xavier in Chicago at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Friday, December 2&#13;
Movie Dog Day Afternoon at 8:00 p.m. in Union&#13;
Gnema.&#13;
Sunday, December 4&#13;
Fall Sports Banquet in the Union Cafeteria at 6:00 . ...., p.m. Tickets are $5.00 on sale in the P.E. Office.&#13;
classified&#13;
NNd ~Id• II Neoo a tall good-look Ing guy&#13;
with a Monte Carlo (red preferably) to&#13;
chauller me from the main concourse to&#13;
Tallent parking lot. Call: 654-5308.&#13;
1973 Kawuakl 175 ccm, 7000 miles,&#13;
excellent condition. $280. with helment.&#13;
Further Information call Goetz, Burlington,&#13;
763-8564.&#13;
Host Family Wanted Helpl, I'm 20 years old&#13;
and looking for a host family in Kenosha. I&#13;
am an I.C.Y.E. exchange student from&#13;
Germany. If you are interested, please call&#13;
652-ll620.&#13;
NNd Rlcle Student from Burlington wants&#13;
rider to share driving &amp; expenses. Call Jim&#13;
(414) 534-6232.&#13;
RE.5 fRJC:1jED&#13;
PARKING&#13;
!&gt;EC"'- ,. ~Al.&#13;
a&#13;
:....... I C -·I&#13;
1Y,f2 j&#13;
f)&#13;
..&#13;
I&#13;
Women and law&#13;
discussed today&#13;
Attorney Mary Sfasciotti will talk on "Women and the Law" at a&#13;
brown bag lunch at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside at noon on&#13;
Wednesday, November 23, in the Union, Room 207. The program,&#13;
sponsored by the office of Community Student Services, is open to&#13;
the public as well as the campus community. '&#13;
Ms. Sfasciotti is in private practice in Kenosha and Chicago and is&#13;
chairman of the Chicago Bar Association Committee on Immigration&#13;
and Naturalization and a member of the National Association of&#13;
Immigration and-Naturalization Lawyers. She previously was senior&#13;
trial attorney for the Equal Opportunity Commission Chicago&#13;
Litigation Center. She received her JD degree from Northwestern&#13;
University and has been a faculty member at John Marshall Law&#13;
School of Chicago.&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PRESENTS:&#13;
THANKSfJIV/NfJ&#13;
_HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Wednesday 3-6 Pm&#13;
BEER 2St&#13;
PITCHER BEER -&#13;
*1.2S&#13;
P.A.B.'S PERFORMING ARTS &amp; LECTURE&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
NATIONAL TOUR-BROADWAY CAST&#13;
CABARET&#13;
THURS., DEC. 1 8:00 p.m.&#13;
COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
Adm: U.W. P. Students $3.00&#13;
General $5.00&#13;
······················································&#13;
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS FAIR&#13;
SATURDA1, DECEMBER 3&#13;
10-9&#13;
MAIN PLACE&#13;
FREE . </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 13, November 23, 1977</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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