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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Chris Daniel wins PSGA vice presidency on write-in campaign</text>
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              <text>I.~..._"'....'s R"n ....r&#13;
- _.&#13;
}; i -- -- --- -&#13;
~&#13;
, II"'" "Zippy"from Madison In Sports&#13;
"Eat S art" . . I declareswar on Parkside. m nutnhon week Spring is budding with&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
Page 3 - The. attack commgup. Ranger baseball and softball&#13;
Page2-The counterattack Page 6 openers.&#13;
I.. Pa~e12&#13;
Thursday. March 22, 1990&#13;
ChrisDaniel wins PSGAvice presidency on write-in campaign&#13;
byDan Cbi~ppetta sta~ ~ident-elect Bill Homer. resp.e~ted. by faculty and to be brought out" "Chris encourages student&#13;
News Ecbtor lbeliev~togetherwe(Horner) administration. We need greater Daniel credits the benefits participation by his ability to&#13;
Tomorrow, C~s Daniel, cana~mp~shthem~ygoalswe communication lines between UW-Parlcsideoffers. "The access motivate swdents. By electing&#13;
presently a Parkside Student seek, explained Daniel. students, faculty, and to faculty is most defmitely a Chris as vice president, IJWGovernmentAssociation&#13;
senator, Daniel would like to build administration." positive. High administrative Parlcside is one step closer in&#13;
IIilIbe sworn in as vice president credibility for PSGA as an 0"I would like to see alumni respect for you and the assistance gaining more student&#13;
oIPSGA. organization and would like to get come to UW-Parkside as role youreceiveisoutstanding. Iftaken involvement," said latesha Jude,&#13;
Asawrite-incandidate, Daniel a lot more student involvement not models to encourage students." advantage of, great educational UW -Parlcside senator.&#13;
defeated write-in candidate Mario only in PSGA, but other 0 Daniel would like to see opportunity. Staff deserves a 101 "By next year Iwould like to&#13;
I&#13;
REcio.The unofficial vote count . organizations. "I want to reach out local government involvement "I more praise than it gets." . see 3,000 votes, then we&#13;
!illS Daniel's60 votes to Riccio's to the students." Daniel's other would like to get local government Apathy seems to bea problem, accomplished something. If we&#13;
23VOfeS. goals are as follows. speakers to get involved. The according to Daniel. "Lack of care and if we worl&lt; to~ether, we&#13;
"Voters could not have made a 0 Daniel wants to be heard. "I significance of local government student mvotvernem IS a problem can accomplish something," added&#13;
IA~~~;h~;efo;anp;;k;id:~;hl~;di:~;~ti~~~s ~;~;:i;~tio:t~es place&#13;
byDan Cbiappetta accesstoourfunds,wecanactua1ly program service, while soc s mmutes are approved we can go on year. We have a frequency&#13;
News Editor do something now," explained purpose is to provide information the air by the end of A~." . allocated to.1lSalready:". , .&#13;
Harris for all the clubs on campus, in As of now, WZRX s budget IS Accordmg to Harris II S gomg "W:zRx will be a standing which theradiostationwould allow. frozen until the senate passes ~ totake,aIOlof~worIc. "Iknow&#13;
committee of SOC; they have their Harris was highly minutes. In other ~ords the radio what Im domg. . . .&#13;
b dget," staled Uebe. f recommendedtotake over the radio station does not exist, Anyone who IS mteresled 10&#13;
own u , . has . oaI .. WZRX can taCt There was much discussion as station. "I have ten years Harris two main g S. 8SS1S~~ '. ~&#13;
towho should run the radio station, experience, I know how a "I'm working on gewng WZRX Harri~ m PSGA, Wyllie LIbrary&#13;
PSGA or SOC. Many people felt commercialradiostationissuppose directly 10 the dorms. My other Learnmg Center D139A.&#13;
thatPSGA isnotthere to provide a to run," emphasized Harris. "If the goal IS to be on FM radio by next&#13;
OnMarch9,1990, theParlcside&#13;
SludentGovernment Association&#13;
PiSSed the proposal of allowing&#13;
UW·Parkside's radio station,&#13;
tIZRx, to be run under Student&#13;
OItanizationsCouncil, Before&#13;
'InRx OrSOC can stan any plans,&#13;
IhcPSGAsenate needs to approve&#13;
IhcMatch9, 1990 senate minutes&#13;
tiring tomorrow's senate meeting.&#13;
'Thesenateshouldn'thaveany&#13;
JlObIem passing the minutes," said&#13;
~ BethDebe, vice president of&#13;
OnFeb.16,1990,anexecutive&#13;
tlion was taken by locking up&#13;
~. Lack of leadership, lack&#13;
allOtganization,and stolen material&#13;
COntrIbutedto the locking up of&#13;
!be radiostation.&#13;
. "If the senate approves the&#13;
lllinlltes,all the funds will be&#13;
1Iansrerred to SOC," explained&#13;
Teresa Harris, WZRX station&#13;
lllanager.&#13;
~ Al this time, and during the&#13;
'up, WZRX was a sub-&#13;
=:nee of PSG~. "PSG.A /las&#13;
.... uoponant things to attend&#13;
~ lidded Debe. . . '.&#13;
.1:"':'UnderSOC we have more;.&#13;
Horn~rupsets Prange in PSGA presidency race&#13;
president. This was Homer's second term as&#13;
o Create more student senator.&#13;
involvement in PSGA and other HomerbelievesUW-Parlcside&#13;
organizations. is a very positive university.&#13;
o To help UW·Parkside get "UW-PadcsideofTersexcellent&#13;
more funding from the UW- educational quality. There'salsoa&#13;
System. close relation betweenstudentsan~&#13;
o To create more public faculty. It's a beautiful campus,&#13;
awareness ofUW -Parksidelocally he said. .&#13;
and statewide. "This is one of the Homer ISseen as a co,~med&#13;
finest, if not the finest academic and dedicated person. I w~t&#13;
institution in the system. We don't students to come to PSGA WIth&#13;
have to take a back seallOanyone," their problems concernmg faculty,&#13;
explained Homer. staff, administration, or whate:er&#13;
. Homer is a political science it may be, we Will do our best .&#13;
and psychology major who plans Homer also plans on working&#13;
. h I hard t 'ncrease enrollment and on gOlOg to law sc 00 or 0 I .' .&#13;
counseling in the future. Homer is opponunities formmonues and the&#13;
a member of the Segregated disadvantaged. Homer would also&#13;
University Fees Allocati.on like to ~ mon: programs for&#13;
Committee and theParlcside Umon students m the Dmon.&#13;
Advisory Board Food Committee. "By the end of my term, I&#13;
by Dan Cbiappetta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
On March 8, 1990, Bill Homer&#13;
defeated the present Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
president, Don Prange. .The&#13;
unofficial vote count for president&#13;
was Homer with 122 votes to&#13;
Prange's 82 votes.&#13;
"I care about the students and&#13;
UW-Parkside," said Homer, a&#13;
PSGA senator who tomorrow will&#13;
take the office of president of&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
. "Bill is a positive role model&#13;
for UW -Parkside students and I&#13;
feel that be will do the best he can&#13;
to represent the students," said&#13;
Latesha Jude, PSGA senator.&#13;
Homer has three main goals&#13;
he plans on accomplishing as&#13;
President-elect Bill HOI'Mr&#13;
would like 10 say that I&#13;
conuibuted in makinga diffecence.&#13;
I'm high on Parkside," added&#13;
Homer .&#13;
2 Thursday, March 22, 1990 Ranger&#13;
~~23QQif\ion&#13;
Parkside Says zip it, Zippy&#13;
Theleare 13 UniverSity01 Wisconsin lour-year campuses across the slate,&#13;
and believe ijor not UW·Madison is only one of them. AlthOughtheir enrollment&#13;
is by far the highest inthe sys1lllTl, they are quick to forget that they are just one&#13;
slice of the UW pie.&#13;
Uis obvious that the Madison campus turns its nose up at all of the other&#13;
campuses. They seem to IIlinkthat they are superior to all the other members of&#13;
the system. JohnZipperer states in his article (see article on page 3) that Parkside&#13;
is an inefficientindustry and should be shut down. The enrollment of the Madison&#13;
campus is roughly ten times that of Parkside. Doesn't this imply that ifthey are&#13;
an efficient business that they should be producing a product that is ten times&#13;
better than ours. This product is the college graduate, and for those of you who&#13;
have not yet realized it the schoOl on the diploma has much less to do with the&#13;
graduates' success than do the personal abilities of the individuals.&#13;
"Zippy"also says that Madison's Wisconsin Student Association could show&#13;
us how to get moneywhilewe could show them how to chum butter and slaughter&#13;
cows. This is a cute but archaic little analogy. Madison students could probably&#13;
teach us a great deal more about how to destroy an entire street on Halloween&#13;
than they could about anything else. Wake up and smell the espresso, Zippy.&#13;
More people go away to Madison to get away from the wrath of mommy and daddy&#13;
than for any other reason, and chances are they still expect mommy and daddy&#13;
to pay the bar lab.&#13;
We did not wish to stoop to the level of mudslinging that Mr. (we would like&#13;
10 call him something else other than Mr., but the Ranger likes 10 remain&#13;
joumalisticly ethical) Zipperer did in his article, but since he seems to think that&#13;
peeIilg mud off of tractor treads is the most common career of Parllside&#13;
graduates, here are a lew interesting points about the real comparisons between&#13;
Madison and Parkside.&#13;
1. Approximately 87 percent of the Parkside faculty have terminal degrees&#13;
or a Ph.D intheir field of specialty, and believe it or not they actually teach their&#13;
own classes. Parkside students are given personal instruction in the classroom&#13;
by professors who aclually know the names of most of their students. Madison&#13;
students spend a great deal more money for being instructed by undergraduate&#13;
and graduate student cronies (most 01whom cannot speak the English language)&#13;
rather than by the acluat professors in many cases. Does the professor sit in a&#13;
glass box in front of the lecture hall while a teaching assistant says, 'Here is your&#13;
professor, but he doesn't want anything 10 do with you?' Mr. Zipperer also&#13;
indirecUystates that Parkside does not have real sludents. We ask you who the&#13;
real students are here. Ale they students being taught by students or are they&#13;
students being taught by experts in their field.&#13;
2. Parkside, or any of the other'Uttie campuses' in the UW System may not&#13;
have the funding that Madison does, but at least we are not paying for a "running&#13;
in the red' football program that willnever have a winning record inthis millenium.&#13;
Parksiide doesn't need Waupun 10make license plates like Madison doesso itcan&#13;
finance its mismanaged athletic department. II the Wisconsin taxpayer were&#13;
smart, he would close up Madison's athletic program and make some so-called&#13;
athletes graduate. And once new football coach Barry A1varezhearsthe beck and&#13;
call of Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Rorida, or Arizona, he won't knoWwhere or what&#13;
Madison is.&#13;
The Badger HeraJdisan award-winning paper which many respect and look&#13;
10for style and content tips. Unfortunately, staff members like Mr. Zipperer have&#13;
done a great deal of harm 10 that image. A newspaper as professional as the&#13;
Herald should not be concemed with taking cheap shots at the newspapers of&#13;
fellow system schools. II should be concerned with professionalism and the&#13;
promotion of other joumalism programs in the UW System. The Herald should be&#13;
a model for other campus newspapers. If the He!ald is going 10stoop to the level&#13;
that Mr. Zipperer did in his recent column, weH, there's always recycling.&#13;
Once ~ note on Zippy: is this the same "Zippy" that was the weather&#13;
monkey on -I ne Today Show" in the 19505? Go figure.&#13;
J,etter to the Edjtoc&#13;
Facil~tiesfor handicaDD~d lacking on campus&#13;
_ To the EdItor: not use ",:~l~hairs. The two were again on the UWP campus next&#13;
Something was brought to my -able ID Sit m the theatre and catch year. Let's hope that some&#13;
auentiononTues.,March 13,1990, the last few minutes of a magic adjustments can be implemented&#13;
that I had never realized before. show. However, the other five into the current system to provide a&#13;
Parkside issadly Iackingin facilities children were unable to even get in more efficient atmosphere for the&#13;
forthehandicapped. Ivol~nteered the dOOrw~y. . handicapped.&#13;
at the l~ Very Special ~ Wemls~a1lbutfivemm~tes Working as a volunteer at the&#13;
Festival which was beld atParlcslde. of the show m the Co~mumcabon Festival opened my eyes to many&#13;
Roughly 1,000 st~dents f~m Arts Theatre because It too~ such of the difficulties experienced by&#13;
Kenosha and Racme counues an enormous amoun.t of ume to the handicapped in everyday&#13;
descended on the campus for a day transport the stodents m thecampus situations. Ifthe University can do&#13;
filled with culturally enriching elevators which barely held two something to alleviate potential&#13;
a~tivitiesfrompaintingtomusicto wheelchairs at a time. Larger pitfalls, I think that we owe it to&#13;
SIgn language. In most instances, elevators would allow wheelchair them.&#13;
the children were physically and! bound students better access to&#13;
oremotionally handicapped. Some different levels of the school.&#13;
of the children were wheelchair Finally, I noticed thatParkside&#13;
bound. does not have any drinking&#13;
I was appalled athow difficult fountains placed at an appropriate&#13;
itwastomaneuverthewheelchairs level for those in wheelchairs. I&#13;
around campus. The Parkside have been informed that the&#13;
facilities that serve the handicapped Physical Plant was investigating&#13;
leave a lot to be desired. The most the matter, which I enthusiastically&#13;
significant problem I noted was lbe support. I urge the Parkside&#13;
lack of ramps in the administration to look into this&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. important issue and evaluate&#13;
Stairsareavailableforable-bodied improvements to the present&#13;
spectators, but there isn'tanyroom facilities.&#13;
for wheelchairs. Iassistedagroup It is very likely that the Very&#13;
of seven children, two of whom did Special Arts Festival will beheld&#13;
Gwen Heller&#13;
Environment&#13;
threatened by&#13;
misinformation&#13;
To tbe Editor:&#13;
As the current environmental&#13;
- crisis finally comes ID public&#13;
prominence and mainstream media&#13;
coverage, the misinformation&#13;
propagated by the powers must be&#13;
pointed out, Eager to jump on the&#13;
environmental bandwagon, it&#13;
seems that everyone from&#13;
politicians -to multinational&#13;
Continued on page 3&#13;
!!!!!!~~~!.IEditorial: 553-2287 anger, r $1&#13;
~ew ~ll •.••..•.••...•..•.. ~"O.1~~~~L==~B~U~S~in~~~::5~5~3~~~2~9~5~B~O~X~2~O~oo~,~K~e~n~~~h~a~~~5~321~4~17_L~_~ ~-------~&#13;
Scott S1nqer ••••••••••••••••••..••• Layout Editor Faculty Advisor Stuart Rubner The Ranger is wrinenand edited by studentsof Uw-Perkside who aresolely&#13;
Dan Pacettl ...•••••••••••.•.•••••.••. D ~l t Copy Editor Business Staff •&#13;
responsible for its ed.itcrial policy and content, It is published every Thu"day&#13;
an appet New. Bd1tor d the demi -&#13;
Scott Slng.r .••••.•••.••••.•••• Aa.t. New. Uitor Craig Simpkin••.•.••• _••.••••••• Bu.1n ••• Mana~r unng aea. c~earexceptOYerbreaksandholidays.&#13;
Je~~ LelIIaermann •••••••••••••••••••• Spo::t. Bdl.tor 'lerri Po::tney ••.••••••••••••••••••••••• M. R;P. Letters 10the editor will only be eccepted ifthey are typed, double spaced,and&#13;
Je~~ Reddick •.••••••••••••••• Aa.t. Spo::t. Bdl.tor carol CUri ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Ad. Rep. 350 wo.rdso~less. Allletten most be signed, wilh a telephone numberineluded&#13;
S. • Mant General Staff for verificauon purposes.. Names will.- be withheld upon request&#13;
u ann uano Feature Editor Th R lh D Mall' e anger reserves e nght to edilletteB and refuse those which are false&#13;
awn an~ ••••••••••••.••• Entertainment Mitor Carrie Glidden. 'lonya Ham.11ton.GwenBeller. Gabe and/or defamatory.&#13;
John Kehoe Photo Bclltor ltluka 'led.MoInt - L P uk tll Dca • -J-' yo.. a. ., Kathie Pope, dline for al11el.tersand-classified ads is Monday 8110 a.m. for publication&#13;
Ken Schuh. Thunday.&#13;
53&#13;
r&#13;
---t:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=;=;:::~~==:~:==~:=:==~=:::,==~~R~a~nge~r~T~h~u~rS~'d:a~y;,,' ~M~a~rC~h~22~,~~19~9~O~3&#13;
PublicService Announcements Pa.,r.!n~!:!e~' the TYME has come I. . from The Badger Herald&#13;
March 15, 1990 I Nursingand Pre-Med Studenls who Want experience working with EditorsnOle:The/o/lowingis/rom&#13;
I peopleinahealth related situation. "Reach Out Blood Pressure Awareness the column "Zippy"in the Herald.&#13;
Program" will train and certify you as a blood pressure Measurement God is tempting me.&#13;
I&#13;
Screenerif no' presently certified, Assist or community area clinics with He must be, or things wouldn't&#13;
bIoodpressures.sharing written information and counseling oflow income exist like the latest issue of the&#13;
people,Flexible days and times..As little as 2 hours MONTHLY. . Ranger, the school newspaper of&#13;
'&#13;
I the University of Wisconsin- Wouldyou like to be the editor or your own newsletter? Several non- Parkside. If ever a newspaper&#13;
profit agenciesinKenosha and Racine need creative people with excellent screamed for school aid, well ,•.&#13;
wriling skillsto edit,lay-out and send monthly and quarterly newsletters. It is so tempting. Let me just&#13;
Noexperienceneccessary. English and Communication majors - do you give you the facts. I am not making&#13;
qualify? this up; if! were, then it would have&#13;
something to do with the German&#13;
reunification.&#13;
In a front page story, the&#13;
Ranger reports the UW-Parkside&#13;
will be getting a TYME machine,&#13;
its first, There's even a photo of a&#13;
student standing at a TYME&#13;
machine. Perhaps it's a dramatic&#13;
reenactment of what a UWParkside&#13;
student would look like at&#13;
a TYME machine if UW -Parkside&#13;
had either TYME machines or real&#13;
students.&#13;
UW -Parkside also got its first&#13;
wheel in February. WeU, I'm&#13;
making up that pan. They haven't&#13;
gotten their first wheel yet,&#13;
Now, Parkside deserves to&#13;
enter the 20th century, so we&#13;
. shouldn't be too mean to them.&#13;
Then again, they had better hurry&#13;
because the rest of us are about to&#13;
enter the 2lstcentury,and that's a&#13;
problem for them.&#13;
What the Ranger should have&#13;
. done for Parkside students is&#13;
SpanishCenter In Kenosha has requested help with their afterschaol&#13;
bltoringprograrnfrom3-5prn onTue. andlorThur. Students from 9th-12th&#13;
grades comefor assistance inmatlt, English, and chemistry. Any time from&#13;
8·5prn Mon. through Thur.&#13;
Formore details, contact Carol in the Career Center&#13;
WLLC D175 or call 553.2011.&#13;
News Releases&#13;
FreeIncome Tax 5erviee - UWP accaunting majors and&#13;
Accounting/Rnance Club students will pre pore federal&#13;
and state income tax retums ot no charge. Thisservice is&#13;
provided through the IRSVolunteer Income TaxAssistance&#13;
Progrom and is available to anyone in the community.&#13;
Assistance provided for forms l040EZ. 1040~. 1040.&#13;
Schedules A &amp; B only; Wisc. tax forms 1A. WI-Z. 1. and&#13;
Schedule H.&#13;
Where:Union Overlook; When: EveryThursdayfrom 2:00pm&#13;
·4:oopm through April 12th.&#13;
The ·Surf Boys· will be performing at Parks/de on Friday.&#13;
March 23. Doors open at 8 p.m .. and admission is $2 for&#13;
studentsand $3for non-students ages 18andup. Therewill&#13;
be a tan line. best beachwear. and limbo contest during&#13;
the band's breaks.&#13;
On Thur.,April 19 from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., the Great Skate.&#13;
622067th Street. Kenosha will hold their 18th Annual ten&#13;
hour Skate-a-thon to benefit' the Muscular Dystrophy&#13;
ASSOCiation. Anyone interested in p&lt;Jrticipoting should .&#13;
contact the Great Skate ot 652-8198. 'There isa registrotion&#13;
fee of $3 which includes 10 hours of skoting. skate rental,&#13;
lunch and dinner. Also included will be games, activities,&#13;
and the chance to earn some greot prizes. All proceeds&#13;
from the ten hour Skate-o-thon will service Kenosha area&#13;
residentsaffected by neuromuscular disease.&#13;
The Annual Battle of the Bands will take place on Frl..April&#13;
27. Entryforms can be picked up at the Union Information&#13;
Center and must be returned to the Info. Center by April 9.&#13;
A demo tape must be available. and there isan entry fee.&#13;
First place means the band plays ot Summerfest. The&#13;
second place band will win $200. and the third place band&#13;
\ViIIreceive $100.&#13;
Ms. Angelo Peckenpaugh of Milwaukee. a writer, artist&#13;
and teacher (UW-Whitewater), offers a u~ique&#13;
'Performance Piece" with slides. She presents the lives of&#13;
12women artists. accompanying the slides with readin~s&#13;
Of her Own poems which are of the noture of dram~lc&#13;
rnOnologs. Peckenpaugh provides a program of ~Ides&#13;
Identification along with a bibliogrdphy of women s art&#13;
history. The program runs 50 minutes, More informotion&#13;
about this program will be provided loter.&#13;
b&#13;
Environmental crisis needs community awareness&#13;
Continued from page 2 .&#13;
corporations are paying lip service&#13;
'to environmental consciousness,&#13;
but it is little more than Orwellian&#13;
doublespeak, as their actions, often&#13;
unbeknownst to the public,&#13;
contradict their statements.&#13;
George Bush, after declaring&#13;
himself an environmentalist long&#13;
enough 10be elected, was lobbying&#13;
to allow oil drilling off the&#13;
California coast just days after the&#13;
Exxon Valdex oil spill.&#13;
Congressmen who orate on the&#13;
destruction of the Brazilian&#13;
rainforest, necessary for global&#13;
climate control, simultaneously&#13;
overlook destruction of America's&#13;
own rainforests in the Pacific&#13;
Northwest, sold and defiled by the&#13;
U.S. Forest Service. Companies&#13;
like Dow and Waste Management&#13;
air commercials aimed at giving&#13;
them a false pro-environment&#13;
image. Dow "lets you do great&#13;
things," but the Dow corporation is&#13;
the largest depleter of the ozone&#13;
layer. Waste Management "helps&#13;
the world dispose of its problems,"&#13;
although it happened to be sued&#13;
more than any other company for&#13;
explaintothemhowtouseaTYME&#13;
machine. They might mistakenly&#13;
thinks'it's a laundry chute.&#13;
What we in the modem West&#13;
of Wisconsin must do, not unlike&#13;
West Germans traveling east, is&#13;
send teams of trained experts to&#13;
Parkside to teach them how to&#13;
handle their newfound modernity.&#13;
Maybe Michele Goodwin will go&#13;
if we ...&#13;
No, it's 100 tempting. But yet&#13;
If we set up a sister school&#13;
agreement with UW-Parkside, we&#13;
could let them benefit from our&#13;
technological sophistication, and&#13;
we could benefit by rediscovering&#13;
the quaint traditions of Parks ide&#13;
students. (Three points if you saw&#13;
this coming a few paragraphs back.)&#13;
They could show us how they chum&#13;
butter and slaughter cows for their&#13;
homecoming barn dance. We could&#13;
show them how to get money.&#13;
That's where WSAcomes in.&#13;
Think about how much we&#13;
have to offer them. We have Big&#13;
Ten sports teams, big streets, anda&#13;
big bar-to-student ratio of 2-1.&#13;
If WSA really cares about&#13;
opening up a dialog with students&#13;
of different cultures, then they&#13;
won't pass up the chance to spend&#13;
lots of money meeting with UWParks&#13;
ide student representatives.&#13;
They operate on the Dorito method&#13;
anyway: go ahead, spend all you&#13;
waste disposal violations.&#13;
This type of superficial&#13;
environmentalism is almost as&#13;
dangerous as the anti-environment&#13;
anitude which has characterized&#13;
most of U.S. history. It creates a&#13;
false sense of security; a fantasy&#13;
that our environmental problems&#13;
are being dealt with adequately. In&#13;
fact, it will take a concerted effort&#13;
want. We'll print more.&#13;
Which WSA party will put&#13;
this into their spring election&#13;
platform? Who cares about tuition&#13;
and minority retention and class&#13;
size? We're talking about several&#13;
hundred Parkside students (their&#13;
graduating class) who are doomed&#13;
to spend the rest of their lives&#13;
digging mud out of tractor treads.&#13;
Here is our manifest destiny to&#13;
civilize these people and send them&#13;
to real schools.&#13;
Look around this campus. We&#13;
have 60,000 TYME machines&#13;
here-s-one for every bar. We're&#13;
talking real civilization and we&#13;
shouldn't keep it all for ourselves.&#13;
Ifwe don't bring Parkside up&#13;
to Madison standards, then we face&#13;
the depressing task of having to&#13;
close down Parkside. It's just&#13;
simple capitalism. It's an&#13;
inefficient industry that does not&#13;
keep up with the times, and those&#13;
industries that cannot keep up must&#13;
beshutdown. That would result in&#13;
the direct transfer of thousands or&#13;
. hundreds or lots of small-school&#13;
students to big, efficient schools&#13;
like the UW, and we don't want&#13;
thaL&#13;
One last note on Parkside: on&#13;
page three of the same issue of the&#13;
Ranger, there is a quarter-page&#13;
advertisement for the editor-inchief&#13;
position at that paper. Go&#13;
figure.&#13;
on everyone's part, for it is&#13;
necessary to change the power&#13;
structure, economic system, and&#13;
virtually our entire way of life, if&#13;
IVe are to avert the impending&#13;
ecological disaster. Until this is&#13;
realized,littlecan be accomplished,&#13;
and is best not to believe every thing&#13;
you hear and half of what you see.&#13;
Brendan VaUin&#13;
[Support RangerAdvertisers]&#13;
College Students&#13;
uEARN EXTRA MONEY"&#13;
AND&#13;
HELP OTHERS&#13;
WHILE YOU STUDY&#13;
Plasma Donor Center&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
6212 22nd Ave.&#13;
M-W-F 8:30-3:30&#13;
654-1366&#13;
T-TH 10-5:30&#13;
by Dawn Mailand&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
EtUlOr's Note: For the last&#13;
month, the Ranger has been&#13;
running articles on graduation and&#13;
how to get that "all-important"&#13;
first job. Hereis the last-segment in&#13;
this set of articles. In this week's&#13;
Ranger, you will find out what to&#13;
doanddon'tformakingafavorable&#13;
fust impression.&#13;
For starters. if you want to&#13;
increase the odds of making a&#13;
favorable fust-impression, wear a&#13;
tradition blue or grey suit. A&#13;
contrasting patterned or striped tie&#13;
isa man's wiser choice than a solid&#13;
or knit one. Women should avoid&#13;
noisy, distraeting jewelry. Also,&#13;
seemingly little things like freshly&#13;
shined shoes and well-groomed&#13;
fingernails can make a big&#13;
difference.&#13;
These are a few of the&#13;
principles included in the "Image&#13;
Index." The Index was developed&#13;
by Kiwi Brands, theworld' s largest&#13;
manufacwrerof shoecareproducts,&#13;
in conjunction with Kaufman&#13;
Professional Image Consultants of&#13;
Philadelphia, a firm which&#13;
specializes in counseling&#13;
executives on improving their&#13;
image.&#13;
Thekey to making a favorable&#13;
first impression is to be sure that&#13;
every aspect of your appearance&#13;
fitstogether,aceordingtoKayfman.&#13;
"If anything sticks out, orcalls&#13;
attention to itself in any way, that&#13;
can detract from 'the overall&#13;
impression," he said.&#13;
Makingafavorableimpression&#13;
in business situations is largely a&#13;
matter of paying attention to detail&#13;
and avoid extremes. However, it's&#13;
surprising to see how many people&#13;
have a difficult time in applying&#13;
the basic principles of executive&#13;
dress and good grooming when&#13;
preparing for interViews andlor&#13;
presentations.&#13;
Kaufman believes appearance&#13;
strongly influences other people's&#13;
perceptions of trustworthiness,&#13;
authority, reliability, and&#13;
professionalism. Certain&#13;
combinations of clothing and color&#13;
will convey stronger perceptions&#13;
than others.&#13;
Ingeneral,darker, basic colors&#13;
such as navy andcharcoal grey are&#13;
more conservative and&#13;
authoritative. Blue actual1y has a&#13;
calming effect. Brown is a&#13;
"friendlier" color, but tan, because&#13;
it's a lighter hue, is not as strong.&#13;
Red, and its burgundy and maroon&#13;
relatives, is more active and&#13;
attention-grabbing.&#13;
Black suitsarefuneral for most&#13;
men, and yet black is more&#13;
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We offer:&#13;
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To cpWify. you must ~yc prior&#13;
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acceptable for women because it's&#13;
"more sophisticated and increases&#13;
a woman's authority:'&#13;
Some other things to do and&#13;
don't of making a good first&#13;
impression include the following.&#13;
When it comes to men's shirts,&#13;
white, all-cotton, tong-sleeved&#13;
shirts are the most appropriate&#13;
because they're powerful and&#13;
authoritative. Striped or pastelcolored&#13;
shirts tend to give a more&#13;
casual appearance.&#13;
Button-down oxford shirts are&#13;
very popular and give a sense of&#13;
friendliness. Butthis"preppy" look&#13;
doesn't project much of an&#13;
authoritative message.&#13;
A white shirt, combined with&#13;
a navy or _grey pinstriped suit,&#13;
accented with a burgundy tie, is the&#13;
strongest, most authoritative outfit&#13;
a man can wear. Women,lOO, can&#13;
benefit from the similar O!ltfit -&#13;
minus the tie - because of the&#13;
authority it communicates.&#13;
However, too many women&#13;
are still wearing-oxford shirts with&#13;
bow ties under their suits, and&#13;
insteadof conveying authority, "the&#13;
look leaves the impression thatthey&#13;
don't know how, to dress&#13;
themselves," Kaufman said. The&#13;
outfit also shows a lack of vision,&#13;
and unwi1lingness to take on any&#13;
risk.&#13;
Kaufrnan suggess substituting&#13;
a well-tailored blouse, or opting&#13;
for a classic-styled dress, with a&#13;
jacket. Wearing a dress andjacket&#13;
com bination can be very&#13;
authoritative.&#13;
Many people ignore their shoes&#13;
without realizing that scuffed or&#13;
unpolished shoes can detract from&#13;
their overall appearance quotient,&#13;
"From our experience. we've&#13;
learned that unpolished shoes can&#13;
signal a lack ofattention to detail,"&#13;
said Kaufman. "And that message&#13;
could come through on an&#13;
unconscious level, loud and clear."&#13;
Froma style perspective, dress&#13;
shoes work best for both men and&#13;
women. For men, "wing tips are&#13;
always good," butany kind of basic&#13;
tie shoe is acceptable. Mid-heel&#13;
basic pumps should be the first&#13;
choice for women, although flat&#13;
shoes that are styled like pumps are'&#13;
okay, 100. Anything else - loafers&#13;
for men or sandals for women - are&#13;
deemed 100 casual.&#13;
You also communicate an&#13;
.impression through body language.&#13;
For example, a handshake should&#13;
always be firm, with men and&#13;
women. Andsomeonewhoavoids&#13;
makingeyecontactcancomeacross&#13;
as unreliable and not very&#13;
trustworthy.&#13;
The important thing to&#13;
remember is the significance of&#13;
yourfustimpressiononothers. "As&#13;
Whitesnake's sound enhanced by the gUitar of Steve Vai&#13;
by Cbris DeGuire&#13;
Starr Writer&#13;
Whitesnake&#13;
Slip of the Tongue&#13;
c. Geffen Records. 1989&#13;
Many musicians have&#13;
difficulty following up a disc that&#13;
has sold five million copies. David'&#13;
Coverdale tried to avoid this on&#13;
Slip of the Tongue, and made the&#13;
three-year wait since Whitesnake&#13;
satisfying.&#13;
This time around, Coverdale&#13;
has a new group of snakes&#13;
supporting him. Among them is&#13;
ex-David Lee Roth axeman Steve&#13;
Vai, who did all the guitar work on&#13;
the disc. (The group's other&#13;
guitarist, Adrian Vandenburg,&#13;
received an injury and was not able&#13;
to perform.)&#13;
The- disc is a tribute to both&#13;
Coverdale's early days with Deep&#13;
Purple and the early days of&#13;
Whitesnake and to Vai's blistering&#13;
CITV OF KENOSHA·&#13;
Seeks Student Workers&#13;
For Summer Em·ployment&#13;
Contact Mike Plate at&#13;
UW Parkside Job Service&#13;
553-2656&#13;
AffirmlJfive Actior. Employer M/FiH·&#13;
style of guitar playing.&#13;
All of the tracks are explosive,&#13;
starting with the sizzling title track&#13;
all the way to the soothing ballad&#13;
"Sailing Ships," a Coverdale&#13;
trademark similar to his ''Till the&#13;
Day IDie" back in 1981.&#13;
"Fool for Your Lovin," a&#13;
remake of their own song from the&#13;
late 1970's, is the disc's best track.&#13;
The song displays Vai at his usual&#13;
best and utilizes the full range of&#13;
Coverdale's melodic voice.&#13;
The disc's hard rocker is&#13;
"JudgementDay:'ltcontainshintS&#13;
of 1987' s"Still of the Night," but is&#13;
slower paced and drives harder than&#13;
any other song the group has&#13;
composed.&#13;
"Kitten Got Claws" and&#13;
"Cheap an' Nasty" are fast dance&#13;
tunes that should be playing on the&#13;
radio before 100 long.&#13;
Slip of the Tongue is a wellcrafted,&#13;
hard rockin' achievemenL&#13;
IfCoverdale doesn't fire this band,&#13;
maybe we'll hear from him a lot&#13;
sooner next time.&#13;
---------------&#13;
p===--------&#13;
",... .&#13;
to protect their rights&#13;
responsibile for lea .&#13;
for",:ar~ing address. vmg&#13;
Tb: writing.torepairsornething.&#13;
itmust&#13;
pubhcauon advises te be done by the agreed upon date&#13;
throU~hthe"check-ou~~t:: unless the 1andIord is unable to&#13;
premises wiLhthe landlord because of circumstanCeS beyond&#13;
5 A . his,lher conuol.&#13;
him . tenantshouldproteetber/ S. Thelandlordcannotrequire&#13;
selffromlossofsecuritydeposit by writing down everything that is a tenant to pay anomey's fees or&#13;
wro~g w.'LhLheapartment before costs incurred by the landlord in&#13;
moving mto the apartment, The any legal action or dispute arising&#13;
te h out of a rental agreemenL Also. the&#13;
nants d d as seven days to "inspect landlord cannot be relieved.&#13;
an .. ocument ... pre-existing thro conditions," ugh wriuen agreemenl. from 6 liability for property damage c.&#13;
. Unless otherwise agreed personal injury caused by the&#13;
upon~ landlords can wiLhhold negligent acts or omissions of the&#13;
secunty deposits for the following: landlord.&#13;
tenant damage, neglect of the 9. A landlord cannot enter the&#13;
premises, nonpayment of rent premise except 10 make repairs,&#13;
nonpayment of utility servic~ inspecl the premises. c.show the&#13;
provided by the landlord. and premises 10 prospective tenants.&#13;
nonpayment of govemment utility However. entry for other purposes&#13;
charges. The landlord cannot maybemadewiLhadvaneednotice&#13;
wiLhhold security deposits for and at a reasonable agreed upon&#13;
routine cleaning. such as carpet time.&#13;
shampooing. Ifadeductionisla!&lt;en 10. An "automlllic renewal"&#13;
from a security deposil, !he tenant clause on a lease is notenfe.eeable&#13;
must be provided wiLhan itemized againsl a tenanl unless the IiCIlaDI&#13;
list of damages. was noticed in writing, betweelll5&#13;
7. If a landlord promises, in to 30 days prior to ilS effective&#13;
terval Training System utilizes body potential and improves fitness&#13;
~ SuzanneM~tuano For example, w~en one works chemical found in Lhemuscles used used interval training. After 12 use your beart raIt as a guide and&#13;
FeatureEdl~or out, th~ body rehes on three to fuel Lheircontraction. Then. Lhe weeks. Lhe interval training group go from Lhere. The fasttt your&#13;
!JIeM\. tralm~gI.S based on metabohc systems for energy. The next 90 seconds are used by Lhe showedan IS percentimproverne&#13;
nt&#13;
beart rate dropS within a rccaverY !" _. _" .. &gt;f _.",.,.. """"'" An&gt;·&gt;'C. """. ~;" • .. ,... •• " ~-". -- ... '" _. "Ok ,.. ._ ....... ~ ,_ ." .... ..-.",.,.. ._. ". ""'"'......"... "' ..... U~""•• - •• "'. • - '"&#13;
bIDes of recovery penods, Because the first twO systems are sugar. Finally,!he aerobic system constanl rate showed only aneighl nexl inlttV81· If your beat!. rale is&#13;
IlIIIIIdown. anaerobic systems, they do not begins and oxygen is !hen used as percent mcrease in cardiovaseu\ar 15-20 bealS higher than nonnaI il is&#13;
WbenapersoninterVaittains, require oxygen for energy, but the the sole source of energy. endurance. not safe to begin the next interval.&#13;
~. 8S _ • .",.,. .... '.... 00 N.... '.-"-""""' A."_" "." ...... ""_ _"&#13;
......... .- _b.b _ .. '0 • ~ m;oo._r_ "wh•• ".,,,... .-., ..... '" U""';,, ... ~~.~ ......&#13;
~ for a breaLhlessfeeling. period. Though it is a short period for faster speeds and faster times. of Massachusetts showed Ihree timeS as much time for&#13;
, .. ,"""_ ........ ""'" of.~ ........ ,~"'...... __ .... ",,,,U,;.,,,,.,,, """" " ,- of -..,. "" '_""" ...&#13;
• _~""""" """ .. go -... ,~""'" _; _~ ""...-.... i..... no...... ._~oo~"""- • _ ,_, no"" ", of _ •• ;.~. ";";" ; , p" _ -,~&#13;
• "" "' ....... ~ '" An&gt;'&gt;'C ,,;.n_.- _,,,._; __"w- "'"no&gt;&#13;
• .' __ '" .,_. no ""." _. ""."',........ r_ ..... ~'..... =m" p - _m ., .... ....., , .. ,." ........'" "'," ""'. '" ,,, "w'.' ",..... """,",. '" - .w'" ....., "'"....... ,,""". " .......'m_ _ w,,',~,...."' no "" '"... .,.. ......- .. ,,- H ••• -"-&#13;
• "" _ _, AT"'C .,,,,m .",,~ ~. 00'.......... no-."""'" "" .. 00 ...... '"'"""" "" • ...... ,....,,~_. ,""'ph.,,,.... _m,b ;" '" _, ....... '" .... ...... ....... ~" ~.'"." r_&#13;
,;&#13;
,~&#13;
date.&#13;
If a telIllllt feels her/his riShts&#13;
have been violated. there are&#13;
remedies. Citations can be issued&#13;
to Iandlc.ds for violation of hea\Lh&#13;
and safety codes. In Kenosha call&#13;
the City Health DepaI1I11enlat&#13;
656-8170 or in the counly call the&#13;
respective Township c. Village&#13;
Hall. InRacinecalltheCityHeal!h&#13;
Departmenl at 636-9203 or in the&#13;
counlY call !he re pcctive&#13;
Township or Village Hall.&#13;
To receive your own copy or&#13;
"Landlord and TenanlS: The&#13;
Wisconsin Way" contaCI the&#13;
Conswner Prou:ction Bureau at&#13;
(414) 257-8956. For further&#13;
assistanee aboul rellling in the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine areas or if you&#13;
feel yourrightshavebeen violaled,&#13;
cootaCt Steve WalInet, t&#13;
DirecUlr of Residence Life at Lhe&#13;
UW-Pattside Hoosin8 Omce(553-&#13;
2320).&#13;
(fhisarticle wasadaPltJd from:&#13;
"RenterS do have la.vs 10 proICCt&#13;
rights.j&#13;
RanQllf Thursday. March 22, 111905&#13;
IsconSln renters have laws&#13;
bY StefeWallner protecting tenants as outlined .&#13;
~lto the Range~. the publication are as follow . 10&#13;
CO'. '.•.linglD the publicauon 1. Once a' s. • Th wntten agreement&#13;
,.... and Tenants. e (lease) is entered into th ,,~ »bllS' bedby the . ' e tenant ¢&gt;inWay.pu must be given a copy T .&#13;
on&#13;
sin&#13;
Departmen~ of mustalsobeprovidedwitha en~ts&#13;
~. maintell8llce IS the for any rent or security :e'~&#13;
lIIoneCOl1\plaintfromrentersgiven to the landlord. POSIt&#13;
lihe&#13;
irlandlords. 2. Landlords must disclose in&#13;
~ a staltwule survey, 23 writing. the name and address of&#13;
lI1&#13;
0fthe&#13;
studentten3?ts and the person(s) authorized to collect&#13;
~nl of the.loW.lDcome rent and maintain the property.&#13;
_5!3ftdll1atmarntenancewas ~. It is the landlords duty to&#13;
~ problem". Whether the provide premises that are "fit and&#13;
jklllS are maIntenance or habitable." This includes hot and&#13;
~g else.tenters do have cold running water; adequate&#13;
• ~ proteClthem. Lack of plu~~ing and sewage disposal&#13;
~ge abOut .these laws, facilities; heating facilities which&#13;
~, is a major problem. are safe and operable maintaining&#13;
IIl'ISneedtobe more awbarei\'.of a temperature ofat least67 degrees&#13;
iii rights. and responsl lUes Farenheit;safeelectricalwiringand&#13;
entennglOtOa lease. electrical fiXtures; and conditions&#13;
_ofthebaS1C~odes(codes which are free from risk of personal&#13;
. laws. ordmances~ or injury. The landlord mustdisclose&#13;
"unmental regulaU~ns any utilities not included in the rent&#13;
109 the constrUction, before the tenant signs the leas&#13;
ce.habitality,operation. 4. Landlords have 21 daY:~o&#13;
• use. or appearance at return security depositsaftertenants&#13;
IIpemises or dwelling unit) move out. The tenants are&#13;
student Special $501Of 3 MonthS (Bring Parkslde I.D.)&#13;
Membef Nonmember&#13;
Tanning Rates: 1 VISit $4.00 $5.00&#13;
10 VISitS $30.00 $40,00&#13;
1 week $10.00 DaY Pass $4.00 SpeCial Punch Card Rate $40.00: 20 visits&#13;
call for an appointment 633-FLEX&#13;
personalized FitnessPrograms tor Men • women· BodY Building. powel1ifting&#13;
TonIng and general conditIOnIng. $pOllS Tralnl~ . • • . FEA1URES:snack Bar w/luncheS &amp; light dinners. Pro ShOp. 10,(0) Ibs. of tree&#13;
FITNESS C E NTE A weigh"· 30 .-'" Rex ,qul,?",en\. ShOW"". Ole' &amp; Nu1ri1lonGu;donCe· ".&#13;
conditioned. Vitamins &amp; Nutrition Health Bar. 2400 Rapids Drtve. Racine. Wl 53404. Rapids ShOP·center&#13;
•&#13;
FLEX&#13;
FITNESS CENTER&#13;
(414) 633 • FLEX&#13;
6 Thursday, March 22, 1990 Ranger&#13;
~&#13;
Cuning down on fat intake also ~l&#13;
promotes weight control. I&#13;
3. Eat more high-fiber foods ~I&#13;
to reduce risks of breast, prostate ~r&#13;
and colon cancers. Good source~' fof&#13;
fiber are fruits, vegetables, and 'f&#13;
whole food items containing whole ~~&#13;
grains such as oatmeal, bran, and f!'&#13;
wheat ~l&#13;
4. Include foods rich in ~&#13;
Vitamins A and C 10 reduce the '"&#13;
risks of cancer of the ~x, ~&#13;
esophagus, and respiratory tract. ~&#13;
Good sources include cataloupes, 1&#13;
peaches, broccoli,spinach,a\ldark 1&#13;
green leafy vegetables, sweet ,&#13;
. potatoes, carrots, pumpkin, winter&#13;
squash, tomatoes, citrus fruits, and&#13;
brussels sprouts.&#13;
5. Include cruciferous&#13;
(cabbage family) vegetables to&#13;
reduces risk of colorectal and&#13;
stomach cancers. Cabbage,&#13;
broccoli, brussels sprouts; kohlrabi,&#13;
and cauliflower are vegetables in&#13;
the cabbage family.&#13;
6. Go easy on alcohol if you&#13;
do drink as this may reduce risks of&#13;
liver and oral cancers.&#13;
7. Eat less smoked, salted, or&#13;
nitrite-eured foods to limit the risks&#13;
of getting stomach and esophagus&#13;
cancers.&#13;
Formore information, contact&#13;
the American Cancer Society or&#13;
Student Health Services.&#13;
Student Health Services co-sponsors ''EatSmart"nutrition week&#13;
Swdent Health Services and&#13;
Food Services are co-sponsoring&#13;
an "Eat Smart" promotion of the&#13;
American Cancer Society's&#13;
nutrition guidelines for reducing&#13;
the risks of developing cancer.&#13;
The "Eat Smart" promotional&#13;
activities will take place the week&#13;
of March 26 through March 30.&#13;
Food services wil\ identify food&#13;
items which meet one or more of&#13;
the guidelines on Wed. and Thur.&#13;
March 28 and 29. Main entrees&#13;
that are tailored to fo\low the&#13;
guidelines will be featured. Free&#13;
brochures and recipes will be&#13;
available in the cafeteria, minimart,&#13;
and the main concourse&#13;
display. There is evidence that diet&#13;
andcancerarerelated. Some foods&#13;
may promote cancer; while others&#13;
protect you from it. The American&#13;
Cancer Society's seven&#13;
recommendations for reducing&#13;
cancer risks are:&#13;
1. Avoid obesity since it may&#13;
belinkedwithcancersoftheuterus,&#13;
gail bladder, breast, and colon. The&#13;
AmericanCancer Society's 12-year&#13;
study of nearly one million&#13;
Americans uncovered high cancer&#13;
risks particularly among people&#13;
40% or more overweight&#13;
2. Decrease fat consumption&#13;
to limit the chances of developing&#13;
beast, prostate, and colon cancers.&#13;
.....&#13;
.....&#13;
If you can't hold on to your&#13;
glasses, at least now you can&#13;
hold on to your money.&#13;
Just buy a complete pair of&#13;
glasses for $75 or more and&#13;
get a second pair, in the same&#13;
prescription, free. And for&#13;
your free pair, feel free to&#13;
choose from over 100 styles.&#13;
Plus if you break either pair,&#13;
they're guaranteed for a year.&#13;
If you am keep them that long.&#13;
But dont take long deciding.&#13;
Place your order from March&#13;
5 to 31 at participating stores.&#13;
Most single vision and flattop&#13;
bifocal lenses are included.&#13;
And please note that there are&#13;
just a few minor restrictions.&#13;
So buy one and lose one&#13;
free. Think of it as found&#13;
money. _&#13;
STERLIIING OPT •. CAL&#13;
The Surf Boys return&#13;
to Parkside&#13;
Even though school may not&#13;
quite be over, come to the Union&#13;
Square tomorrow night for a bit of&#13;
the beach. That's right! The ever&#13;
famous "Surf Boys/Class of '62"&#13;
wil1 be performing at Parkside to&#13;
close out Beach Week.&#13;
The Surf Boys have been&#13;
coming here for many years, and&#13;
everyone who stops in has had a&#13;
blast Back by popular demand is&#13;
the filling of the Square with beach&#13;
sand During the band's breaks,&#13;
there will be a tan line contest, a&#13;
beachwear contest, and a limbo&#13;
contest. Come prepared to show&#13;
off your tans, clothes, or athletic&#13;
ability.&#13;
The music the Surf Boys will&#13;
play will bring you back to the&#13;
'60s. With exce\lent renditions of&#13;
the Beatles, the Beach Boys and&#13;
.many other old favorites, the band&#13;
wil1 make you hop out onto the&#13;
sand and start dancing.&#13;
The doors open at 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission is $2 for students and&#13;
$3 for non-students age 18 and up.&#13;
RESEARCHIIORMA'" Largest Ubrary of Informaflon in U.S.»&#13;
all subjects&#13;
Ord.r Catalog Today wilh Visa/MC or COO&#13;
~ BOO-351-0222 ~ mGalif,(213)47J.8226&#13;
Or, rush $2.00 to: R.... rch Inf.rmatiOll&#13;
11322 Idaho Ave. 1:206·A, Los Angeles, CA 90025&#13;
•&#13;
Ranger 'Thursday, Marcn,,22, 19907&#13;
I;:;; Classifieds and Club Events~~~~&#13;
: HELP WANTED&#13;
I&#13;
LOST AND FOUND: Very&#13;
~ial ring was lost in WLLC&#13;
I [IaIhlOOm(1 think). Silver, 4 parts&#13;
1.C(llnected-apuzzlering.Reward,&#13;
639-7452(Lori)&#13;
j Adoption:Happily married couple I UNABLEto have a baby wants&#13;
deSPi:ratelyto share their love and&#13;
\&#13;
Wewithababy. Strictly legal and&#13;
confidential.PLEASE call our&#13;
mwyer,MILWAUKEE, 281-2622.&#13;
I OUTSIDEMlLWAUKEE, 1-800-&#13;
1716-7093.&#13;
Attention:Earn money typing at&#13;
hoIIIe! 32,OOO/yrincomepotential. I Details,(I) 602-838-8885, Ext. T1&#13;
14511&#13;
WIN A HAWAIIAN&#13;
I VACATIONOR BIG SCREEN&#13;
lVPLUSRAISE UP TO $1,400&#13;
INJUST10 DAYS !!! '&#13;
Objective: Fundraiser&#13;
I Commitment: Minimal&#13;
, ~ Raise $1,400&#13;
~ Zero Investment&#13;
Campusorganizations,clubs, frats,&#13;
IlIOrities call OCMC: (800) 932-&#13;
0528, or(800) 950-8472, ext, 10. IATTENTION - Easy work. CLUB ANNOUNCEMENTS&#13;
Excellentpay!Assembleproducts Todayandtomorrow from9am.&#13;
• borne. Details - (602) 838-8885 to 4 p.m. will be a Peace Corps&#13;
ExLW-1451l. representative will be in the Union ..&#13;
WRING!!!Cruise ship, casino, At5p.m.todaythevideo, "Choose&#13;
00ie1 jobs! Free travel benefits. La Serve," will be shown in Union&#13;
Details,(I) 602·838·8885, Ext. Y - 207.&#13;
1&#13;
14511 Setting Goals-Developing a Job&#13;
Lookingforafraternity,sorority Search Plan will be a workshop&#13;
!rs1Udentorganizationthat would ' presentedMon.,March26in Union&#13;
1ie1Oma!&lt;e$500-$I,OOOforone 204 from noon La 1 by the Career&#13;
..moo-campus marlcetingprojecl Center.&#13;
Must be organized and Identifying and Contacting&#13;
ladwlIking.CalIBeverlyorMark Employers will be workshop&#13;
1(800) 592-2121. presented in Union 207 form noon&#13;
ATTENTION: Hiring! La 1 'on Wed, March 28, by the&#13;
Oovernmentjobs-yourarea Many Career Center. Sign upin theCareer&#13;
IIDlllediateopenings without Center, WLLC D175. All seniors&#13;
lilitinglist or lest. $17,840 - are encouraged La attend.&#13;
169,435.Call 1-602-838-8385, ARE YOU INTERESTED in&#13;
Ext.RI451l. • writing as a hobby or ma~be a&#13;
EARN MONEY WHILE career? Are you a Business,&#13;
lI'ATCIDNGTV! S32,OOO/yr Communication orEnglish major?&#13;
~\lOlential. Details, (1)602- Any professor willtell you that you&#13;
i38-3885,ExlTV-14511. need good writing skills. Wntefor&#13;
PorlraitStudioseeking part-time theRangerandgetexperience. We&#13;
~Ip.Dutiesinclude typing, phone need writers for news, feature, and&#13;
illd receptionist skills. Could entertainmenl Write when YOU&#13;
Plssibly become full-time during have the time. It looks good on a&#13;
summer months. Apply in person&#13;
at Camera Masters, 5903&#13;
Washington Ave., Racine&#13;
Union Grove student needs ride&#13;
home from school Mon. and Wed.&#13;
Lastclassendsat3:15. Call Mary&#13;
878-5071. Will pay gas money.&#13;
resume. Stop in the office&#13;
sometime. We'd love to have you&#13;
here!!!&#13;
12·Steps to Recovery Meetings:&#13;
Mon - Alcoholic Anonymous, 12-&#13;
1 p.m., Moln. D13I; Mon - AIAnon,12-1&#13;
p.m., MoIn. D133; Wed&#13;
, - Narcotic Anonymous, 12-1 p.m.,&#13;
Moln. D13I; Fri - Alcoholic&#13;
Anonymous Information/Drop&#13;
In, 12-1 p.m., Moln. D13I; Fri -&#13;
AdultChiidren of Alcoholics, 12-1&#13;
p.m., Moln. D133. For more&#13;
information, call 553-2366.&#13;
Food for Families will be&#13;
sponsoring a Food Challenge to all&#13;
Parkside students, staff, faculty,&#13;
administration, and clubs. This&#13;
will be held from April 2-6, and a&#13;
table will be set up in the alcove by&#13;
the library. Individual as well as&#13;
club participation will count, 1st&#13;
place will receive S25; 2nd place ,&#13;
SIO; and 3rd place, SIO.&#13;
The March meeting of the&#13;
Molecular Biology Club has been&#13;
moved to Monday, March 26 in&#13;
Moln. 161 at noon. Dr. Chen will&#13;
discuss the various degrees that&#13;
can be earned in molecular biology.&#13;
Bring your lunch. Dessert and pop&#13;
will be provided.&#13;
Members of the 3rd New York&#13;
Battalion Revolutionary war&#13;
group who will speak on "Campus&#13;
LifeofSoldiersandTheirWomen."&#13;
Thur., March 22 in Moln. 107 at7&#13;
p.m. Refreshments will be served&#13;
OnMarch26,DI:.RichardAmmann&#13;
will speak on Yoruba art, in Moln&#13;
324 at noon. Dr. Ammann will&#13;
have many slides on the different&#13;
Yoruba artist and styles.&#13;
Refreshments will be served. All&#13;
Anthropology Club activities are&#13;
open La anyone interested.&#13;
C.I.A. is having a meeting on&#13;
Friday, March 23 in Main. 128.&#13;
Make a difference! Attend the&#13;
Minority Actions Council meeting&#13;
on Monday, March 26, 1990, at&#13;
noon in CART 129.&#13;
JOHN KEHOE got&#13;
engaged!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!&#13;
Congratulations!! !!!!! !!!!!&#13;
Franca Savaglio - It can't be the&#13;
same, so what! It can definitely be&#13;
better .. you better know whatI'm&#13;
talking about,&#13;
Atten: Now playing in the Union&#13;
Cinema, Pablo and his troop of&#13;
dancing buns.&#13;
Dear ''my boys" What's your&#13;
problem! ''The Mag"&#13;
Linda Schwejsser; Feel the&#13;
growing power of the russ&#13;
movement! Soon we will swamp&#13;
the L3! Russ Geese&#13;
Hey Craig: Are those two Chinese&#13;
specialty foods called Chow Some&#13;
Gap and Hung Young Boy. Just&#13;
wondering.&#13;
Dearest Mr. Black Fiero, When&#13;
are you gonna take me on a date?&#13;
Love, Black Acura&#13;
La- La: I hope I managed to get a&#13;
foot into the doorway. OhJeez! It&#13;
was real hard. African Embassy&#13;
Attn: Pablo Buns and Horns now&#13;
on sale in the Union Cafeteria&#13;
HEY HEY CORY DUDETTE·&#13;
Here's one ... all homonids are&#13;
homonoids but not all homonoids&#13;
are homonids!! Your Anthro pal&#13;
Anastasia: Guess who?&#13;
Stan "lead foot" Anderson -&#13;
remember the speed limit in&#13;
Normon, Oklahoma is 65, not 86.&#13;
Bubba Smith, Oklahoma State&#13;
Patrol&#13;
Rachel • you need to clip your&#13;
wing.&#13;
Jenni: What is the definition of&#13;
reality? I think it'Stime you woke&#13;
up and realized who your friends&#13;
are, or should we sayWERE! Dave&#13;
Katie Ward - Have you&#13;
RALPHED on someone lately?&#13;
Pat BeBow - next time I'm going&#13;
La rip your head off - Pablo&#13;
ATTENTIONPARKSIDE: We&#13;
are on approach and soon we'll be&#13;
jammin' the airwaves at WZRX ...&#13;
Coming at you atthespeed oflight!&#13;
TMNT&#13;
To 4F: Your party was awesome,&#13;
but a bit expensive. Can't wait for&#13;
another one! Proud to be a littlo&#13;
sister. From: The D.L. and Jules&#13;
Rachel, who told you your hair&#13;
looked good?&#13;
Jenn i: When areyou installing the&#13;
revolving door in your dorm.&#13;
Everyone but Dave.&#13;
Frances - HALLO - my name is&#13;
Indigo Mantoya, you killed my&#13;
fader, prepare to die! Hee Hee&#13;
Jenny G: What spiral stairs? I'm&#13;
jealous - Sara Padre ''90''&#13;
Dina - what's with bathrooms?&#13;
Aren't beds more comfonable?&#13;
Jenni: It's the first inning. Aim&#13;
up to bat, I have no outs, no strikes&#13;
and all balls. Just try and throw me&#13;
a curve. Dave&#13;
Jenni: to how many friends did&#13;
you lose this week. 1,5, or 10. Oh,&#13;
I forgot you can't count that high,&#13;
or is it you didn't have that many&#13;
friends to begin with. Dave&#13;
Jenni: How do you spell&#13;
girlfriend? IsitQ-S-H-K-O-S-H??&#13;
Randy (alias not Dave)&#13;
Ski (used and abused), can you&#13;
spell inflate-a-mate? (A·I·t·e·r·na-t-i-v-e).&#13;
Oh, how was the Virgin&#13;
Islands?&#13;
Ratpack, not all roses are red •&#13;
forget-me-notsarelightblue,don't&#13;
beat a dead horse, just because no&#13;
one beats and has - with you.&#13;
HEYRATPACK- Why don't you&#13;
guys take a hike .. Bart&#13;
Rachel S., one wing in your hair&#13;
isn't getting it honey. What's the&#13;
wing span for a vullure anyway?&#13;
Jenny G. Is that your bread? Sara&#13;
Sunny • how many Coronas in&#13;
Mexico? Padre ''90" Sara&#13;
Katie, why do you arch your back?&#13;
Padre "90" Sara&#13;
LISA (if this is the Lisa Lisa):&#13;
lunch at 12 still exists ... we have&#13;
just not gotten together. Why?&#13;
Have to get info for the&#13;
conversations!&#13;
To aU those who made stupid&#13;
bets with me; I am making big&#13;
Cant. on Page 8&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Attention: Government homes&#13;
fromSI (V-repair). Delinquenttax&#13;
property. Repossessions. Call I602-838-8885,&#13;
ext. GH14511.&#13;
For Sale: Plane tickets - round trip&#13;
Chicago to Phoenix. Departs Sat.,&#13;
Apr.14 &amp; returns Sat., Apr 21.&#13;
Asking $300 or best offer. Call&#13;
Jeff at 551-9721.&#13;
MEAL TICKETS: If you're&#13;
interested, pleasecalI553-290 I and&#13;
ask for Melloney.&#13;
ATTENTION: GOVERNMENT&#13;
SEIZED VEIDCLES from SIOO.&#13;
Fords, Mercedes, Corvettes,&#13;
Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide. 1-&#13;
602-838-8885, ext. A14511.&#13;
For Sale: 15 cuff Chest type&#13;
freezer. S70.00 654-4101, Bill.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
ATTENTION ALL BANDS!!!&#13;
Battle of the Bands is Fri., April&#13;
27th. Entry forms are located in&#13;
'the Information Center, Union D 1,&#13;
Attention Seniors&#13;
Interviewing- A New Perspective&#13;
sponsored by Kiwanis Club of West Racine&#13;
in cooperation with V.W.- Parkside's Career Center&#13;
B siness leaders from the Kiwanis Club of West Racine wiD be&#13;
d&#13;
u. k interviews with all graduating seniors from spnng,&#13;
con ucung moe - . chane I&#13;
summer, and fall semesters of 1990. This IS your e to earn&#13;
through experience. h 28&#13;
To re Ister bring in your resume to the Career center by Marc •&#13;
Intervie~s will be conducted on Wednesday, April 11 from 5:45 ~~&#13;
8:00p.m. A reception for all aplicants and Kiwanis Club members w&#13;
follow the interviews. . . and learn new&#13;
Take advantage of this opportunity La pracuee&#13;
mtervlewmg . . .' skills Additional information is available at the Career&#13;
Center, UW-Parkside, WLLC D175.&#13;
Ir::- ..,&#13;
I Term papers or I other assignI&#13;
ments typed ,&#13;
On my in-home PC. ReaSOnablerates.&#13;
Professional&#13;
reSUlts,&#13;
Pbone 414.694.6366&#13;
.....&#13;
A free gift just for calling piUSraise up&#13;
to $1700 in only 10 days. Student&#13;
groups, frats, and sororities needed&#13;
for marketing project on campus.&#13;
'For details, plus your free gift, group&#13;
officers call&#13;
1.800~765·8472 Ext.50&#13;
CODt. from pagc 7&#13;
plans for that $162! Signed·&#13;
Syracuse rules!&#13;
Topper -I would like my $150 in&#13;
big bills only. Love you •&#13;
Suworogoll hoffensteinsky withan&#13;
H!&#13;
Let lbe games begiD. Dave&#13;
Mark: Will Saturday night ever&#13;
happen again?&#13;
Overbeard in PSGA oMee:&#13;
Maggie,comebere,lwanttosbow&#13;
you something! •.•.•I'll be rigbt&#13;
tllere, Ken.&#13;
Jenni: The game bas started. Just&#13;
be ready for extra innings. Dave&#13;
"Pray tbat the earth doesn't tire&#13;
of the way that we're putting ber&#13;
down" bless the masses. (Psycbo&#13;
killer returns)&#13;
MankandArt: Thebrainsbehind&#13;
the brawls. Good worlc on making&#13;
the wrestling meet the success of&#13;
theseason. Standup,beproud,and&#13;
make lots of $$S.&#13;
Tbe water wiD be warm in the&#13;
pool at 4A. Sat Marcb 24, 5pm.&#13;
RB: Nucha doesn't mean to be&#13;
mean, but sometimes she is NUTS&#13;
Ijust want to say hi to the&#13;
Homecoming Queen 1989-90 ..•&#13;
mIl&#13;
(What do you think this is,. ... a tv&#13;
camera?)&#13;
Wbich one of our friendly Union&#13;
student managers could have said&#13;
Classifieds and Club Events~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~:&#13;
Associate Professor Lana Rakow continues lecture series&#13;
Workers are thought of as highly"&#13;
interehangable. Also, in this system&#13;
Rakow says thatrules are designed&#13;
to control and limit freedom. The&#13;
system is also hierarchical, and&#13;
power means the power over or the&#13;
power to control. Lastly, Rakow&#13;
attributes The Mechanistic system&#13;
with having a leader who is out in&#13;
front, one who presents an allpowerful,&#13;
all-knowing image.&#13;
"Being in ademocratic society&#13;
you would think that organizations&#13;
wouldn't belike this," Rakow said&#13;
"Ifwe want to begin to change this&#13;
we mustfirst thinkahoutredefining&#13;
our idea of democracy."&#13;
The other model, which&#13;
Rakowassociateswithpeace,civil,&#13;
and feminists movements, is The&#13;
Living Community. In this model,&#13;
the organization is flexible and it&#13;
shifts to accommodate its people.&#13;
Rules are set to serve individuals&#13;
this?? "near your butt ••in more" •&#13;
J.S.? ... MD&#13;
Brad Janowitz· You have the&#13;
body of a trueman - asecretadmirer&#13;
from the Padre trip.&#13;
Bart, hey you, come here! get in&#13;
the van!&#13;
Jenny: so what are you trying to&#13;
say about the green river?&#13;
by Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
In a continuing effort to help&#13;
educate student leaders, Lana&#13;
Rakow, associate professor of&#13;
communication is set to give a&#13;
lecture on new models of&#13;
organizations as part of The Spring&#13;
Leadership Lecture Series.&#13;
The idea that Rakow plans on&#13;
focusing on is that models of&#13;
organizations sbould not be just&#13;
accepted, but instead, questioned.&#13;
"Wesbouldnottakethesociety&#13;
of organizations as a given, but&#13;
more of an issue to be thought&#13;
about," Rakow said.&#13;
Rakow placed most&#13;
organizations under what she calls&#13;
The Mechanistic System or The&#13;
Powerful Leader. In this system&#13;
the organization is highlystructured&#13;
and people must fit the system.&#13;
What's VGA? .~&#13;
UW·Parksld.&#13;
Campus Rep.&#13;
Ken Schuh&#13;
553-2852&#13;
T""'I'MfJU •.40MbSU99&#13;
S~"n&gt;Po" j&amp;' S.f-.aMl:&gt;f¥lo99 oOW»t99&#13;
IOOMb~oo.um&#13;
S."...." ... ,~k-lO"lb5*9'il_ n999&#13;
411~lb5_"" ...S3m&#13;
To place Jour order contact:&#13;
5E~ eens you've&#13;
ever seen!&#13;
'=&#13;
~""" Idata systems&#13;
~. -&#13;
o 0&#13;
t&#13;
-&#13;
Gary. when are you going to the&#13;
chapel? Constricted.&#13;
Sara -if you could fly, wherewould&#13;
you land?&#13;
To Lisa: let me know ifyau need&#13;
bus departure times for DeKalb,1L&#13;
to (NIU) - Gary&#13;
UW .Madison Badger Herald •&#13;
Lock your doors when closed, to&#13;
keep people like "Zippy" from&#13;
sneaking in and rambling on about&#13;
nonsense.&#13;
Dave, women don't. rip men's&#13;
hearts out; it is said that man&#13;
"chases" woman togethis ribback.&#13;
It must be true. Quit chasing and&#13;
-on that,&#13;
Katie: does jackrabbit ring any&#13;
and are modified if necessary. The :m&#13;
Living Community, as coined by···&#13;
Rakow, also has equal voice and&#13;
participation included in it's&#13;
structure. The idea of powerin this&#13;
model is based on a power within&#13;
and the ability to act upon it The&#13;
leader in this model acts as an&#13;
inspirational piece to help guide&#13;
workers to make their own&#13;
decisions.&#13;
Though both models have&#13;
relevant advantages and&#13;
disadvantages, which will be&#13;
discussed during the lecture today&#13;
in Union 106 at 3:30 p.m., Rakow&#13;
hopes to enlighten those who do&#13;
attend to evalutate or re-evaluate&#13;
their leadership style and their&#13;
organization as a whole'.&#13;
"I am very concerned about&#13;
the role that we have raised in&#13;
regards to our organizations&#13;
culnire," Rakow said. "I hope that&#13;
bells? Sara&#13;
Sunny' What a --in' burger.&#13;
Katie, if you were a fly Where&#13;
would you go? Sara&#13;
To Kristin and the gang- thanks&#13;
for a great 21st b-day!!!!! Love&#13;
L.D.&#13;
Lana Rakow&#13;
students can leave here and takea&#13;
critical view with them of whatan&#13;
organization could be like:'&#13;
Melissa Etheridge's second recording shows much improvement&#13;
by Teresa Harris&#13;
Starr Writer&#13;
. MelissaEtheridge- Brave&#13;
and Crazy&#13;
Island Records, Inc, c.&#13;
1989&#13;
Melissa Etheridge is no&#13;
newcomer to the music industry,&#13;
Ii&#13;
but she is just now getting&#13;
recognition. This is her second&#13;
album and itis much better than the&#13;
first,&#13;
This lady bas a heart full of&#13;
soul and a head full of the blues.&#13;
Ten tracks to this disc, and&#13;
everyoneofthemisgreat. As usual,&#13;
I do have my favorites. "Let Me&#13;
Go," the seventh track, is the first&#13;
release, and you can hear it on&#13;
WXRT-FM (93.1) in Chicago at&#13;
least once a day. It's a great track&#13;
that she pours her heart into it. The&#13;
lyrics are particularly good.&#13;
She plays a twelve-string&#13;
Planned&#13;
Parenthood Clinics&#13;
~&#13;
HeaItbtmnh ~__.~_._.._01_&#13;
Physical Exam • Birth Control&#13;
Pregnancy Test. - STD Treaunent • lab TellS&#13;
AIDS Education - Informalion and Referral&#13;
Kenosha Clinic'&#13;
654·0491&#13;
guitar and she knows what she's&#13;
doing, especially on ''Testify," the&#13;
sixth track.&#13;
Another real hot track is "Skin&#13;
Deep:' Thisonerea11ycooks! She&#13;
really gets into it, and you will 100.&#13;
Like I said, there isn't a bad&#13;
track on this album. Every traCk&#13;
has exceptional lyrics. A well·&#13;
produced album and particularly&#13;
well-engineered is what Etheridge&#13;
'has put together.&#13;
If you like blues and jazz,&#13;
you'lI1ove MelissaEtheridge. Buy&#13;
this one on compact disc. You&#13;
won't regret it&#13;
Meeting the specific&#13;
needs of Parkside&#13;
. employees and&#13;
students&#13;
Tallent HaU&#13;
Room 286&#13;
553-2150&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 9:30-4:00&#13;
...&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I Transport yourself back ten&#13;
I yearsorso,ifyouwill,totheneigh_&#13;
bOrttood you grew up in. It's a&#13;
I sunny,Saturday afternoon and&#13;
I you're walking backfrom the cornerslOre&#13;
with your friend who goes&#13;
I by!he name of "Spike"&#13;
I&#13;
Witha mouthful of stick bubblegumand&#13;
a bagful of baseball&#13;
cards, you're trying to swing a deal&#13;
to uade one of those three Ned&#13;
Yost cards you just found for&#13;
Spike'sAI Bumbry card. Spike&#13;
won'tgo for it, so you agree to&#13;
drow inKurt Bevacqua card and a&#13;
pie(:e of gum. Ah! childhood&#13;
memories.&#13;
Well,the gum is still the same,&#13;
but !he stakes have changed, and&#13;
it's 110 longer for kids only. TradiIIg&#13;
cardsare back in a big way.&#13;
"Iwas probably seven or eight&#13;
wilen I started collecting cards,"&#13;
says UW-Parkside student Bill&#13;
iTopp. "I remember riding my bike&#13;
10 lIIe comer drug store in&#13;
Wauwatosa to buy packs of baseballcardsatSO.15.Atarecentcard&#13;
show, I just sold a Nolan Ryan&#13;
rookie card (1968 Topps) for&#13;
1850.00."&#13;
Toppbas been caught up in the&#13;
recentsurge in the collecting martetfOfSponscards&#13;
after collecting&#13;
IIrough grade school and some of&#13;
high school. With all the new inIeres~Topp&#13;
bas taken his hobby&#13;
IIIIC step further with Bill J"opp's&#13;
Spans Cards.&#13;
''One year ago, that Nolan&#13;
Ryan card would have been availIble&#13;
for maybe $100 or $150,"&#13;
mendonedTopp about his recent&#13;
collectables ('. memorabilta&#13;
a diuision of&#13;
SPORTSWORLD&#13;
IHVUTIIIlNT$ co&#13;
.• sets&#13;
• wax packs &amp; boxes&#13;
• supplies &amp;posters&#13;
• investment recommendation&#13;
BILLTOPP&#13;
Home 453-7663&#13;
School 553-2807&#13;
chandise at various card shows&#13;
about the area virwally every&#13;
weekend, and with his Milwaukeebased&#13;
supplier, he bas opened up a&#13;
small business here on campus.&#13;
"Rookie cards are almost&#13;
always the most valuable card of&#13;
anyindividualplayer,"addedTopp&#13;
on his trading tips. "I like to compare&#13;
it to the stock market in ways.&#13;
You must speculate on potential&#13;
Ha1I-of-Famersandreallyplan your&#13;
strategies -.Timeliness is also a big&#13;
thing, ifyoucanbesmanand timely ,&#13;
. in your trading, you can generate&#13;
some hefty returns."&#13;
Recent prices of cards show&#13;
proof of the big returns he speaks&#13;
Rain plagues baseball trip&#13;
by 10M. Fletcber&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
. .~eRangerbaseba1l team was&#13;
V1ClUnized by the elements on its&#13;
~latet spring trip to the Sho-Me&#13;
.Baseball Camp. with rain&#13;
~away six of their eight&#13;
~edt. contests in Missouri last&#13;
Greeting their arrival 'were&#13;
~ratures in the mid-eighties,&#13;
!he' leamfi was able to work outon&#13;
If IfSt day in camp. but the&#13;
~:~_~rolledin. Rain held off&#13;
""'If rust day of scheduled rm:nand Parkside met Iowa's&#13;
I&#13;
Penn t.:niversity.&#13;
.effLemmermannreceivedthe&#13;
~tnod for the Rangers. but he&#13;
ou~~Iy three innings. pitching&#13;
~ lams in the second and third&#13;
!he gs before being pulled with&#13;
SCore lied at 3-3.&#13;
III)fiOffensively, Armand Bo-&#13;
\be Jg!ionailedhis rust homerun of&#13;
season. a solo blast in the rust,&#13;
andKenNeesetripledin Don Keller&#13;
in the third.&#13;
The Rangers were kept from&#13;
taking the lead in the third when&#13;
Bonofiglio was thrown out trying&#13;
to score on a Brian Gauthierdouble&#13;
to end the inning.&#13;
That would prove costly, as&#13;
William Penn's Jim Nerat hit his&#13;
second homer of the game in the&#13;
fifth off of reliever Ross Kalinowski.&#13;
That two-run blast proved to&#13;
bethegame-winner,asneitherteam&#13;
scored the rest of the way.&#13;
Kalinowski was tagged with&#13;
the loss, as Parkside dropped its&#13;
fourth straight to open the season.&#13;
Thatwas quickly remedied,as&#13;
the Rangers faced South DakotaWesleyan&#13;
in the nightcap.&#13;
Parkside's hitters errupted for 15&#13;
runs in that game. banging out 16&#13;
hits in seven innings.&#13;
Steve Leonhard was shutting&#13;
down South Dakota in the mean&#13;
. time. giving up a single run in the&#13;
rust before seuling down to give&#13;
lain multiples of the more valuable&#13;
cards. 1986 was the rookie yearof&#13;
Karl Malone. Michael Jordan,&#13;
Charles Barkley, and Patrick Ewing,&#13;
among others."&#13;
Big profits have attracted a lot&#13;
of people back to the collecting&#13;
tables. and Topp's business here is&#13;
beginning to show that interest,&#13;
"Things started off slowly. but&#13;
recently business has picked up. A&#13;
lot of word-of-mouth 'advertising'&#13;
has helped between my friends."&#13;
While selling cards has been&#13;
the biggest part of business so far.&#13;
his door is always open for anyone&#13;
who is looking to sell. "It's a good&#13;
way for someone who finds cards&#13;
up only three hits in the final six&#13;
frames.&#13;
Bonofiglio and Jack Klebesadel&#13;
each had four hits in the&#13;
Ranger barrage, with Klebesadel&#13;
hitting three doubles and knocking&#13;
in five runs. Freshman Dom Del&#13;
Rose also added a pair of doubles&#13;
in the 15-1 rout.&#13;
Leonhard went the distance&#13;
. for the victory. Parkside's rust of&#13;
the year against four·losses.&#13;
The rest of the Ranger games&#13;
fell victim to a storm system which&#13;
dumped over four inches of rain on&#13;
the camp that night and the next&#13;
day. Among the games lost: additional&#13;
games against Penn and&#13;
Wesleyan; a doubleheader against&#13;
Missouri's School of the Ozarks.&#13;
and a pair of games against UWOshkosh.&#13;
This Saturday will mark the&#13;
Rangers home opener, as they will&#13;
facetheMarqueue Warriors. Game&#13;
time will be noon at the Ranger&#13;
Baseball Complex.&#13;
Ranger Thursday, March 22, 1990 g&#13;
Rangers&#13;
swept in&#13;
opener&#13;
ToPP brings.sport card collectin .&#13;
by Jeff Lemmermann saleatacardsh "I 9 a step closer&#13;
Sports Editor be' ow. t really can' of. Take, for example a 1986 bo&#13;
a g~ mvestmem, and really of Fleer Baske ' .x at home to get some quick cash.&#13;
payoff if you do it smartly" . . al tball cards. In their RIght now I'm especially interTopp&#13;
was introduced tlte the ~~:nanlear. ~ou could go to a ested in a Jack Klebesadel rookie&#13;
card business a few years back tainin acks ase a full box con- card or the Top Gun edition of the&#13;
when the current owner of Sports- $20 ~ paTodaof cards for Just 1990 Ranger Basketball team."&#13;
world Investment Company Tim would . , y, that same box Added Topp, "Buying sets of&#13;
S&#13;
,go ror upwards of around cards' eeger, opened. up shop on 122nd $2,000.00. IS comparable ~ putting&#13;
&amp; North Ave. In Milwaukee. At "S th. li money In the bank. I ve never&#13;
the time, Topp helped with setting box of omed&#13;
mg iketn&#13;
unopened heard of a set depreciating, as long&#13;
things up, and running errands for va1uablecar~ can 0 ten be more as it's been taken care of. Some&#13;
the fledgling business. Now, he Pea Ie .. a complete set sets do better than others, and a lot&#13;
helps by selling" cards and mer- uno~n':';;illingh.tohgarnble on depends on how the rookies do that&#13;
r&#13;
..:._.....:.x.:.es::.:w=Ic:.:.:CO=UI:d~c:o:n-~year. The 1987 set with Jose&#13;
Canseeo, Will Clark, and Bo&#13;
D.U ~ . , Jackson will obviously do better Di .hhS than the 1981 set which never did&#13;
TRAIlE YL'rt C,~ pan out"&#13;
" 'k 0 S arUs Of his current collection, he&#13;
c. points out a rookie Walter Payton&#13;
(1976 Topps-S300.oo) and three&#13;
Joe Montana rookie cards (1981&#13;
Topps-S2oo.(0) as his mostvaluable.&#13;
"My favorite, though, besides&#13;
the BUddy Bianca1ana collection,&#13;
is a Robin Yount rookie (1975&#13;
Topps) worth ahout $200.00. He's&#13;
always been my favorite player."&#13;
"If your looking to buy or sell&#13;
cards, give me a call. If 1don't&#13;
bave it, I'll find someonethatdoes."&#13;
from Baseball. p, 12&#13;
it 5-4. Indiana State ended thai&#13;
threat in a hurry, scoring eight run!&#13;
in the bottom of the third to break&#13;
the game open. Final tally: Indiana&#13;
State 21, Parkside 6.&#13;
The only pitcher to escepe&#13;
without injury was freshman ROSl&#13;
Kalinowski. He rescued Fennrid&#13;
in the fifth and went the final three&#13;
and one-third innings, giving up&#13;
nothing on four hits in his r1fSl&#13;
appearance as a Ranger.&#13;
The series was the season&#13;
opener for both teams, as theSycamores.&#13;
ranked 30th in the nation&#13;
D01Ched their rust series sweep. '&#13;
"We really didn't play that&#13;
badly," added Gauthier. "Better&#13;
defense would have given us the&#13;
rust game, and the third game was&#13;
a one-run COOleSt until the roof&#13;
caved in. For being outside for the&#13;
rust time this year. it wasn't bad."&#13;
r······················,&#13;
: PAN PIZZA DEAL : i$549 Receive a 10" Pan :&#13;
I Pizza with your two I&#13;
I favorite toppings and I&#13;
: 1 litre of Coke for :&#13;
I II $5.49! I&#13;
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: :. ~ 4/4/90 :&#13;
• v.Iid.~ 01'I'fNlll~ ............ '"'- ..... ..., II&#13;
I&#13;
e-~~ L.iII*d~_ ~""''*'l''''&#13;
tNnS2ll.OllOl.w..... _tlCIl~Icw_---. •&#13;
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1:$999 Receive two 10" Pan :1 Pizzas with your two&#13;
: favorite toppings and :&#13;
I 2 litres of Coke for I III $9.99! I&#13;
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• =:;,::.:==:~-:.=r='==:,: • • "-S2ll.OllOur,*-_IKIl~b''''---- •&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
soQII.... ca" ... CAIl ••••• n FOIAIICIr DEAl.&#13;
Call us Kenosha!&#13;
North: 654-5070 2136 Washington&#13;
West: 654-5577 491 g 60th Street&#13;
South: 652-1222 B028 22nd Ave.&#13;
Call us Racine!&#13;
North: 681·3030 3945 Erie SI.&#13;
Central: 634-26007 1100 WashIngton&#13;
South: 554-9543 2308 Lathrop Ave&#13;
-10 Thursday, March 22, 1990 Ranger'&#13;
Seniors lead the way for&#13;
1990 baseball campaign&#13;
Brain Gauthier, and Jack KJebesadel&#13;
will roam the outfield this&#13;
spring, with Gauthier the latest&#13;
addition to the senior trio. Gauthier,&#13;
who moved from his catcher!&#13;
infield position of a year ago, was&#13;
moved to the outfield this spring&#13;
with hopes that it will lead to improved&#13;
offensive statistics. Last&#13;
year Gauthier batted .344 with ten&#13;
team-leading doubles. With a stable&#13;
position those numbers should go&#13;
up. Bonofiglio, who batted around&#13;
.500 two years ago, slipped down&#13;
to human numbers of .337 last year&#13;
while leading the team in RBI's&#13;
with 22. With expectations not as&#13;
high, look for Bonofiglio to relax&#13;
in center field and turn in some&#13;
impressive numbers again this&#13;
spring. Klebesadel, -who batted&#13;
.352 a year ago, will need to duplicate&#13;
those numbers in order for the&#13;
Rangers to baveasuccessful spring.&#13;
This senior trio of outfielders need&#13;
to be at the heart of the offensive&#13;
attack this spring, and being there&#13;
last year the Rangers look for big&#13;
games from them.&#13;
Pitchers - Starting pitchers for III;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;,m&#13;
the Rangers this year wiD be seniors&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann (4.84 ERA&#13;
a year ago), Darrin Pluskota (7.36&#13;
ERA), Steve Leonard (3.46 ERA),&#13;
and junior Jeff Konzcal ( 4.09&#13;
ERA). With this veteran starting&#13;
rotation in place, the only thing that&#13;
could hurt them is an early season&#13;
cold spell which can lead to inactivity&#13;
and a lack of effectiveness, a&#13;
problem which plagued this group&#13;
last year. Shoring up the bullpen&#13;
will be Jeff FeDrick, Ross Kalinowski,andTimCates,allofwhom&#13;
should provide more than adequate&#13;
relief help.&#13;
Designated Hitter - Ron Wilke&#13;
will see most of his action in this&#13;
spot after being forced out of the&#13;
outfield picture this spring. Wilke&#13;
will be looked at to help give some&#13;
, power to the line-up which may be&#13;
_a much needed component in the&#13;
Ranger attack.&#13;
Overall the Rangers look to&#13;
have the pieces in place for a sue- l':~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~&#13;
cessful season, if they can over- r&#13;
come early season inactivity via So.4itball team' en'ioys Wisconsin's less than forgiving ':J I ~&#13;
springs, they should produce a&#13;
better than a.500record this spring. successtui road. tn·p Though their tough schedule may U I • I .&#13;
hinder that, they have 16 Division from Lady Rangers, p, 12 The rains came Thursday and&#13;
I games, as well as six Division II the Parkside powerhouse, 8-0, as forced theLady Rangers oockNoM&#13;
games which will help to show Beth Hansen got her second win but coach Draft was bappy about&#13;
their strength come playoff time. and Draft was able to sub most of how the team played.· .&#13;
Ifthe Rangers are able to use the contest, "We were just putting dungs&#13;
their plethora of seniors to their In the last day of action together when we bad to leave,we&#13;
advantage and play consistent Parkside heat up the next victim, had good pitching, and our out·&#13;
baseball,thiscouldprovetoheone Hiram College, 8-0, as the final fielders did a great job, IjustbOPO&#13;
of the most exciting springs at three games for the Lady Rangers we can live up to our ~&#13;
Ranger Field. were basically bench victories. number four ranking," she said·&#13;
by Jeff Reddick&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
The grass is still brown from&#13;
the winter and already the baseball&#13;
season is upon us. The Parkside&#13;
men's baseball team heads into the&#13;
1990 spring campaign with one of&#13;
its most promising_teams in years.&#13;
The Rangers, who only lost&#13;
OIIC member off last year's team,&#13;
bave been building towards this&#13;
season for four years. At the conclusion&#13;
of this spring the Rangers&#13;
wiD be without the services of ten&#13;
of their top players. Spring 1990&#13;
needs to be "The Year" that the&#13;
Rangers take the District 14 title,&#13;
and they appear poised to do so.&#13;
After a disappointing 1989&#13;
season in which the team compiled&#13;
a 13·16 record, coach Red Oberbrunoer&#13;
looks for his team to put&#13;
everything together and make a&#13;
run at the District 14 title. Two&#13;
years ago the team had hiDing but&#13;
lacked effective pitching. Then last&#13;
year the bats gave way, anda much&#13;
improved pitching staff was left&#13;
holding the bag. This year both&#13;
elements need to come together in&#13;
order for the team to meet expectations.&#13;
This is how the 1990'Rangers&#13;
shape up by position.&#13;
Catcher- Gary Fritsch andStan&#13;
Diedrich will share the duties behind&#13;
the plate this season. Fritsch&#13;
isback after suffering through two&#13;
yearsofnagginginjuries.lfhecan&#13;
stay healthy he stands to be a welcome&#13;
addition in the Parkside offensive&#13;
attack. Diedrich should&#13;
see equal time in the catchers slot&#13;
after proving his effectiveness as a&#13;
platoon player in '89 when he&#13;
shared time with Brian Gauthier,&#13;
who has since moved to the outfield.&#13;
FirstBase- JeffReikowski will&#13;
hold down the right field line for&#13;
the fourth consecutive season.&#13;
Reikowski batted .313 last spring&#13;
and had an impressive .981 fielding&#13;
percentage. With those numbers&#13;
behind him Reikowski only&#13;
needs to cut down on his strikeouts&#13;
(a team leading 22 in '89) in order&#13;
to have an improved spring. Having&#13;
the unpleasant position of playing&#13;
behind a four-year starter is&#13;
Mike Caccioppi, who_ will see&#13;
limited action.&#13;
Second Base - Senior Dave&#13;
Rebro and Freshman Marc Thompson&#13;
will split time at second.&#13;
Rebro had a dismal '89, only&#13;
managing a .240 batting average.&#13;
He will definitely need to improve&#13;
if he is going to maintain his yearold&#13;
starting spot. IfRebro falters&#13;
early look for Thompson to step in&#13;
and hopefully provide some spark&#13;
in the bottom of the order.&#13;
Third Base - Don Keller will&#13;
play thebo! comer this spring after&#13;
seeing most of his action in the&#13;
outfield last year. Keller will need&#13;
to make the transition smoothly,&#13;
because his bat will be needed to&#13;
bolster the bottom of the order.&#13;
Shortstop- Kenny Neese will&#13;
maintain the position here earned a&#13;
year ago when now departed Doug&#13;
Londowentdown to injury in midseason.&#13;
Neese provided the offensive&#13;
spar!&lt; to many Ranger victories&#13;
last year as well as on the base&#13;
paths, where he led the Rangers in&#13;
stolen bases with eight, Neese, a&#13;
senior, will bave to continue to&#13;
provide the spark as he well hold&#13;
down the lead-off spot in the batting&#13;
order.&#13;
Outfield - Armand Bonofiglio,&#13;
PARACH UTI NG,--------&#13;
WITH&#13;
PARKSIDE!!I&#13;
Spon red by the Parkside Activ s Board&#13;
Sports and Recreation Committee.&#13;
April' 22, 1990&#13;
An entire day of excitement&#13;
Price: $100&#13;
$20 deposit due by Aprll4 remainder due on Aprll18&#13;
Includes transportation, clOss,and Jumplll&#13;
Bus ceeons 5:00a,m.&#13;
SIgn up at Union Into Desk no later than MARCH 21. so we&#13;
con determine price. Additional Information and more&#13;
details wiD folloW&#13;
Your Gui.de to this:&#13;
spring/s baseball and&#13;
softball action, ..&#13;
1990Ranger Baseball&#13;
~17~@@OO!Dl ~©lD1@©IJillI]@~&#13;
Date Qpponent Place Tim&#13;
Lake ForestCollege&#13;
Indianapolis Tourney&#13;
DePaul University'&#13;
Marion College&#13;
Loyola University&#13;
College of St. FranctsfIrny)&#13;
St. Xavier College&#13;
U. of Illinois-Chicago&#13;
UW.QshkoshTourney&#13;
51. Xavier College&#13;
U. of Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Mt, Mercy Tournament&#13;
DePaul University&#13;
National College&#13;
UW-Parkside Tourney&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
Lake Forest, IL&#13;
Ind., IN&#13;
HOME&#13;
HOME&#13;
Chicago.Il,&#13;
51. Francis. IL&#13;
HOME&#13;
Chicago.IL&#13;
Oshkosh, WI&#13;
Chicago.Il,&#13;
HOME&#13;
MI. Mercy. IA&#13;
Chicago,IL&#13;
HOME&#13;
Shane Rawley&#13;
'HOME&#13;
3:00&#13;
TBA&#13;
3:30&#13;
3:30&#13;
3:30&#13;
TBA&#13;
4:00&#13;
4:00&#13;
TBA&#13;
4:00&#13;
4:00&#13;
TBA&#13;
4:00&#13;
4:00&#13;
5:45&#13;
4:00&#13;
03/24 Marquette University HOME 12:00&#13;
03/29 St.XavierCollege Chicago,IL 1:00&#13;
03130 North Central, HOME 2:00&#13;
04/03 UW-Madison Madison,WI 1:00&#13;
04105 U.ofIllinois-Chicago Chicago,IL 12:00&#13;
04/07 Northeastem Chicago,IL 12:00&#13;
04/08 UW-StevensPoint HOME 12:00&#13;
04/10 CarthageCollege Kenosha,WI . 1:00&#13;
04/12 UW-Milwaukee Milwaukee,WI 2:00&#13;
04114 Northeastem HOME 12:00&#13;
04/17 CatTolICollege HOME 1:00&#13;
04120 NorthPark North Park, IL 3:00&#13;
04t23 NorthPark HOME 1:00&#13;
04126 NorthCentral Illinois 2:00&#13;
04128 UW-Milwaukee HOME 12:00&#13;
04!29 CarthageCollege HOME 1:00&#13;
05101 Lewis University HOME 1:00&#13;
1990 ~nger rubmen'sSoft6af[&#13;
!R~u.far Season Scliet!u.fe:&#13;
Date Opponent Place Tim&#13;
03/29&#13;
03/30-31&#13;
04/03&#13;
04/04&#13;
04/OS&#13;
04/07.00&#13;
04/09&#13;
04/11&#13;
04/14&#13;
04/16&#13;
04/18&#13;
04/21-22&#13;
04/24&#13;
04/25&#13;
04/27-28&#13;
OS/OI&#13;
-&#13;
"LadyRangers potentially the best&#13;
r I by Ted MdJ;ttyre I Sports Wnter&#13;
I&#13;
If ever there was chance for a&#13;
National Championship to come to&#13;
UW·Parksidenow is the time.&#13;
Ranke(Hourthin the NAIA polls,&#13;
!bewomen'ssoftball team is primed&#13;
I&#13;
and ready for a stellar season.&#13;
This season's Lady Ranger&#13;
I&#13;
ream will field an experienced&#13;
!Quad, in which all but two of the&#13;
I&#13;
ninepositionshaveretummgstart_&#13;
es, Head coach Linda Draft is&#13;
hopingforthe best but understands&#13;
awilltakemore than just a talented&#13;
!Ila!lclub.&#13;
"We are capable of winning&#13;
!beNationaltourney, but that will&#13;
require a little luck too," said Draft.&#13;
AmongUW-Parl&lt;side's experienced&#13;
club are six starting senm.&#13;
Starting at first base will be I Kim Vanderbush, at second base&#13;
Wendy Sackman, and at shortstop IPam Hosp. The outfield will have&#13;
IWO starting seniors, Tracy Bur1lII:h&#13;
in leftfield and Marisa Posig&#13;
in ri$htfield.As for the rest of the&#13;
I&#13;
!llIltIIIgline up, Sue Palubicki, a&#13;
~homore, will start at third base,&#13;
IIId jWliorlaura Nowdomski will&#13;
!IalI in centerfield.&#13;
Ranger Thursday, March 22, 1990 11&#13;
EXCITING WOMEN'S&#13;
PROFESSIONAL&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
Minnesota Monarchs&#13;
vs&#13;
LEGENDS OF BEACH VOLLEYBALL&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 23,1990&#13;
AT&#13;
RACINE maH SCHOOL FIELDHOUSE&#13;
MATCH TIME 7:30 PM&#13;
The Ranger pill;hing staff is as&#13;
well experienced and includes four&#13;
women in the rotation. Returning&#13;
senior Karen Livesey had a 16-8&#13;
record last season for UW -Parkside&#13;
and a 1.33 ERA. Juniors Beth&#13;
Hansen; 14-8 last year, and Laura&#13;
Stock, 5-1, POSted 1.96 and 1.99&#13;
ERA's, respectively. Joining the&#13;
upperclassmen rotation is freshman&#13;
Jeanne Easelman.&#13;
These girls will have to be&#13;
ready to compete quickly as the&#13;
softball season starts this Saturday&#13;
as the Lady Rangers travel to&#13;
Pensacola, H.. for the Spring Ring&#13;
tournament lasting seven days.&#13;
UW-Parkside is scheduled to play&#13;
a minimum of II games with the&#13;
possibility of going onto the playoffs&#13;
on March 16th and 17th.&#13;
A big reason for UWParkside'snumberfiverankingare&#13;
a trio of Lady Rangers. Pam Hosp&#13;
is returning with All-American&#13;
honors as is Tracy Burbach, who&#13;
was named to last season's Nationals&#13;
all-tournament team. Wendy&#13;
Sackman was also an All-Amencan,&#13;
named to the all-tourney team,&#13;
and was the National Player of the&#13;
Week. With all this experience&#13;
UW -Parkside could easily become&#13;
overconfident, but Draft is making&#13;
sure to safeguard against this hap_&#13;
pening.&#13;
"Our motto is to take each&#13;
game one at a time, have fun, and&#13;
not look to the end of the season"&#13;
said Draft.&#13;
The Lady Ranger schedule is&#13;
incredibly busy this spring as the&#13;
team plays 57 regularseason games&#13;
inasmanydays. Mostofthegames&#13;
played will be doubleheaders with&#13;
weekend dates going to tripleheaders.&#13;
The rigorous schedule could&#13;
wear down most teams, but this&#13;
year's Lady Rangers are deep&#13;
enough to allow starters time to&#13;
rest. Pivolal players off the bench&#13;
for the Lady Rangers are sophomore&#13;
Tammy Wright at frrst base,&#13;
freshman Jodi Farberwhocan play&#13;
either shortstop or second base,&#13;
sophomore Patti Fink at thirdbase,&#13;
and freshmen Tara Carlson, Jacki&#13;
Vukos, and Rachel Silaff backing&#13;
up the outfield.&#13;
With her line up, Draft is very&#13;
optimistic about this season and&#13;
knows this is the year she has a&#13;
great chance to go on to Nationals.&#13;
"Our girls are very excited and&#13;
ready to play, I'm looking forward&#13;
to a good season."&#13;
!MONARCHS ROSTER INCLUDES:&#13;
Elaine Roque - Olympic team, All-American, Top beach player&#13;
Therese Boyle -Intemational Player, All-American&#13;
Diane Ratnil&lt; - Canadian National Team, All-Big 10, Team Canada&#13;
Andrea Gonzales - Argentina national Team, 4 Time All-American&#13;
~aENDS OF BEACH VOLLEYBALL ROSTER INCLUDES:&#13;
Linda Chisholm - Top pro beach player, Olympic team&#13;
Nina Matthies - Olympic team, Top probeach player, MLV player&#13;
Angela Rock - Olympic team, All-Tournament Canada Cup&#13;
Dale HaU - Olympic team, Italian professional league MVP&#13;
TICKETS:&#13;
$5 Adults! $6 At Door&#13;
$3 Children (12 and under)&#13;
Women'sbasketball&#13;
wraps up good year&#13;
said Miller. "We got good bench&#13;
help. The freshmen played especiallywell&#13;
for us, and HeatherTrue&#13;
also played excellent basketball at&#13;
the end of the season.&#13;
Looking ahead to the 1990-91&#13;
Lady Ranger campaign, Parkside&#13;
will be solid in the experience eato&#13;
agory with Van Cuick, Wietzel&#13;
and Ingallsallrewming to lead the&#13;
squad.&#13;
'I1ie 1989-90 'Ubmen's '13ask.f,toaf{Team.,.&#13;
from Netters, p. 12&#13;
and lead the squad in field goal&#13;
percentage, shooting .483 from the&#13;
floor. Tracy Northrop Jed the team&#13;
in the rebounding category with&#13;
7.4 pg. and scored 8.5 per game.&#13;
Terri Ingalls added 1.4 ppg.&#13;
The bench wasalsoinsuumental&#13;
in the success of the Lady Rangers&#13;
this year.&#13;
"EveryoneconbibutedflX'us,"&#13;
, '!f9JJerof the weeK ...&#13;
Van Cuick leads the way&#13;
I For excellence on the basketball court this season, and in leading the&#13;
/l&lt;idy Rangersto a 15-15 record, the Ranger extends its congratulations to&#13;
I&#13;
JIiIliOr guam Brenda Van Cuick. . . .&#13;
VanCuick, in her third season for Parkside, has sohdified.a starting&#13;
llilot whichshe held all season long. She led the Lady Rangers 1D se~~&#13;
CilagOlles this past season She averaged 13.9 pomts per game an&#13;
ISIisISper game as well as Jeading the squad in steals with 3.9 per game .&#13;
. VanCuick will have another chance to improve on these stats as she&#13;
till be --,- to spearhead the Lady Ranger attack. '-w,wlg next season . d f her&#13;
For her outstanding performance on the court this season, an or&#13;
~tions all season long for the team, the Ranger congratulates&#13;
~&lt;oIlIIVan Cuick as our Player of the Wee . ·&#13;
s&#13;
12 Thursday, March 22, 1990 Ranger&#13;
Sycamores bring .out brooms in baseball opener&#13;
s p&#13;
by 1M.F1etdler&#13;
Starr Writer&#13;
Gameoneproved 10beapromising&#13;
start for the Rangers, with&#13;
Darrin P1uskola getting the starting&#13;
nod against Sycamore ace Mike&#13;
Farrell. Last year, Farrell led his&#13;
club with a 3.39 ERA, and posted&#13;
an 8-4 record including two wins&#13;
over thedefending National Champion&#13;
Shockers of Wichila State.&#13;
Parkside Baseball kicked off&#13;
last week as the "ping" of the bat&#13;
rang in early signs of spring as the&#13;
Rangers traveled 10 Indiana State&#13;
for a three-game swing with the&#13;
Sycamores.&#13;
o R T&#13;
the first round-tripper of the season,&#13;
a two-run shot 10 left, and the&#13;
teams were knotted. 2-2. Still in&#13;
that inning, the Rangers threatened&#13;
10 take the lead when Jack Klebesadel&#13;
reached on an error and&#13;
Armand Bonofiglio doubled 10 put&#13;
two runners in scoring position with&#13;
two outs. Farrell,though,gotBrian&#13;
Gauthier 10 strike out 10 end that&#13;
threat.&#13;
In the fourth, Pluskota showed&#13;
signs of fatigue as a single and a&#13;
pair of walks led 10a Sycamore run&#13;
10 put them up, 3-2, after four.&#13;
Pluskotagave way IOJeffLemmer·&#13;
mann in the fifth, and Indiana State&#13;
was able 10 generate a two-outrally&#13;
as Farrell helped his own cause&#13;
with a triple, followed by a single&#13;
by third baseman, Danny Frye. A&#13;
RangererroronaSycamoredoublesteal&#13;
capped the inning, and Indiana&#13;
State went inlO the sixth with a&#13;
5-2 lead.&#13;
Gauthier ignited things in the&#13;
sixth with a lead off triple, scoring&#13;
on a Jeff Reilcowski single, but the&#13;
Rangers could do no further damage&#13;
as Farrell again worked out of&#13;
a jam, stranding two Rangers in&#13;
scoring position.&#13;
The Sycamores went down in&#13;
order in the sixth, and Parkside had&#13;
pulled off a victory in the last inning&#13;
(the seventh), but the umpires&#13;
called the game after the hour-and- .&#13;
a-half waiting time had been used&#13;
up through the sixth.&#13;
In game two the Lady Rangers&#13;
showed why they are ranked fourth&#13;
in theNAlAas they pounced on SL&#13;
Mary's for a 6-0 win scoring three&#13;
in the first and two in the second.&#13;
From there Pam Hoop' coasted to&#13;
her first win of the year.&#13;
"I was pleased with our comebackingametwo"saidcoachLinda&#13;
Draft, "In the first game we just&#13;
struck out too much."&#13;
The next day Parkside faced&#13;
Carson Newman College. Again&#13;
the Ranger hats fell asleep, losing&#13;
2-3 as alate comeback effort failed.&#13;
In game two that afternoon,&#13;
Parkside woke up to gain another&#13;
shutout for pitcher Beth Hansen,&#13;
who had a no-hitter spoiled in the&#13;
sixth on a single.&#13;
one more chance against tJie&#13;
"Shocker-Stopper". Neesedoubled&#13;
10open the frame, but Farrell got a&#13;
pair of strikeouts and a fly out to&#13;
notch his f1tSt win of the season.&#13;
Game two saw the Sycamores&#13;
jump on Ranger starter JeffKnoczal&#13;
early, scoring six times in the fust&#13;
and once in the second 10build a 7-&#13;
o lead.&#13;
Parkside came back with a pair&#13;
of runs in the third, but the Sycamores&#13;
got those back with single&#13;
runs in the third and the fourth as&#13;
they cruised to an 11-2 victory.&#13;
Konczal and reliever Steve&#13;
Leonhard were the victims of a II·&#13;
hitSycamoreanack which included&#13;
seven extra-base hits, while the&#13;
Rangers were held to just five&#13;
singles and a double.&#13;
The final meeting in the weekend&#13;
series was a disastrous one for&#13;
the Ranger pitching staff as starter&#13;
Dan Langendorf and reliever Jeff&#13;
Fennrick were knocked around for&#13;
20 hits in four and two-thirds innings,&#13;
breaking open what once&#13;
was a one run game.&#13;
With the score 5-1, Neese&#13;
trippled in a run, Klebesadel&#13;
knocked home Neese, and Wilke&#13;
doubled home Klebesadel to make&#13;
see Opener, p. 9&#13;
• •&#13;
SIX&#13;
•&#13;
SWIR&#13;
Tuesday was showdown day&#13;
for the Lady Rangers as they came&#13;
up against the University of Western&#13;
Florida, currently ranked second&#13;
in the NAIA. The rol1ercoaster&#13;
pattern continued for Parkside as&#13;
they could not buy a run in game&#13;
one, losing a tough I~battle as&#13;
Beth Hansen got the loss. Draft&#13;
was outspoken on the umpiring and&#13;
said Parkside was "robbed of a&#13;
victory." But in game two it was&#13;
Parks ide jumping out to a 9-0 lead&#13;
and fmishing with a 10-2 victory as&#13;
UWF barely avoided having the&#13;
game called for a 10-0 margin. The&#13;
win was definitely the biggest of&#13;
the young season for Parkside.&#13;
The following day another St.&#13;
.Mary' s oflndiana was the Parkside&#13;
opponent, and the Rangers man'&#13;
aged to come 10playas they posted&#13;
an easy 8-2 victory, Later that day&#13;
Wil1iarn Jewel of Missouri fel1lD&#13;
see Softball, p.IO&#13;
Indiana Slate reachedPluskota&#13;
for a pair of runs in the bottom of&#13;
the first to stake Farrell 10an early&#13;
2~ lead, taking advantageof one of&#13;
the four Ranger miscues committed&#13;
by Parkside infielders in the&#13;
contest.&#13;
Parkside struck back in their&#13;
half of the third as Ken Neese hit&#13;
by Ted Mdntyre&#13;
Sports Writer&#13;
The women's softhall team&#13;
opened it's season this past week in&#13;
Pensacola, Florida, but were cut&#13;
short as the Annual Spring Fling&#13;
tournament sprang a leak with 17&#13;
inches of monsoon-like rain&#13;
cancelling the teams fmal five&#13;
games.&#13;
Before the early departure,&#13;
however, the Lady Rangers were&#13;
able to take the field and post a 6-3&#13;
record in stiff competition.&#13;
The season opened up last&#13;
Sunday as Parkside met up with the&#13;
College of St Mary's from Nebraska.&#13;
Parkside scattered five hits&#13;
for two runs, striking out ten times&#13;
at the plate, and St Mary's came up&#13;
with three runs on only four hits 10&#13;
hand the Lady Rangers and pitcher&#13;
Karen Livesey the team'sfirst loss&#13;
of the season. Parkside might have</text>
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