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INSIDE Big Business! Majors continue shifting to­ THE UWM POST ward professional fields. Page 3 Financial aid: Competition for loans will; increase as cutbacks in federal grant prog­ Focus on. Higher Education rams hit home. Page 3 S&Sl Twenty-Five years after Port Huron, we look at the group's history. Pago 5 Freshmen; UWM administrators question Wednesday, September 2.198/ their preparedness. Page 11 New student minds fail to bloom r? fits Critique of education 113

highly controversial \1 W* A University of professor, special­ iMWM izing in social thought, says higher education is impoverishing the souls and minds of to­ day's youth. Few recent books relating to the state of American universities have drawn as much critical response as Allan Bloom's "The Clos­ ing of the American Mind." Despite Bloom's insistence that Story by Michael Szymanski his book is for students, many may Illustration by Mike Thompson feel slighted by his appraisal of them. In his book that has headed the I * i Times list of bestsellers for more than three months, Bloom warns that American univer­ sities are churning out a generation of non­ thinking cultural illiterates. Dloom, a respected J>6-year-old philosopher, charges that the cur­ rent move away from traditional liberal arts studies to vocational, tech­ nical and professional education is dimming the faculties of college stu­ dents. The book, a philosophical narrative that takes the reader on a con­ temporary cultural journey, uses great thinkers like Plato, Rousseau, Socrates and Nietzsche as guides. According to Bloom, the failure of higher education to require more liberal ai e failure of students to choose them is causing educational quality to spiral downwj Bloom calls the present state and trends < most urgent problem. "The crisis of liberal education is a re i •'5 a crisis at the peaks of learning ... an intellectual crisis of the greatest z magnitude, which constitutes the crisis of our civilization." I he "openness" college students express to differing ideas illus­ trates one problem in our current educational system, according to - z Bloom. < The university has responded to student demands for the democra­ tization of educational disciplines and Bloom interprets this as aban­ donment of scholarly tradition. Dloom sees a generation of college students who have been given no basis for making intellectual, judgements in their education and >- in lifestyles. Instead, they flounder in an abyss of alternatives without a Q I z Turn to page 13 CO Z < •s . Ul Percentage of total cost of instruction UW Budget mandates cuts paid by resident undergraduate students enrollment by 2,007 students, bringing the num­ by Michael Mathias ber of students in the UW System down to 1981-82 1982-63 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 162,511 students. he Legislature approved it, Gov. Tommy If the System reaches its enrollment manager Thompson signed it and UW System stu­ ment goals, it will receive full funding for 341 dents will face a budget that calls for in­ new faculty positions. However each of the T campuses receiving new faculty must use them to '«* creased tuition and continued enrollment reduc­ tions as they enter school this fall. relieve bottlenecked courses. The total operating budget for the UW System "The UW System is basically being held hos­ is $T.7 billion — a four percent increase over tage," said David Suchman, an analyst for the last year. Legislative Fiscal Bureau. "The university cannot System officials also will be more accountable release any of the money to those campuses that to the Legislature under the 1987-'88 budget. did not adhere to the enrollment targets." Monies alioted for increased faculty positions The Legislature requested that of the 341 new won't be allocated until the System shows satis­ positions, five percent be filled by minorities. A factory progress in restricting campus add/drop proposal by State Rep. Spencer Coggs (D-Mil- procedures, managing enrollment and tightening waukee) that would require 12 percent of the admissions policies. new positions to be held by minorities failed to get into the final version of the budget bill. System President Kenneth Shaw also is di­ % of total cost of instruction paid by students. rected to provide a report by Sept. 1 of each year The budget provides for a 9.2 percent tuition until 1991 detailing progress of the enrollment increase for resident undergraduates, bringing the cost of attending UWM for a year, with fees, UWM Post Graphic Source: UW System Fact Book 1987 management plan. This semester, the UW System has to cut Turn to page 13

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Wednesday, September 2, 1987 The UWM Post Focus on Higher Education Page 3 | Legislation triggers increase in student debt Higher Education Act have A revised definition of an "in­ Prior to the amendment there Johnston said. "Grant money has by Lisa Lien raised the maximum dollar dependent student" included in was no age provision for inde­ leveled off as a result of the bud­ amount students may borrow, the new law requires that a stu­ pendent status, and any student • get crisis and many students are hanges in federal higher ed­ but at the same time stricter pro­ dent qualify as one of the follow­ whose earned under finding themselves ineligible for ucation spending and legis­ visions have narrowed the pool ing: $30,000 automatically could be loans. The options are to go o C lation have prompted stu­ of eligible applicants, said Janet • A 24-year-old student. included in the program. other sources." dents to seek new resources, ac­ Hansen, director of policy analy­ • An orphan or ward of the A student who does not qualify Johnston noted a drop in the cording to financial aid and lend­ sis at the College Board of Wash­ court. as an independent student must total number of students partici­ ing institution officials inter­ ington, D.C. • A veteran of the United now document financial need in pating in loan programs in Wis­ viewed recently. "The real impact will come this States Armed Forces. order to participate in the GSL consin from 108,600 in 1986- As available aid dollars fail to fall," Hansen said in a telephone • An individual with legal de­ program. '87 to 95,000 this year — a 12 increase with education costs, interview. "The bottom line is pendents other than a spouse. The change in independent percent decline. and more stringent requirements that under the new eligibility • A graduate or professional status requirements has triggered But at the same time, Johnston limit the number of students eli­ fewer students are borrowing, student who will not be claimed a shift away from GSLs toward said, the average amount bor­ gible for Guaranteed Student but they're borrowing more." as a dependent. supplemental loans and the Pa­ rowed has increased. Students Loans, observers note several The new education act allows • A married person who will rental Loans to Undergraduate will borrow a total of about new trends in financing a college students to borrow up to $2,625 not be claimed as a dependent. Students program, according to $235,400,000 this year — an av­ education. for each of the first two years of • A single person with no de­ Dick Johnston, vice president of erage of $2,500 for each student, As borrowing increases, ex­ school arid $4,000 for the fol­ pendents who was not claimed the Higher Education compared to the average of perts are also beginning to raise lowing two years. A student may as a dependent by his parents for Corporation. $2,150 last year. questions ab$ut the impact of borrow up to $54,750 for gradu­ the two previous years and is "Students are not necessarily UWM has seen a 20 percent student indebtedness on career ate school — more than twice the self-sufficient — having earned at voluntarily going away from the drop in financial aid applicants choices. amount allowed under the old least $4,000 in each of the last GSL program, the federal laws Amendments to the 1965 legislation. two years. are forcing them away," Turn to page ~

The quick payoff Future income important when selecting a major "It also can be a lucrative field if you by Maureen Moore get into the right business," Breuriig said. tudents across the nation are opt­ ing for vocationally-oriented majors Dianne Sinnwell, director of the Ca­ Sthat will ensure jobs and high in­ reer Development Center, said she has comes, said a recent study by the High­ found more students are choosing er Education Research Institute of the vocationally-oriented majors like busi­ University of at Los Angeles. ness and accounting than in past years. "Students pick what majors they The study, a random sample of think jobs will be opening up in," 300,000 freshmen in 600 colleges, in­ Sinnwell said. dicated that 25 percent of the students chose business over other traditional Students hear from the media that fields such- as the health professions there are opportunities in business or a v$mess You have iob and education. shortage of teachers so they pick that legreeand as Kenneth Green, associate director of major, she said. 10 anywhere in the Higher Education Research Insitute at UCLA, said in a recent New York Sinnwell has also noticed that stu­ Times article that students want a ma­ dents straight from high school are jor that will have a quick payoff be­ more interested in liberal arts than cause of rising tuition and difficult eco­ older students who want a majqr that nomic times. can get them a job fast. The older stu­ dents feel a time crunch with their Between 1966 and 1985 an interest choice, she said. 1 in liberal arts has declined steadily and dramatically, Green said. A decline in "Employers, though, are looking for a engineering majors by 20 percent and well-rounded individual with good discouraged students from education, "There are greater prospects in edu­ computer science by 60 percent in the communication skills," Sinnwell said. but they have improved in the last cation now," Bagley said. last three years was also found, he said. three to five years," Bagley said. Martha Bagley, assistant dean for the Social Welfare is one of the more "Education is starting to come back, School of Education, said that because Students are also going back to drastically declining majors at UWM. In but it is still a considerably smaller per­ of national publicity of the need for im­ school to get their teaching certificates 1980 the number of students graduat­ centage of students," William Korn, provement in public education and the because they are unhappy in their pres­ ing with a B.A. was 195. In 1986 it had who also worked on the study, said in a shortage of teachers, more students are ent jobs, she said. Teaching was their dropped to 116. recent interview. choosing education as a major. first choice but they instead went into a UWM students seem to be following major like business for the job oppor­ "There's no denying the decline," the national trend. Records show the "Salaries also may have in the past tunities. Dean Fred Cox of the School of Social number of students graduat­ Welfare said, "though it has ing with bachelor's , de­ leveled off the last two to grees from the School of three years." Business Administration has Business 25.1% increased from 457 in 1980 The social work jobs that to 652 in 1986. Social were anticipated have not Science 110.0 materialized, Cox said. The "Students see business de­ government has cut support grees as career opportun­ for social welfare programs, ities," said Sarah Sandin, a Other non­ so there are very few jobs. specialist in the Career technical Counseling and Placement Lori Best, who plans to be office for the School of Busi­ a social worker, said she real­ ness Administration. Education izes the money will never match what she could make "They also want a more Engineering in another field. specialized degree for the "You have to have a mas­ more specialized and techni­ Other Tech- ter's degree and a speciali­ cal jobs opening up," Sandin zation to go anywhere in the said. field," she said. Greg Widener, a student in "I want to work in geriat­ International Relations, said 5.8 rics and open a program for he disagrees with this philos­ Alzheimer's disease," Best ophy. He said he chose his STUDENT MAJORS said. "I think it's a misrepre­ major over business because he believes a broader back­ sented field, but will be rec­ ground will be better. ognized in years to come as America grows older." "I think employers will be looking for more general and "I didn't go' into it for the flexible majors," Widener money, that why most peo­ said. ple don't go into it," she said. Shelly Breunig, a business Widener said he feels that major, said she grew up . choosing a more general ma­ helping with busi­ jor, like International ness finances and found she Relations would allow him to liked it. !B2»ntiMMMlittMMiftttMiMadimiatffcti "go anywhere."

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First Bank Milwaukee • Phone School I am attending An Equal Opportunity Lender Wednesday, September 2, 1987 The UWM Post Focus on Higher Education Page 5 25 years later A historical account of the '60s student movement

n June 11, 1962, 59 college stu­ Statement", which would eventually cause dents gathered in Port Huron, a split with the LID. The group wrote that a at a United Auto work­ social change was necessary from the cold er's camp 40 miles north of De­ war, military-industrial complex that had story by troit, to discuss the future of the American developed after World War II. The group left and the university student's role in that believed that the university would be a Doug future. tool to form the movement for this The culmination of that meeting, what change, which would be based on the Hissom was to be called "The Port Huron State­ premise that: ment," a 64-page, single-spaced work of ideological prose, became the founding • "Any new left in America must be, in document of a group calling large measure, a left with real intellectual itself Students For A Demo­ cratic Society, whose acro­ nym, SDS, would be syno- nomous with the radical movement of the 1960s — the' anti-Vietnam War/draft efforts; freedom of speech gains and a push for academic and social freedoms on cam­ puses across the nation. By 1970, over 60,000 copies of this document had been circu­ lated among college students around the country.

The Port Huron Statement evolved from a group of stu­ dents who believed that a to­ tal reconstruction of Ameri­ can society — both economi­ cally and ideologically — was needed "in order to form a more perfect union." The end result, however, turned into some of the most violent ac­ tions our modern-day nation has ever known. The social and political ramifications from that movement exist still today, 25 years later. The original draft of The Port Huron Statement was written by Tom Hayden, a skills, committed to deliberativeness, hon­ former editor of the University of Michi­ esty, reflection as working tools. The uni­ gan Daily newspaper. Hayden, now a state versity permits the political life to be ad­ legislator in California, and Al Haber, a junct to the academic one, and action to graduate student at the University of be informed by reason. Michigan, brainstormed on the idea of a national student organization which • "A new left must be distributed in sig­ would focus on the goals of a new liberal­ nificant social roles throughout the coun­ ism — a new left — a left different from try. The univeristies are distributed in such the roots of what SDS was, the Student a manner. League For Industrial Democracy — a socialistically political, yet staunchly anti- • "A new left must include liberals and Soviet communist student arm of the socialists, the former for their relevance, league For Industrial Democracy. The the latter for their sense of thoroughgoing founders believed in more openness to­ reforms in the system. The university is a ward ideologies of the left. more sensible place then a political party Hayden, Haber and a small group of for these two traditions to begin to discuss other like-minded thinkers' efforts came to their differences and look for political syn­ UWM students marched o.'n Kenwood Blvd. during a 1970 student strike. fruition in the draft of "The Port Huron thesis. • "A new left must start con- ...,- troversy across the land, if na­ tional policies and national apa­ thy are to be reversed. The ideal university is a community of con­ troversy, within itself and in its ef­ fects on communities beyond. [. • "In a time of supposed pros­ perity, moral complacency stom­ achs to be the engine force of so­ cial reform. The case for change, e for alternatives that will involve uncomfortable personal efforts e must be argued as never before. The university is a relevant place for all of these activities." Nationwide membership hov­ ered between 800 and 1,500 students at about 30 campuses during the years spanning 1962- 64. By October of 1965, SDS could claim over 10,000 mem­ ber? and 90 chapters aroun i the sues an< nation — including one at UWM people! , which formed in December If stuc 1965. the cam The activity of SDS at UWM The r was at first limited to holding lec­ vate pec tures and distributing leaflets tion." It about the growing American mil­ getting < itary involvment in the Vietnam rnation War. troversu On May 19, 1966. the campus ble," bu group held its first demonstration "scholai during a selective service exau another nation being held in Bolton 15( too." According to an article in Tb Alrno! page 14 Turn to page 6 •

Page" 6 The UWM Post Focus on Higher Education Wednesday, September 2, 1987

the women . . . we were not al­ SDS lowed to sit on the grass. It was worse than the high school I had From page 5 gone to. I expected a more open, intellectual atmosphere. UWM Post, members of the "When you questioned this at­ ATTENTION group picketed in the hall outside mosphere of intimidation, you and distributed information con­ were met with so much repres­ cerning the military build-up as sion that you had to do some­ STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS students were ushered out of the thing about it." room. The group held demonstra­ There was no recorded vio­ tions and handed out leaflets lence on either side, but "a SDS every day between classes for ac­ sign was ripped by some passing ademic freedom during its early students as campus police days and had about 50 members. looked on." "But we were effective way be­ SDS chapters began forming yond that," she said. in serious numbers after what be­ Simensky she said first became came known as the Berkeley invovled in so-called "liberal poli­ "Free Speech Movement" — the tics" in high school. "I was a little CAP first direct confrontation between to the left of the Young Demo­ students and campus administra­ crats. I thought FDR was fine and • I ai^VaV#« tors at the University of we needed more leaders like California at Berkeley. him." In the fall of 1964, students Simensky said she met some is now located in saw the first campus arrest of students from Antioch (Ohio) picketers who were protesting College at a summer camp for the administration's banning of civil rights education. Union East 341B. all political fund-raising on cam­ "They told me about the war," pus and the first successful stu­ Simensky said. "I didn't know dent strike. In the end, the ad­ there was a war going on in Viet­ ministration relented, but not af­ nam then." She later met some ter the expulsions, arrest and vio­ of the people she knew from the lations of what the students camp at Brooklyn. thought were their Constitutional "The thing that fueled the All inquiries regarding funding rights had kindled the smolder­ whole movement was realizing ing fire of the discontent of stu­ the whole hypocrisy that we had should be addressed to dents on campuses across the been fed throughout our lives nation. and at the university ... that free­ S.F.A.C. AT THIS LOCATION. Sue Simensky, currently a Mil­ dom of speech was something waukee resident who was in­ that you were supposed to have, volved in the SDS formation at but in reality you had something Brooklyn (N.Y) College during else — no freedom at all." the same year, recalled that the Simensky said that when she S.F.A.C. WILL MEET BI-WEEKLY. issues at her campus were the joined SDS, members of some of same as those at UWM. the other left-wing political Simensky said the chancellor groups such as the Socialist Wor­ at Brooklyn College was "a ker's Party and the Communist friend of Joe McCarthy's who Party USA were not too involved. was still living in the red scare "Not many of the people in Requests should be submitted well in days of the 1950s. SDS cared to deal with these "There was no literature distri­ groups," Simensky said. advance of the date that funds will be needed. bution allowed; pants, or slacks, were not allowed to be worn by Turn to page 10 Ml Backpacks 20% Off Through. September 19, while supplies last.

Sticker Prices Include Discount ••lifetime warranties 3x the ••fashion colors UWM BOOKSTORE Wednesday, September 2, 1987 The UWM Post Focus on Higher Education Page 7 Aid trends Computer system signal turn to loans boosts efficiency From page 3 this year, said Mary Roggeman, acting director of the Department at Financial Aid of Financial Aid. Roggeman said about 15,000 by Lisa Lien students had applied for some form of aid at UWM, and that about 10,000 of those would re­ n innovative computer interface system has boosted efficiency ceive financial assistance. She es­ at UWM's Department of Financial Aid and has helped improve timated that about 38 percent of A application processing time,.according to financial aid and lend­ the university's students receive ing institution officials. financial aid. She said that although UWM The new system "automatically packages" each student's financial had been allocated the same statement and aid application and links UWM's office with area lend­ amount of federal grant dollars ing institutions, said Mary Roggeman, acting director of the depart­ this year, the demand for the ment. This system has improved the department's application process­ grants had increased — forcing ing time by about 230 percent over last year's, she estimated. more students to participate in "We decided to automatically package the loans through the sys­ loan programs. tem," Roggeman said. "We're taking steps to improve'operation, and "The Reagan administration is we're finding it's working more efficiently this year." just not putting the money into " higher education grants, it is putt­ The network, which is used by almost all UW System four- year ing the funds into federal loan campuses and MATC, has expedited the process by centralizing infor­ programs," Roggeman said. mation, she said. Additionally, each student who files a Family Finan­ UWM was allocated $1.5 mil­ cial Statement and application with the office receives a letter detailing lion for federal grants, she said, all forms of aid for which he is eligible. Loan information is mailed to but the department "could rea­ the student at that time. sonably spend five times' that amount if we had it. The need is Previously, loan information was sent only after a student had learn­ there." ed he would be ineligible for grants or other aid and had requested a She said that as of Aug. 24 the loan, she said. The department then would evaluate how much the stu­ department had awarded $20.6 dent would be eligible to borrow under the Guaranteed Student Loan million in financial aid. Of those program. dollars, 51 percent was in the Under the new system, students are considered for all forms of aid form of GSLs, direct student and evaluations are packaged with the materials sent to students, she loans and other supplemental said. Students who decide to take out loans then take the statemeni to loans. Federal and state grant a lending institution and determine how much they will borrow. money accounted for only 36 percent of the total awarded, she "What we're doing here is getting the ball rolling," Roggeman said. said. there "is a lot of concern that stu­ the most money tend to go into "Many students wait until the last minute to decide to see what loan Seven percent of the remain­ dents will become over-indebt­ careers such as engineering and money they're eligible for. This way, they're informed of how much der was in the forrrTof work study ed," there is little evidence to business, while those borrowing they could borrow and are sent the paperwork right away." and employment programs, and suggest how the concern is af­ the least chose fields such as The system is especially helpful to large schools such as UWM, ac­ 6 percent was in the form of oth­ fecting career choice. teaching and communications. cording to Tammy Metzke, a marketing representative at First Bank. er scholarships, she said. "There just isn't enough data She added, however, that the Since the processing time is significantly improved, UWM's financial About 1,000 students who to support any theories," studies are "incomplete." aid office now compares favorably with that of many schools. were eligible for GSLs last year Johnston said, "Of course stu­ "People are beginning to study lost that eligibility with the new dents who go on to graduate the overburdening of students," "The loans are definitely coming through much more quickly," independent status provisions school levels finish with a much she said. "But we need to know a Metzke said. "It's very encouraging. It's a larger school and will of this year, Roggeman said. But higher'debt, but it seems they lot more before we can say just course have more students to deal with, but it seems to have become about 1,000 more gained eligibil­ earn higher incomes and so as­ how much students consider in­ much more efficient." ity by turning 24. sume the responsibility of paying come when choosing a career." Metzke said the turn-around time, the amount of time it takes a stu­ "Because they're now allowed it back." Hansen said a student's loan dent to receive a loan after completing an application, is about eight to borrow more, I hope students Johnston said the average stu­ payback after graduation gener­ weeks at UWM, while schools such as the University of have a take a second look before decid­ dent debt upon graduation in ally is 7 percent to 8 percent of 12-week turn-around time. ing to borrow the maximum Wisconsin is $4,750 to $5,000. his income per month. available to them," she said. The average is higher at urban "Paying back is not a big prob­ The computer link between the office and lending institutions has "They've got to look at the real universities such as UWM, he lem for the majority. There will "made our job a little easier," Republic Savings Vice President Ron picture and borrow responsibly." said. be a few whose burdens will be Fillon said. She said the financial aid de­ "Theoretically, some may get too much. . . . There will always "All the information is coming in computerized. Because UWM is partment sponsors pre-loan and so bogged down that they are be pockets of problems. much larger, it had been hard for them to handle all the processing. budget seminars for students, overwhelmed by the debt. ... In "But it's appropriate at this But this year it has gotten a lot better," he said. which urge students to consider some individual cases it may be time to be concerned that we their career choice and potential true, but we can't really say yet." could reach a point at which it's Fillon said the computer network also includes links to the Wiscon­ career income before borrowing. Hansen said some studies indi­ too much. We have to be vigi­ sin Higher Education Corporation and American College Testing, Jqhnston said that although cate that students who borrow lant." which help evaluate loan eligibility. W.rSlQfcWQS^W^^Si^? there is "And education? itutefor PLACEMENT & CAREER . . . The experience of the ce. DEVELOPMENT OFFICE movement of the senses Mark Your Calendars Now! toward formation." CAREER DAY 1987 —Isis Ramon Thursday, October 1st Wisconsin Room, UWM Union 9:00 AM — 2:00 PM: GENERAL SESSION 3:30 — 5:30: HEALTH CARE SESSION LOCAL 82 Don't miss this opportunity to explore the Wisconsin State Employees Union career of your choice with employers from AFSCME • AFL-CIO business, industry, government, and health care. URGENT MESSAGE We represent over 450 members Subscribe to The \toll Street Journal, who work here at UW-Milwaukee and enjoy student savings of up to $4& That's quite We have received an urgent request from Jacques a bargain, especially when you consider what it Clauvel of the Direction de rEnseignment, and the UW centers in Waukesha really represents: Tuition for the real world. To subscribe, call 800-257-1200,* Ext. 1066 tol-free Superieur des Telecommunications for a student and West Bend. Become involved O mail to The Wall Siren Journal. 500 3rd Ave W. Seattle. WA 98119 by the name of Bryan who visited Paris on May in your student organizations and _Gr»d M,*lh/*ar_ 14 - 15 to contact his office. Please contact the the campus community - and have Office of the Dean of Students (229-4632) for a good semester! "«* TheWfcll Street Journal 2000 further information. 7JW eloih dtar\ <* the Am Attention The Rt 41 U-Watertown Plank no longer runs direct to UWM. Users should use the Rt 16 State Fair Park and Ride lot. Catch the bus right outside the entrance at the street side. This cost is only $7.50 for 10 tickets. See the Rt 16 schedule. Convenient and Inexpensive Transportation to UWM

Get the excellent UWM education you want without using a car and SAVE, SAVE, SAVE!

If you live 10 miles from campus it could cost at least $318 per semester to drive a car to campus. If you live further keep adding $$$$$. If, however, you take the bus it will cost at most $210 per semester. That's a $165 savings!

From all areas of Milwaukee County there is a bus for you —

9 direct UBUSES #5 Oklahoma #15 Oakland - KK Ave.— Runs at 20 minute intervals #16 Hales Corners — Featuring the State Fair Park and Ride Freeway Flyer Service #21 North Avenue — Runs at 14 min. intervals #22 Center St. — Runs at 20 min. intervals #30 Prospect or Downer — Runs at 10 min. intervals #40 College Ave. — Freeway Flyer Service #60 Burleigh — Runs at 12 min. intervals #62 Capitol Dr. — Runs at 15 min. intervals and OVER 40 UBUS + PLUS routes!

No matter where you live a bus will take you from home to UWM all semester long. A map of the regular MCTS bus routes with the UBUS routes super-imposed is printed on the opposite page. In addition, the UBUS ticket window on the ground floor of the Student Union is open Monday through Friday 8 AM to 4 PM. Commuters may purchase MCTS bus tickets (10 for $7.50) and weekly bus passes ($7.50 — unlimited rides during the week) at the ticket window. Buying tickets or a weekly pass saves money. Cash fares are $1.00. Detailed information and bus line timetables are available at the Parking and Transit windows.

If you need help in planning how you'll get to school and home again, please stop by the Parking and Transit Office or call 229-4000. We'll help you get to class; we'll help you get onto your road to success.

Taking the bus makes cents and saves dollars!

INFORMATION PARKING AND TRANSIT UBUS 229-4000 MCTS 344-6711 MON. - FRI. 8 AM - 4 PM 24 HOUR INFO. SERVICE MILWAUKEE COUNTY TRANSIT SYSTEM

UNION GROUND FLOOR

1«! Page 10 The UWM Post Focus on Higher Education Wednesday, September 2, 1987

SDS From page 6 'They were into the 'bring our 1/ltefcomeBack boys home' sort of thing at mar­ ches but we believed it was wrong to be killing the Vietnam­ ese as well. Our boys weren't the only ones getting killed over there.1' *r The Brooklyn SDS chapter, as well as most chapters around the country were typically male- dominated, but Simensky added that the group was very un- authoritarian. "A lot of women from SDS started the rebirth of the women's movement." Simensky said that despite The Port Huron Statement's wide cir­ Imprinted " EASTPAK culation among college students, it wasn't a document that heavily CREWNECK Heavy Duty influenced SDS after its writers had left the organization. "It's not like they read (The SWEATSHIRTS BACKPACKS Port Huron Statement) and joined. They joined because of $£fc99 Only While Quantities Last S amW mM 99 the struggles they felt ... it $ $ seemed to be a group that was *f Reg. 14" Save 5°°! 1 I Reg. 15" Save 4°°!\ cutting through the hypocrisy. "SDS became a much more national 150Count ^National radical group than its founders intended." **** Stemming from the Free Speech movement at Berkeley FILLER SPIRALS was the concept of the "Free Uni­ 70 Sheets —1 Subject versity" — collection of what was PAPER up to that time a selection of no- 18 58 cost, no-credit politically-orient­ _ $4)30 Reg. 3 for 2 $ m 90 Reg. 2 forlf ed courses considered tabboo at universities of the time, taught by 2 for dL Save 88$ on 2! Save 68$on 2! local activists as well as university professors. The SDS chapter at UWM es­ tablished a Free University here in September of 1966 featuring PHOTO such courses as "Anarchism and CALCULATORS Avant Garde Literature," "Issues Scientific (EI-515) Financial (EI-731) in Vietnam," "Psychodynamics of Political Behavior," "The Consti­ PROCESSING $44,95 $4795 (At Participating Stores) tution, Myth or Reality" and 0 "Marxism as a Social Science." l"W Reg.2795 M Reg.2495 OA ^ Every Day The Marxist course drew the $ 00 00 ire of Nile Soik, a Republican Save 13 ! Save*? ! mm w Off Low Prices! assemblyman from Whitefish Bay. Soik made several futile at­ '•'^ American tempts at banning the chapter TZSKi&TnB. from the use of university fac­ Heritage Roget's II: THE ilities for this endeavor. The Free University at UWM DICTIONARY continued growing steadily for NEW THESAURUS the next four semesters, reaching Thumb-Indexed Thumb-Indexed a high of offering almost 30 courses and would maintain spo­ $ $095 Save radic offerings for two more 10" s 95 $ years after that. Reg. 15* Save *5™7 Other activities for the UWM Reg. 12 4°°! SDS group for 1966 included demonstrations in front of navy and marine recruiting booths in the Union. Plus Many Unadvertised Specials!! In March 1967, at the UW- 3132 North Downer Avenue, Telephone: 962-7880 Madison campus, SDS members and students numbering over 1,000 protested recruiting by (MasterCard representatives of Dow Chemical 1 X J Company, the makers of napalm. SALE PRICES VISA* The end result was students' Follett's VALID heads meeting the clubs of the THROUGH MILWAUKEE BOOKSTORE campus police. Seventeen pro­ OCTOBER 15 c MCMLXXXVII testors were arrested while Fpflett Corporation Shockwaves went across the state's universities as chancellor's

Turn to page 14 Wednesday,,September 2, 1987 The UWM Post Focus on Higher Education Page 11 Class demands prompt remedial course fee The charge was implemented in re­ in fall, but monies gained from the reme­ mented to enable students to improve by Michael Szymanski sponse to the high demand for 100 level dial course fee will open 151 new sections their skills without first attending a tWo- math and English courses. Demand for in math, English, psychology, economics year campus. The program also was budget maneuver designed to open these courses has increased since General and history, according to Dean of the Col­ chosen to enable UWM to monitor degree more class sections will require stu­ Educational Requirements go into effect lege of Letters and Science William progression. A dents taking remedial English and for all undergraduates this fall. Halloran. On the extra charge, Smith said: "In the math courses this fall to pay, in addition to A report on remedial instruction and fee end the student pays anyway because if tuition, a $195 fee if they take more than In the past, only the College of Letters and Science required English and math recovery estimated that no more than 30 there are not enough sections, they are 12 credit hours. pereent of students taking a pre-college proficiency for graduation. Now, however, not going to get out in time. You can pay The additional fee for remedial classes course will enroll for more than 12 credits. more students must take the courses to now, or pay later." will be charged to students who enroll full- A letter sent to all students informing them time, take 12 credits and register for a re­ meet graduation requirements. of the new fee assessment advised stu­ Smith said the demand for sections had medial course — non-credit classes such During 1986-'87, $350,000 was allo­ dents against taking 12 credit hours in ad­ reached the "crisis level" and the only al­ as English 90 and 95, and Math 90 and cated from UWM's base budget to pay for dition to a non-credit course. ternative was to assess the fee. 95. remedial courses. That money will now be But in order to generate the needed . In-person registration has gone smooth­ .Tuition with the charge is $1,086.65. shifted to 100 level math and English funds, the program is banking on students ly as a result of the opened sections, ac­ The one credit hour that 95 level courses courses and other bottlenecked depart­ going against the advice. cording to Halloran. used to carry has been eliminated. ments. "It's our feeling that people who place in "It seems to me that it is very beneficial But students enrolling in three classes, The administration estimates that pre-college English and math ought not for students," he said. "More students nine credit hours and a non-credit course enrollment for remedial courses will doub­ take more classes," Halloran said. "But, if were able to get the courses they need and will be assessed tuition for nine credits and le, generating $790,023 in 1987-'88. One they feel they can take those courses, they this has helped students make progress to­ $195, a total of $892.40. Offering non- reason for the increase in enrollments is will." ward their degree." credit courses on a fee-recovery basis has the GERs. Chancellor Clifford Smith said the plan Halloran said he does not forsee the as­ been approved for one year as a pilot Budget constraints prevented the open­ to use a remedial course charge to finance sessment of extra fees for specific credit program. ing of needed additional course sections the openning of new sections was imple- courses.

(g)Vfc/ ® © ,® © Freshmen place ® © ®®^© below standards 5 ®® e>®\©

UWM, MPS officials concerned ^®©@

emphasis on reading — reading by Michael Szymanski difficult books. More intense preparation on English, grammar lmost half of the freshmen and composition, and certainly , ®®« entering UWM this fall more than one or two years re­ \b ®® ( A have tested into remedial quired in math," Smith said. ® English or math courses, further­ ®< ing a downward trend in place­ Weckmueller said it is tempt­ flowing each quesuorinm^ **®<( ment scores and prompting con­ ing to sit back and blame the high >%t*» ^e sections othi> .f ^ „. ® cern among some Milwaukee schools, but she noted that ® Public School System adminis­ teachers at the secondary level S>® ^®Sre detailed cx ^ trators. have their hands full. Although UWM officials are "Maybe something has gotten apprehensive to blame seconda­ out of sync between the high t~; "TV»: ry schools for failing to prepare schools and the university?" she students for college studies, asked. Q b]

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Wednesday 9:30am Faculty Spouses 1:30pm Over 55 Post Organizational Meeting 5:30pm Panther Recreational Challenge 8:00pm Dorm Foursome Tues., Sept. 8,1987 1 -4pm Union EG80 v Thursday 7:00pm Mixed Foursome

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NEW COST: $3.00 per bowler TROPHIES: awarded at Banquet, December 16,1987 Open to all UWM students, alumni, faculty, staff and general TELEPHONE public. Sign-up at the Rec Center Main Desk, Lower Level of the SYSTEM Union, or call 229-5511 for more information. On August 7, 1987, a new telephone system was installed at UW-Milwaukee. As a result, the campus exchange number changed from 963 to 229. Most 4-digit office extensions Union Lower Level • remain the same.

For individual campus numbers call:

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Get the facts What's more, with an IDS TSA or TSCA, todav. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. you have the advantage of working with one of our experienced personal financial planners. Someone who can help you tailor your investment to match your spe­ An American Express company cific needs. And your specific financial and A^MY RESERVE-OFFICERS'TRAINING CORPS | retirement goals. Call Major Randal Milling IDS is offering teachers a special oppor- at 229-4990 , UWM ARMY ROTC Wednesday, September 2, 1987 The UWM Post Focus on Higher Education Page 13 Bloom: University offers students no distinct vision vs. Jesus — he did not conclude Editor's note: T H E_ that all things are equally good, Reprinted below are excerpts that the distinction between high from "The Student and the Uni­ and low disappears. versity, " the last section in Allan As a matter of fact he intended Bloom's The Closing of the to revitalize the consideration of American Mind. Bloom argues 0MN33 these great alternatives in show­ that the student, upon arriving at • OF THE ' ing the gravity and danger in­ the University, finds an anarchy volved in choosing among them; because the University has no they were to be heightened to framework for what an educated overgrow and render indistin­ person really should know. As a guishable the profound problems result, the student is forced into the confrontation with which majors providing a narrow focus makes the bow of the soul taut. and chances for a prospective ca­ The serious intellectual life was reer. MIND for him the battleground of the great decisions, all of which are What image does a first-rank HOW HIGHER EDUCATION HAS FAILED spiritual or "value" choices. college or university present to­ DEMOCRACY AND IMPOVERISHED day to a teen-ager leaving home THE SOULS OF TODAY'S STUDENTS . . . There are attempts to fill for the first time, off to the adven­ the vacuum painlessly with vari­ ture of a liberal education? He ous kinds of fancy packaging of ALLAN BLOOM what is already there — study has four years of freedom to dis­ FOREWORD BY SAUL BELLOW cover himself— a space between abroad options, individualized the intellectual wasteland he has majors, etc. Then there are Black left behind and the inevitable least a prescribed curriculum and Studies and Women's or Gender dreary professional training that a prospective career. On the way Studies, along with Learn Anoth­ awaits him after the baccalau­ the student can pick up in elec­ er Culture. Peace Studies are on reate. In this short time he must tive courses a little of whatever is their way to a similar prevalence. learn that there is a great world thought to make one cultured. All this is designed to show that beyond the little one he knows, The student gets no intimation the university is with it and has experience the exhilaration of it that great mysteries might be re­ something in addition to its tradi­ and digest enough of it to sustain vealed to him, that new and tional specialties. The latest item is computer literacy, the full himself in the intellectual deserts ^ must speculate on what the hu­ really an anarchy, because there higher motives of action might be cheapness of which is evident he is destined to traverse. These man potential to be fulfilled is. In are no recognized rules for citi­ discovered within him, that a dif­ the specialties we can avoid such zenship and no legitimate titles ferent and more human way of only to those who think a bit are the charmed years when he about what literacy might mean. can, if he so chooses, become an­ speculation, and the avoidance to rule. In short there is no vision, life can be harmoniously con­ ything he wishes and when he of them is one of specialization's nor is there a set of competing vi­ structed by what he is going to It would make some sense to has the opportunity to survey his charms. But here it is a simple sions, of what an educated hu­ learn. promote literacy literacy, inas­ alternatives, not merely those duty. What are we to teach this man being is. Simply, the university is not much as most high school gradu­ current in his time or provided by person? The question has disappeared, distinctive. Equality for us seems ates nowadays have difficulty careers, but those available to . . . The university now offers for to pose it would be a threat to to culminate in the unwillingness reading and writing. And some him as a human being. The im­ no distinctive visage to the young the peace. There is no organiza­ and incapacity to make claims of institutions are quietly undertak­ portance of these years for an person. He finds a democracy of tion of the sciences, no tree of superiority, particularly in the do­ ing this worthwhile task. But they American cannot be overestimat­ the disciplines — which are there knowledge. Out of chaos mains in which such claims have do not trumpet the fact, because ed. They are civilization's only either because they are emerges dispiritedness. because always been made — art, religion this is merely a high school func­ chance to get to him. autochthonous or because they it is impossible to make a reason­ and philosophy. When ".Veber tion that our current sad state of In looking at him we are forced wandered in recently to perform able choice. Better to give up on found that he could not choose educational affairs has thrust upon them, about which they are to reflect on what he should learn some job that was demanded of liberal education and get on with between certain high opposites not inclined to boast. if he is to be called educated; we the university/This democracy is a specialty in which there is at — reason vs. revelation, Buddha Bloom: Liberal arts cutbacks are harmful From page 1 "Now, the most important reason, if not the exclusive reas­ framework for knowing the dif­ on, to get an education is to ference between right and make money," Yarger said. wrong, good or evil. "This is a move away from the He writes that the resulting traditional idea of higher educa­ "cultural relativism," — accepting tion," he said. "We have students differing viewpoints as legitimate here who know nothing about and equal — is wrong according 'art, , history or our culture :o the great classical thinkers and and get a liberal arts degree." :hat this flawed attitude stems Professors Contacted for this rom students' demands for rele- story from the School of Busi­ ance in the classroom. What ness and the College of Engi­ Bloom sees is a 1980's version of neering, two favorite targets for nihilism. liberal arts advocates, judged A majority of students now their students' liberal arts training avoid the great philosophic and as adequate. literary works — works that Kanti Prasad, a dean from the Bloom says address the funda­ School of Business Administra­ 1 mental questions of life — and tion, said recently imposed gen­ >pt instead for career training. eral education requirements en­ In a recent interview, UWM sure a basic foundation in all the Chancellor Clifford Smith agreed disciplines. with Bloom on the importance of- "If you go into any of the other studying the liberal arts, but said fields you could be closing your Student costs go up again students are unable to study the mind to the technological aspects great works and specialize in a of engineering and professional­ From page 1 high schools. A Minority Loan Forgiveness prog­ technical field because of eco­ ism," he said. ram for under-represented minority juniors and nomic necessity. to $1,563. Students now contribute 32.7 percent seniors in teacher certification programs with Dean of the College of Engi­ of their instructional costs. "College is very expensive. It's ~ funding of $100,000 is also in the budget. neering and Applied Science, Originally, the UW System had requested an the cost," Smith .said. "Students A Grow-Your-Own minority faculty grant/loan Charles James disagreed with increase in tuition of nearly 27 percent. Thomp­ ask themselves What are my program will begin in 1988-'89 with $183,400, Bloom's argument, noting that son had requested an increase of 12 percent. :hances of paying back student liberal arts requirements have in­ under the budget. loans?'" creased recently. Jim Smith, legislative affairs director for United The budget provides $5,759,400 for "Instruc­ Council, a state student lobby group, said the tui­ tional Quality Improvements," including: Although Smith said he has "I just don't think that it (liberal tion increase had been a victory for students. • $1 million annually for library acquisitions. not read the book, he called the arts) is important in engineering. "We were able to bring it down from what they • $50,000 annually to improve System-wide tone a little harsh based on the I question the need for it overall," requested and I think that's a good show of pow­ management information systems. reviews. He said he agreed with he said. "If a student comes out er for students in this state," Smith said. Bloom's contention that students • $18,082,600 for 341 new faculty (if of high school and has poor lan­ Smith also said that students in the state would enrollment management targets are met.) are given too much freedom on guage and reading skills . . . and what to study. benefit under increased financial aid plans in­ Additionally, Thompson requested that the doesn't know where Seattle is, cluded in the budget, pointing to a provision System comply with the following guidelines: there is not much we can do to "I would like to see people with which allows the cost of child care to be taken • That a System-wide test be developed to correct that in Engineering." a good solid two to four years of into account when considering financial need. measure math and verbal skills of incoming liberal arts education then go on Echoing Bloom, Yarger Adrian Serrano, UC president, also said stu­ freshmen. to the specific discipline they're forsees a continuing trend to­ dents had fared well under the System budget. • That all campuses review their mission state­ interested in, but it's not practi­ ward career oriented education "We were looking at a 27 percent increase," ments and develop specific guidelines for their cal," he said. for a quick payoff. Serrrano said. "I think 8.8 isn't that bad." Centers of Excellence. Sam Yarger, dean of the "I think we will move heavily Smith also noted that the budget would in­ • That the System report on any institution ad­ School of Education, said even if into careerism," Yarger said. "We crease funding for minority recruitment and re­ mitting more than five percent of its students be­ Bloom's call to continue classical will see a loss of touch with our tention programs. low admission standards. . liberal arts education is not finan­ cultural history, a loss that will The budget includes $132,000 in 1988-'89 for • That enrollment cuts larger than 2,000 in cially practical, it is too important slowly erode links to our heri­ a pilot scholarship program at five Wisconsin any one year be included in the budget. to disregard. tage." Page 14 The UWM Post Focus on Higher Education SDS From page 1 0 attempted to enact stricter disci­ plinary codes which would make it easier for a student to be ex­ pelled for such activity. New rules were set for acquir­ ing demonstration and leafleting permits and restrictions on the use of amplification equipment and bull horns. A non-violent protest for the same reason by UWM SDS members in November of 1967 drew more than 100 marchers at the Downtown UWM Civic Cen­ ter campus. UWM Chancellor J. Martin Klotsche had moved, the Dow recruiters downtown unannoun­ ced to avoid a confrontation at the main campus and to reduce the numbers of protesters. Although an article in The UWM Post in Nov. 1967 stated that SDS has all but "ceased to exist," national membership reached a peak of over the 100,000 mark in 1968. The UWM chapter chose CIA recruitment and the presence of the ROTC program on campus as its most visible targets for the next two years. Sit-ins, arrests, pickets, Vietnam veteran tent-ins and two student strikes domi­ nated the news for the next four years. However, it didn't matter that it* SDS members were directly in­ volved or not, students on campuses in Wisconsin and the nation were voices for social change, for peace, for goals that, he Milwaukee Journal while still threatened today, are somewhat taken for granted. Although SDS, through an in­ creasing ideological identity be­ keeps you in touch with the tween individuals, ultimately be­ came a victim of the problem it originally was intended to solve — that of attempting to defactionalize the American left times when time is precious. into an organized movement — the achievements of that 10-year span from The Port Huron State­ College is one of the busiest times of your life. Staying on top of ment to the Black Panthers, the current events is no easy trick with your busy schedule. White Panthers, the Revolutiona­ ry Youth Movement and the The Milwaukee Journal is designed with you in mind. The Journal Weatherman are still tangible to­ keeps you on top of local and national events with stories that are day. concise, yet comprehensive, so they're quick and easy to read. "The traditional respect for au­ thority that people grew up with Coupons and ads help stretch your dollars. in the '50s ... or to put faith in that your government or your And The Journal has special feature sections for everyone: university administration knew 'Health brings you the latest medical updates. Mondays. what's good for you . . . was bro­ *XTRA is designed for people on the move. Tuesdays. ken down, never to be put back in the same way again," *Food and Style offer treats for eyes and appetites. Wednesdays. Simensky points to as the most 'Neighbors focuses on everyday activities. Thursdays. enduring of the major SDS 'Weekend helps you plan the hottest activities in town. Fridays. achievements. "And it certainly ended the draft and kept it from And the Sunday Milwaukee Journal packs all these topics and I coming back. more into one big edition! "The government's very care­ ful to create the conditions for Sign up for delivery to the main desk of your dorm for the fall another movement. They're semester by mailing in the attached order blank with your check walking very soflty now. or money order. "SDS helped radicalize the whole society for a time and Delivery service will begin as soon as possible and will run: reorient people in directions of Sept. 8-Dec. 19 (inclusive) doing something meaningful in their life . . . moving society ahead as being the main goal in life . . . not personal wealth," Simensky said, citing former SDSers that have taken their be­ liefs during college into the "real" DORMS ONLY world. "Don't think they got de­ moralized once they were no longer students. They try to apply the same principles into what YES! University of Wisconsin — Milwaukee: fall semester they maybe doing." I would like to order The Milwaukee

Journal for the semester as follows: Name

1966 Special College address Tower and room student offer Regular price From page 5 City State ZIP Phone (with area code) tracurricular affairs validates stu­ Daily and Sunday $15.90 $31.80 dent government as a training Milwaukee Journal center for those who want to • My check/money order for $ is enclosed. spend their lives in political pre­ Daily Milwaukee • Bill my VISA MasterCard tense, and discourages initiative Journal $ 8.90 $17.80 from the more articulate, honest Sunday Milwaukee and sensitive students. The Journal $ 7.00 $14.00 Signature (if charging) bounds and style of controversy

begin. The university "prepares" Card number Expiration date the student for "citizenship" FOR OFFICE USE ONLY through perpetual rehearsals Make check payable and mail to: and, usually, through emascula­ Journal / Sentinel Inc., P.O. Box 661, Milwaukee, Wl 53201-0661 tion of what creative spirit there is in the individual. Wednesday, September 2, 1987 The UWM Post Focus on Higher Education Page 15 Education voices Access, faculty pay concern UW observers the University Committee, said Cassell was far more positve students to educate with the the opportunity to attend the by Robin Watkins he had mixed feelings about the about UWM. funds we have." University might be missing an condition of higher education in "UWM is more upbeat. Largely Bachelor's degrees received important part of their education, aculty members and observ­ Wisconsin. due to Chancellor Smith's sup­ from UWM and UW-Madison are according to Dean of the School ers of the UW System are "It's disheartening to see the port for UWM in the Legislature," "among the best in the nation," of Education Sam Yarger. debating quality, access F System disqualify people who Cassell said. "He represents Fowler said. "The quality of the "Since World War II there has and faculty salaries as they assess will be useful citizens," Cassell UWM well in the UW System courses is good, but students been a move toward a combina­ the state of higher education in said. "Many people don't apply budget pie." need to want to work for these tion of vocation, professionalism Wisconsin and at UWM. because of the sky-rocketing Cassell pointed to growth in degrees." and careerism.... There are few While many observers con­ costs, then both the System and undergraduate programs, the Fowler also said that it was im­ bastions left where a student can tacted agree Wisconsin institu­ the individual lose." quality of younger faculty and portant to properly compensate get a good liberal arts education, tions are making strides, most The System seems to be more the new Great Lakes Center for faculty members. "The catch-up but students aren't willing to do point to recruitment of faculty adjusted to keeping people out research as positive develop­ pay helped a lot, but next year that anymore." and student access as areas that than providing educational ments of UWM. we'll fall behind again. In fields Ed Muzik Sr., Director of the need attention. opportunities, he said, adding Barbra Fowler, University such as economics and business, Association of University of Wis­ "Number one, I think UWM is that short-sighted policies such Committee chair at UW-Madi- the private sector can offer larger consin Professionals, said he is a «* doing a super job considering the as this will not help the students, son, said the System is "pretty salaries." great believer in low tuition and age of the university," said System or the state. good considering the number of Even the students who have high accessibility for the UW Barbara Borowiecki, University System. Committee chair. "It's come a "I believe it's wrong to deny long way from a state school with the right to an education. They only a few thousand students to a made a great mistake in reducing university which has strength at access and in the not-too-distant the international level for attract­ future they will be looking for ing students and faculty." students," Muzik said. She said the quality at UWM He said center schools are not will continue depending on a reasonable alternative for UWM's ability to recruit and re­ many students who live in cities tain a strong faculty, an issue re­ and would not be able to move to lated to faculty salaries. another area to attend school. Borowiecki said the System is "I don't believe we should sac­ one of a few strong systems in rifice access for quality. This hap­ the nation, comparable to Cali­ pens when officials are unwilling fornia and New York. to fight for accessibility," Muzik "However, the budget is not said. keeping up with the cost of edu­ He also said teaching has been cation," Borowiecki said. "One devaluated. Promotions and trend I see is to relieve the cost raises are not given according to with the center schools." teaching ability^ but to those who Students who attend center publish and do research. schools for two years before Although the catch-up raises, transfering to the major universi­ which varied from 10 percent to ties would help alleviate the pres­ 15 percent, helped faculty this sure of crowding in classes, she year, Muzik said the two percent said. increase granted by Gov. Thom­ "It's a good trend that will pay pson for the 1987-'88 budget back," she added. "It's easier on and 1988-'89 were too small to students and institutions." keep up with inflation and the Frank Cassell, f6rmer chair of cost of living.

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[NNMHH Page 2 The UWM Post Wednesday, September 2, 1987 DSO awarded $80,000 grant After three attempts, the services that are available in­ Learning and Disabled Students clude wheel chair pushes, note Office at UWM, which offers taking and assistance in class reg­ Campus Briefs services to over 800 students, istration and at the library. i:„, ;,"••••• ', ,:•"'• •. • :• '," '. i has been awarded an $80,000 federal grant. The office staff consists of four Jeantz Martin, director of the full-time employees, one part- Charge for calls office, said the department had time and about 30 volunteers, applied unsuccessfully for the she said. The office is located in paid by Housing grant for the past two years. The Mitchell Hall room 116, and stu­ money will be used to cover the dent interested in volunteering to Although resi­ salaries of the office manager read textbooks should call 229- dents will not notice any changes and staff, as well as to fund the 6287. in their telephone bills this fall, a department's many services. new state phone system will as­ UWM awarded sess a 9 cent fee for each local The grant also will cover the call made on dorm phones, As: costs of producing a video tape, HUD grant sistant Director of Housing Pat which the office will present at Prischman said. high schools to recruit disabled UWM's urban planning depart­ Under the new system, dorm students. The tape is part of a ment will receive a $64,000 phones and all campus lines will program designed to inform high award this fall from the Depart­ be considered business phones, school students of services UWM ment of Housing and Urban De­ she said. The Housing Depart­ UWM Professor David Buck will speakon Chinese leaders on Sept. 29: has to offer, Martin said. velopment, as part of a $3 mil­ ment will absorb the charges for lion national scholarship prog­ local calls this year, but next year by eminent experts in a seven- ies costs $22 for the general pub­ The Learning and Disabled ram for minority students study­ students will pay an additional part lecture series at UWM this lic and individual lectures are $5 Students Office, established in ing community development. sum in their housing bill to cover fall. general public, $4 institute mem­ 1972, has received two other the calls. bers and $2 for students. grants from the Division of Voca­ The grant will sponsor four mi­ Helene L. Boatner, the director nority students through a two- Prischman said the exact cost of the office of leadership analy­ tional Rehabilitation for its hear­ the department would absorb for ing impaired program and for year graduate program in urban sis for the Central Intelligence Minority students planning. The money will cover local calls on the dorm's 456 Agency, will come from Washing­ equipment for the visually im­ phones was not yet available, but paired. tuition, some expenses and ton, D.C. to launch the program awarded tuition wages for employment in related that some estimates indicated with "The Concept: What Makes Martin said many students are fields at several area agencies. about 90 calls are made on each a Leader?" on Sept. 15. Five minority students who phone per month — totaling graduated in 1987 from Milwau­ not aware of the services availa­ Urban planning director Bill about $180 per month per kee area high schools won full tu­ ble to the disabled. New adapta­ Page said the department is re­ On Sept. 29, UWM history phone. ition scholarships to UWM this tions for computers are available cruiting students for the program, professor David Buck will speak year from The UWM Foundation. to aid visually impaired students, which is expected to begin in She said, however, that the about "Leaders in The People's Each scholarship is renewable including voice output, screen January. number of calls on each phone Republic of China: Mao to magnification and a braille out­ would be higher because four or Deng." until graduation if the student "The purpose of the grant is to maintains a good academic rec­ put printer. get minority professionals work­ five people use each suite phone. Because the department will The third lecture, "Indian ord. ing in the area of urban plan- Leaders: Nehru and the Tapes of textbooks also are v cover the local calls this year, Recipients — Rosalind Davis, ning, Page said. "HUD is inter­ Gandhis," will be presented by available for the disabled. Volun­ Prischman said Housing would Dawn Habighorst, Debra Hester, ested in assisting minority stu­ The Consul General of India teers from the community and "have to tighten up in other are­ Rene Smaglick and Lourdes dents in getting their master's de­ Dalip Lahiri Oct. 13. UWM read textbooks into a tape gree in the field, and preparing as" to handle the cost. Velez — were judged on aca­ recorder, she said. The tapes are "This year, students will not Other speakers include: UWM demic, athletic and extracurricu­ them for work in the public or political science professors then made available to those private sector." notice a difference in what they lar excellence. Winners of this pay for phones," she said. "But Howard Handelman and Donald year's awards represent black, who need them. He said the course of study in­ they're paying, as there will now Pienkos, Consul General of the Hispanic and Native American cludes options in such areas as Alternative testing arrange­ be something else Housing can­ United Kingdon Roger Carrick ethnic backgrounds. economic planning, transporta­ ments can be made through the not afford to do." and George Reedy, professor of office for students who cannot tion and environmental and ur­ journalism at Marquette Univer­ The Minority Academic take a test in the usual manner. ban design. sity and former Press Secretary Achievement Scholarship Prog­ Martin said volunteers are on to Lyndon Johnson. ram began in 1984 and the first UWM is the only Wisconsin two of eight continuing winners hand to read tests aloud, write Eminent scholars The series is offered on alter­ campus to participate in the will graduate in May of 1988. the answer or anything required program, which includes Califor­ slated for series nate Tuesdays in the Fine Arts to enable the student to take a nia State University, Drake Uni­ Lecture Hall at 7:30 p.m. by the test. — Compiled by Diane Daley, versity, Iowa State University and World leaders and the qualities Institute of World Affairs. Lisa Lien and Michael According to Martin other •UCLA. that make them will be analyzed Attendance for the entire ser­ Szymanski.

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by Michael Mathias bill that would cap the portion of tuition that stu­ A dents pay at current levels could be introduced into the Leg­ islature during the upcoming ses­ sion, according to the chief spon­ sor of the proposal. Rep. William Berndt (R-River Falls) said he would introduce a bill calling for a tuition cap be­ cause tution had increased "so dramatically." "Although the cost of an edu­ cation in the University will con­ tinue to rise," Berndt said, "we need to offer students some cer­ tainty, some stability." If passed, tuition still could be increased, but the bill would cap the proportion that students pay for tuition at about 33 percent. The state subsidy for tuition then Moving day —Post photo by Dave Kallmann would be at about 66 percent. Sandburg Halls staff member Andrew Delzer directed traffic dents came back to school. Sunday was the first day to move along Maryland Avenue Sunday as more than 1,500 dorm resi- into Sandburg, and the rush caused a five-block traffic jam. Berndt, who describes himself as a fiscal conservative, said he could not support legislation that would cap tuiton at an actual dol­ lar figure, but that he felt tuition increases had grown to a prohibi­ Students uneducated about AIDS, expert says tive level. 19,036 cases are in an age group between by Alice Rodgers "Historically, tuition has been 30 to 39. at 25 percent," Berndt said. "And CDC officials point out that given the in­ while we have to keep our eye on n the next five years everyone will know cubation period for the disease, 5 to 10 the budgets, I think the goal of someone who has AIDS or who will years, the.vast majority of people were in­ certainty and stability for stu­ I have AIDS, according to Robyn Brooke, fected in their teens and early 20s. dents can live side by side with health coordinator at American University Brooke said the time for quoting statis­ the goal of fiscal restraint. in Washington, D.C. tics is over. She is part of a grass roots ef­ fort by colleges in the Washington, D.C. "Obviously due to inflationar The potential for college students to get increases and the need for quali­ acquired immune deficiency syndrome is area to educate and inform students about AIDS. ty in the UW, tuition will have to astounding, yet little is being done to edu­ rise. But tuition has increased so cate them, Brooke said. "People are tired of hearing facts, but it's not OK to have casual sex anymore," dramatically, we're not offering' "If this group (students) doesn't take she said. "If people want to keep their any stability to our students and AIDS seriously, they will be the next group heads in the sand they are fools." parents anymore," Berndt said. at risk to get AIDS," she said. On a local level, Norris Health Center Berndt said that he expected The national Center for Disease Control administrators say they have no plans for the proposal would face an uphill in has documented 27,590 cases a general campus-wide education prog­ battle, but "we have a wide range of AIDS in the among peo­ ram on AIDS. of support for this concept," not- ple ages 20 to 39. Of those reported cases,- M&!Lx 8,554 are in an age group of 20 to 29 and Turn to page 7 Turn to page 6> Housing: Students survey the options years to assess the number of overflow people who by Robin Watkins can be guaranteed rooms. These numbers change daily as students find oth­ WM students who choose to live near campus er housing or are not admitted by the university. have few options available to them — hous­ East Side landlords contacted said they did not U ing in the dorms is limited and desirable see a great deal of competition for vacancies, al­ apartments can be difficult to find. though rental property does have a quick rate of Sandburg Halls officially houses 1,931 students. turnover. The spaces fill quickly and more students are ac­ Jim Wiechman, of Wiechman Enterprises, said he cepted than thereis actually room for, while others was not as busy as last year and will still have some are put on a waiting list. The overflow residents are vacancies as of Sept. 1. "It appears as if more peo­ given temporary rooms until permanant ones be­ ple are moving out of the area rather than in." come available as residents cancel their housing Weichman said some places have to be shown contracts and move out. more than others before they are rented because of Pat Prischman, associate director of Housing, bad housekeeping by the current residents. "We said, "We try to give everyone the best possible like to look for people with the imagination to look chance we can. They're crammed in, but that's OK." past things like that." Prischman said that the department works with the average number of cancellations from previous Turn to page 9 h Pacre 4 The UWM Post Wednesday, September 2, 1987

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Lobby affirms opposition to Jarvis No preferential treatment: views. He said the hearings would be held at UWM by Lisa Lien and at another System campus to allow students to "speak on the record and report their feelings." Coaches helping athletes strongly-worded resolution opposing the "The committee is interested in what students nomination of UWM student John Jarvis to feel about the nominee," Czarnezki said. "We're so­ battle against the system A the position of student regent was passed liciting public testimony, which is necessary for the Saturday by United Council, the state student lob- committee to make decisions." According to women's bas­ by. UC President Adrian Serrano said his group will by Doug Kirchberg The resolution, which attributes UC's opposition ketball coach M.A. Kelling, stage a "Stop Jarvis Week" on System campuses scheduling classes around to Jarvis' lack of knowledge of student issues, was the week before the hearing to raise awareness of passed at a monthly meeting in River Falls as the t in-person registration, practice time and games is al­ UC's position. He said students would be urged to the Union was filled most always a problem for the group prepares to voice its concern at a public hear­ write letters to Education Committee members ask­ ing on the appointment, slated for Sept. 21 at A with students hoping to coaches and athletes. ing them to oppose the nomination. UWM. add classes and complete "Sometimes I feel like we're Jarvis, a part-time graduate student in taxation, "Jarvis doesn't identify with the average student their scheduling. in the dark ages, it's real tough was appointed to a two-year term on the UW Board view," Serrano said. "Because the appointment is Standing in line along with for us to schedule classes of Regents in June. The appointment immediately for such a short time, it is necessary that he have ex­ them were members of the around practices," Kelling drew criticism from student government leaders perience with policy matters for education and the UWM coaching staff, includ­ said. who contended Jarvis did not represent student System. He just hasn't been on campuses much the ing cross country and track Volleyball coach Tom views and had attended a UW campus only one last few years." coach Frank Markel and as­ Pleyte said that another year out of the last four. Jarvis has said that although experience in stu­ sistant basketball coaches scheduling problem arises State Sen. Joseph Czarnezki, chair of the Senate dent government is an assest for a student regent, it Greg Capper and Ron Hun­ with courses that have out of Education Committee which must approve the ap­ is not a prerequisite because the majority of System ter. class exams. pointment, said he moved to delay confirmation un­ No, these coaches weren't "This year we've got the na­ til September to give students time to voice their Turn to page 8 trying to get classes for them­ tionals here and one of the selves. They were helping players, as it turns out our best their athletes schedule hitter, might have to miss one courses. night of the nationals because Nothing out of the ordinary she can't reschedule a test," at UWM. Pleyte said. "Obviously we'll "If there's a problem the try to reschedule it. * coach tends to take it upon himself to help," Markel said. "What we try and do is con­ "The kid I registered for was tact the professors early in the from the Quad Cities. It didn't semesters and sometimes make sense for him to drive they'll allow us to reschedule for four hours to stand in line these exams. But other times for a half hour, so I did it for they just don't want to set a him. precedent because they're "If people think that ath­ afraid that if they do it for one letes get some sort of special they'll have to do it for treatment, they don't." everybody." Other members of the The NCAA requires that all UWM coaching staff agree students competing in inter­ that the student athlete is not collegiate sports must take at given any preferential treat­ least 12 credits that are going ment when it comes to toward their major. According scheduling classes. They say to Pleyte, in certain schools, the athletes have to work where courses are extremely within the same system as difficult to get into, this re­ every other student, their only quirement makes scheduling advantage being that they even more difficult. have the help of the coaches —Post photo by Tony Garza and teammates. Turn to page 17 Luis Casteneda guided a crane operator through some work near McKinley Beach. The work is part of a $2 million county project designed to head off shoreline erosion along Lincoln Memorial Drive. Welfare petition puts George at center of controversy

But some leaders in Milwaukee's black In a recent telephone interview, George For George, 1986 was a hectic year. He by Steve Burnham community have questioned the efficiency called Coggs' criticism "a smaH and petty ran for U.S. Senate in the Democratic pri­ and even the legitimacy of the petition. effort to get attention." mary and it was his comments made at the tate Sen. Gary George (D-Milwaukee) They note that the petition has a photo­ George said the petition was designed Wisconsin Democratic convention, align­ is at once one of the most influential graph of George at the top and is directed as "a mechanism of communication" be­ ing himself with President Reagan's for-, Sand well-respected state legislators in to the governor, who cannot rescind his tween him and his constituents, "not un­ eign policy and the Star Wars program, Wisconsin and one of the most criticized, own veto. like a newsletter." that contributed to the recall movement. at least within his own district. "I fear the governor will see (the peti­ "I wanted to make it clear that people Last fall George, co-chair of the power­ tion) as a publicity stunt," said Rep. Spen­ didn't think I was responsible for the six There were also news stories concern­ ful Joint Finance Committee, was the tar­ cer Coggs, a critic of the petition. "If it is percent cut because I wasn't," he said. ing George's misuse of state telephones in get of a recall petition which was eventual- seen as a publicity stunt, it will be harming Besides already garnering "thousands" a deposition he made in 1984, relating to „ ly thrown out by the State Elections the very people that (George) is trying to of signatures, George said, the petition is an application to construct a television sta­ Board. help." strongly supported by many area politi­ tion, in which he stated his legislative Coggs said the petition was probably cians, including aldermen Michael McGee duties took as little as two hours a week In August of this year, George began a "poor judgment" on George's part. and Marlene Johnson, county supervisors when the Senate was in session. petition drive against Gov. Tommy Coggs said the direction of the petition Betty Voss and Dorothy Dean, and Rep. Thompson's "digit" veto which, if not — to Thompson —was as much a mistake Marcia Coggs. But George, 33, made it through the overridden by the Legislature, would cut as its appearance. year seemingly unscathed and was again state aid to families with dependent chil­ George also defended addressing the elected by the Democratic caucus as co- dren by six percent. "My feeling is that it would have been a petition to the governor. Though Thomp­ chair of the Finance Committee for 1987- lot more effective to have channeled the son can't override his veto, George ex­ '89. George represents Milwaukee's 6th Dis­ petition toward Republican senators who plained, "He can .. . release the Republi­ would have to help the Democrats over­ trict, which is 80 percent black residents cans in the Senate and the Assembly" to Turn to page 6 and includes the inner city. ride the veto in September," he said. vote against his veto. The UWM Post will begin ^ publishing twice weekly on Thurs­ (ash value l/2ttol ! mil day, Sept. 12, but you don't have to ifFREE IT'S A GOOD TIME wait that long to see us. SOFT SERVE FOR THE TWIST CONE GREAT TASTE Come to the Post Organizational WHEN YOU BUY A Meeting from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. on I LARGE SANDWICH* Tuesday, Sept. 10. We need re­ I AND A LARGE SODA. Good only at porters, illustrators, graphic artists, J Just present this coupon when you 3121 N. Oakland Ave. I buy a large sandwich* and a large Milwaukee, Wl photographers, advertising repre­ I soda, after 11 am, and you can get | a NEW Soft Serve Twist Cone free. sentatives and more reporters. j Limit one coupon per customer, Valid until Sept. 30th J per visiL Please present coupon j@ *Big Mac,* Quarter Pounder* J when ordering. Notvaild with any ;*£" Quarter Pounder with Cheese; The UWM Post, the newspaper • i other coupon or discount offer. & ?£' Chicken McNuggets."* for the informed student. Page 6 The UWM Post Wednesday, September 2, 1987 George Tuition cap proposed the cap, said that passage of the Corrections From page 5 From page 3 bill could have important ramifi­ In the Arts and Entertainment It is unclear whether the recall ing that Rep. David Clarenbach cations for students in the future. "What it means is that in a dif­ Section of this issue, the article drive hurt him in his own district. (D-Madison), generally regarded on summer films was written by In his U.S. Senate primary bid, as a liberal, would co-sponsor the ferent political climate and under different economic conditions, Joe Neumaier. In the article on though George ran third behind bill. bookstores, Pathfinder Books and Milwaukee law­ students in the state might be Adrian Serrano, president of able to lobby for a decrease in was referred to by its old name, yer Matt Flynn, he won in his dis­ Militant Bookstore. trict. United Council, the state student the cap," Serrano said. "It opens lobby which originally proposed the door for the cap to go down." Sponsors of the recall drive claim George was not represent­ ing his constituents in the 6th District. George's own recent pe­ tition drive against welfare cuts Come visit us could be seen as a reaction to that criticism. at our new pub. As part of the Senate leader­ ship, George said, he must bal­ ance statewide concerns with those of his constituents. But he denied he has neglected his dis­ Gary George trict, pointing to legislation he pushed which made Wisconsin's That depends on who runs for minority business law "the what in the wake of U.S. Sen. strongest... in the entire nation. 's retirement, he said. "I have also used my office . .. But if George, who was first to push Senate Bill 56, which elected to the state Senate in passed, re-organizing the Mil­ 1980, runs for that office again, waukee Police Department, in ef­ he may face a tough race, per­ fect leading to the transfer of haps with Coggs. power from Chief Brier to Chief Asked if he would run against Ziarnik." George in 1988, Coggs replied, Will George seek higher office "I've not said yes, but I haven't in 1988? said no."

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Wait till you've tried the burgers we make! Lutheran Campus Ministry welcomes you ... to a cookout/party on Wednesday, September 9, at 5:30 pm at the Lutheran Campus Center (Corner House), corner of Kenwood & Maryland. Let's get acquainted: we're anxious to know you. The Rev. Alexander M. Jacobs, campus pastor 962-9320 Wednesday, September 2,1987 The UWM Post Page 7 SA president calls for recruitment efforts rates," he said. "Figures show a by Lisa Lien greater year-to-year drop-out rate for minorities, and it's some­ ompletion of a student re­ thing that must be examined." source center and increas­ Annen said keeping students Cing efforts toward recruit­ informed of what the SA is doing ment and retention of minority is another priority. He said staff students are two projects topping members are looking into com­ the agenda this fall for the UWM munications systems such as Student Association, according "Campus Vision," which would to SA President Harold Annen. include television screens Annen, who took office in throughout the Union featuring June, said the organization had news, campus information and made headway this summer in advertisements. developing a resource center in "It's difficult for any student the Union that would include government to work when it can't copy machines, typewriters and mobilize student support," he word processors for student use. said. "We want to try to get stu­ A facility of this kind has been dents to become more aware of sorely lacking on the campus, he the power that's at their disposal — Post photo by Mike Szymanski said, and the SA expects to open in the student association." Sparks flew as workmen welded on the North Enclosure project recently. While progress is visible, the the center by early October. project is half a year behind schedule and more than $500,000 over budget SA officials also plan to work The new staff also will work to with United Council, the state improve participation in the stu­ student lobby, to "look closely at dent senate, Annen said, point­ Expert notes student AIDS risk admission standards at UWM ing to a need to increase the sen­ and in the UW System and de­ ate's role in policy making and From page 3 who fall into a high risk group or "Several hundred have been velop concrete strategies to im­ voicing student concerns. are known IV drug users. tested in the program — both prove minority retention," Annen He said SA is exploring the "We have a difficult time trying She also said people who are students and area residents. So said. possibility of sponsoring a stu­ to educate students on this cam­ worried about their sexual histo­ far in two and a half years of test­ dent summit on shared govern­ pus because of the high level of ry and suspect they may have ing 60 tests have been positive," "Minority students seem to ance, inviting administrators and commuters. It's pretty hard to "been exposed to the virus should Tillotson said. have a tremendous differential interested students to discuss contact students who don't live in be tested. "A bigger concern we have from other students in drop-out policy differences and concerns. the dorms," said Jean Hamilton, Hamilton said the AIDS anti­ here at the Blue Bus Health Clin­ health maintenance coordinator. body test is available free to any­ ic is the estimated 15,000 Hamilton said those most cur­ one on campus and is strictly untested individuals who are car­ rently at risk are hemophiliacs, IV confidential. She said code num­ rying the virus without knowing drug users, and homosexual or bers were used to identify pa­ they may be spreading the dis­ bisexual men. This group would tients and ensure confidentiality ease," he said. "A high priority is 1" also include anyone who has Fewer than 1,000 students at reaching those people." been sexually active with a per­ UWM have requested the test i Brooke, Hamilton and Tillot­ son in a high risk group. since the process became availa­ son stressed the need for a Brooke said testing and follow­ ble at Norris two years ago, ac­ change in sexual attitudes among ing high risk groups of people is cording to Hamilton. students, but pointedto a greater important, but in order to edu­ She said exact figures on the need for changes in individual cate students it is necessary to number of tests run and the behavior. identify 'high risk behaviors' and number of positive results could . "People's attitudes toward sex­ 1700 E. 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• Carry outs , • FANCY DRINKS WELCOME BACK TO SCHOOL "On Milwaukee's Eclectic East Side" Beer specials every week 1010 EAST BRADY 271-8889 "take advantage of Siegels September Wine sale" Page 8 The UWM Post Wednesday, September 2, 1987 Schreiber to draw from business experience self "Lord, if you're ever going to percent, and community activist else has run anything," Schreiber by Mike McCallister take me, don't take me as the Donna Horowitz Richards had said. president of an insurance com­ five percent. Thirty-three percent After losing in his attempt for a ormer acting Gov. Martin pany," and decided to return to were undecided. full term as governor in 1978, Schreiber, after spending public life. Schreiber became vice president In an interview Saturday nearly 10 years in the insur­ of Sentry Insurance, eventually F Schreiber, 48, is now consid­ morning at his Sherman Park- ance and publishing businesses, running the Wisconsin insurance ered the front-runner in the race area home, Schreiber pointed to decided that life in the private operation and conducting an au­ to succeed Henry Maier as Mil­ his experience as governor and sector was not personally fulfill­ dit of the company. waukee mayor. in the business world as the chief ing. In a WTMJ-TV poll of July 22, differences between him and his He left Sentry in 1984 to be­ So last March, when his 12- Schreiber led Dennis Conta by a opponents. come publisher of Production year-old son underwent brain margin of 38 percent to 15 surgery and Schreiber took stock percent. State Sen. John Nor- "No one else has the business Credit Association Farming mag- Martin Schreiber of his own life, he thought to him­ quist had the support of eight experience that I have, no one Turn to page 17

Lobby affirms opposition to Jarvis BACK UWM From page 5 System schools and to several ra­ Tommy I must confess i** students are not involved actively dio stations as a "comical way to I think you know it's true with student associations. raise awareness of the issue," Didn't know what a weenie you were He also has said his academic Serrano said. until I met you history and work experience at Jarvis said the song and com­ You were fun, you were swell P0MME dE TERRE Super Steel, a steel manufacturer ments by WSA officials were Since you won, we've been put to hell in Brown Deer, have given him a "somewhat inappropriate." Now because of you 636 N. Water St. "unique perspective" of student "It's hard to reply to something We feel like transferring to Northwest­ 271-0880 needs. like that," he said. "I felt they had ern U. no substance." Refrain: r "I'm confident I can represent Open Daily 10-6 Sat. 10-5:30 the students," Jarvis said in a re­ Although UC "would be out in Cuz' your regent cent interview. "Student leaders full force" at the hearings, he said voting for the very first time 20% OFF ANY PURCHASE can oppose my nomination, but he felt he would field questions O/i; your regent the reasons they put forth ha­ from the committee well. He's voting Tommy Thompson's line WITH THIS AD. ven't carried much weight. . . . Serrano said UC would have a Go on take all my cash They've indicated they don't major effect on the hearings be­ Now my bank account won't last LOTS OF PIG, COW & FISH STUFF want to work together." cause its opposition is well or­ Oh I hoped I could eat this month ACCURATE CALENDARS ganized. Serrano said UC is accepting But now I must fast OUTRAGEOUS CARDS He's so fine applications for the position from Editors note: Reprinted below UNUSUAL SWEATS & TEES other students which the office are the lyrics to "Like a Regent," a His head shines will forward to Thompson. He song written in opposition to John He's a student SHOW STOPPING JEWELRY said UC intends to supply the Jarvis, the controversial student Only part the time TIMELY CLOCKS But with full-time zeal governor with 25 to 30 appli­ regent designate nominated by GREAT POSTERS cants students feel are qualified. Gov. Tommy Thompson in June. He works at Super Steel Opposition to Jarvis has grown Wisconsin Student Association He's got no student appeal FUN PENCILS at UW-Madison, where Wiscon­ Co-Presidents Rob McGinnis Refrain BIG CALCULATORS sin Student Association Co-Pres­ and Steve Marmel composed and Jarvis is his name idents Steve Marmel and Rob sang the song based on Madon­ And my heart sunk McGinnis recorded a song ex­ na's hit single "Like a Virgin." And my eyes burned Located Downtown on the Corner pressing their objections. Copies Copies of "Like a Regent" are And my thighs itched of Water & Wisconsin Ave. of "Like a Regent," a parody to available from the WSA office Vote no good thru Sept. 31,1987 Madonna's "Like a Virgin," have 511 Memorial Union, Madison, Vote no? been sent to student leaders at Wl 53706, (608) 262-1081. Vote no ARE YOU — BRIGHT? ARTICULATE? ASSERTIVE? INTERESTED IN CONTEMPORARY ISSUES? IMPOVERISHED?

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CALL ALLEN KWASS 963-2800 GREAT LAKES OR COMMUNICATIONS, INC VISIT OUR BOOTH IN BOLTON LOBBY 4057 N. WILSON DR. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 9/2 or Milwaukee. Wl 53211 THURSDAY AFTERNOON 9/3 I Wednesday, September 2, 1987 The UWM Post Page 9 Sandburg officials defend dorm security policy sibility; residents are told to lock Davis likened good dorm secu­ "It's like a small community, ate some control over who is by Michael Szymanski suite and room doors and report rity to the usual saftey measures they know who belongs here," around and who isn't." unfamiliar faces to housing offi­ taken at apartment complexes. she said. "It is their job to deter­ At UWM, Pricshman said t Marquette University, cials. "Apartments have locked lob­ mine if people live here ... if Housing has implemented the students need a color- As an added security precau­ bies for a reason," he said. "If you something's not kosher." kind of security the people A coded ID card to get past tion from 7:00 a.m. to 10:30 allow people who don't belong In the past 15 years, attempts wanted and that if students want the receptionists at residence hall p.m., two housefellows, resident there to get in, you're going to to tighten security at Sandburg a change the department will re­ entrances. assistants, tour the three dorm have problems." have been met with complaints spond. Although security measures at towers searching for unsafe situ­ Boasting that Marquette had and attempts at circumvention by UW-Madison dorms vary, resi­ ations and suspicious-looking the largest off-campus security students, according to Prisch­ Some UWM dorm residents in­ dents either need to show identi­ people. After 10:30, two security system in the country, Davis add­ man. At one point, identification terviewed while moving in Sun­ fication before entering the halls personnel take over the duty. ed that he could only remember checks at the locked lobby doors day said they felt secure, but that or must use their key to operate "People are as safe as they two sexual assualts in the dorms spurred students to lodge doors they would be receptive to more elevators after 10:30 p.m. want to be. Each suite has two in his six years at Marquette and open with books so friends could stringent security. Security at UWM's Sandburg doors and we tell them (resi­ that their security kept the "un­ get in. One parent from Texas, Bruce Halls is different — doors are dents) to lock them," Associate desirables" out. Madison Dorm Security Offi­ Womer, who was waiting for his open 24 hours a day. Director of Housing Pat Prisch­ Prischman said one important cer Dale Burke said most crime daughter to fill out a form at the In June, a 17-year-old female man said. "People need to take difference in dorm security at in the dorms is commited by peo­ main desk, had some concerns dorm resident who was consider­ care of themselves." UWM is Sandburg's centralized ple who are not students and that about dorm security. ing attending UWM in fall was Marquette University Public communication system — a students have welcomed new, "I don't think they should have sexually assualted in her un­ Safety Sgt. John Davis said walkie-talkie link between tour­ more stringent security measures visitors in their rooms after cer­ locked room. UWM's system of dorm secutrity ing housefellows and the front during the past three years. tain hours," he said, adding that Her assailant, Christopher would be unacceptable and inef­ desk and the university police lo­ Guests in the dorms must be es­ the lobby should be locked in the Banks, 20, was apprehended by fective there. cated in West tower. corted by a resident and show evenings. university police after the assualt "A system like that (at Sand­ Although Prischman agreed proper ID upon request from Womer's daughter, Kelly, a and is now serving 15 years in burg) would definitely not work that people who do not belong in housing staff. sophomore studying journalism prison for an unrelated bank rob­ at Marquette," partly due to the the dorms can get in, she said the "I haven't heard any com­ who lived in the dorms last year, bery. area, he said. "I would be appre­ housing staff can recognize the plaints about more strict security, agreed with her father and said Security in the UWM dormito­ hensive about living under those 1,931 dorm residents from outsi­ especially from the women," an ID check at the door would be ries is primarily a student respon­ circumstances." ders. Burke said. "I think they appreci­ a'good idea. earn 2-6 credits for volunteer work through the Dept. of Community Ed. ;_z. .IT Location, security factors in flatselectio n An opportunity to From page 3 Depending on what students "It's true they treat us like chil­ Two variations from previous are looking for, and the time of dren," Doffing said, "but most meet representatives years seen by Weichman were a year in which they look, finding people don't stay long enough to .from social - greater number of students housing can be a relatively sim­ see the changes. People normally doubling up and requesting flats. ple process or agony. Timing stay two years, and when they service seems to be the major factor feel too restricted, they move Weichman said he owned 400 here. out." agencies to 500 units on the East side. A previous survey of his ten­ Ken Busch, an assistant direc­ Tanja Briese and Michelle ants showed approximately 50 tor of Housing at UWM, said stu­ Pappas lived together in percent were students, he said. dents need to apply no later than Sandburg and recently rented an apartment with another friend. Wellston Properties owner November or December to have Dan Katz said he has no vacan­ a good chance of being accepted "They became too generic and cies because his property is re- for the following fall semester. we needed more space," said rented immediately. Convenience is almost always Briese. "We lived there for two cited as an advantage for those years but we just got sick of it." Katz said he saw no evidence students who live in the dorms. of doubling up. "We just don't al­ Chris Doffing, starting his Opinions on the degree of dif­ low it. When we find out, we fourth year as a Sandburg resi­ ficulty in apartment hunting vary make someone leave, but I don't dent, said he preferred the dorms depending on what time of year consider it a problem." to an apartment because of the students look and how much MARKET DAY Katz said he did not know how convenience of the Living Learn­ time they put into finding a new many students rented from him ing Center, being able to go back home. although some buildings had to his room between classes in­ UWM student Gene Osborne SEPT. 9 more students than others. stead of hanging around in the said, "You can't just see a nice Katz said he owned "more Union, being able to meet more apartment and rent it, you have UWM UNION CONCOURSE than double what Weichman people, and the security to walk to work to find an apartment be­ has," and that 80 percent of his around inside the building at cause they might have applica­ 10:00-2:30 property is on the East side. night. tions from 10 other people." Volunteer for Credit Program 229-4429 THE DEVIL'S IVIUSIC ITDIDN"f G0MEEAS! FORTHE1 EITHER | Each one had to practice. Again and again. When the big test came, each athlete was ready. Striving for his personal best. That's how it is with sports. And that's how it is with another form of com- tition—standardized s. To doyour best, you Id prepare with the Kaplan. r students are able to re the most, year after yean Fact is, Kaplan prepa­ ration has helped over one million students onto the ide track, giving them •skttlsand confidence finish strong. Ifyou'refacingtheSAT, AVAILABLE HERE ACT GM AT ORE, LSAT, MCAT or professional MILWAUKEE'S PREMIER ALTERNATIVE tests like the Bar or CPA exams* call Stanley U. RECORD STORE Kaplan. These athletes had totrain to beat their com­ petition. 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mr Page 10 The UWM Post Wednesday, September 2, 1987

YOU CANT MISS IT, but just in UC out of national lobby case, look for it (in today's From page 3 on the name calling and the lack paper). What is it? A Poster? of tolerance at the convention," Could be. Wrapping paper? vention works under, the delega­ Smith said, "and that educational tion from Madison walked out, issues were almost non-existent. Maybe. Something for nothing? vowing to defeat a USSA refer­ "But the job is being done for Uh-huh. Something you need? endum in the fall WSA elections. us on a national level," he said. "We could work to make it better, You got it. A book cover worth but without being in there at all, we have no input." money. For free. For you. ". . . The job is being Preston acknowledged that the convention was often "chaos," done on a national level. but that several meetings were We could make it work being held in the fall to address better, but without be­ the issue. At the UC meeeting, several ing in (USSA) at all we delegates expressed an interest have no input" in joining the National Student —Jim Smith Roundtable, a smaller lobbying organization that focuses strictly on educational issues and is con­ sidered generally more conserva­ Ironically, the convention was tive than USSA. held in Madison to celebrate the Most Wisconsin student gov­ 20% OFF TEXAS INSTRUMENTS 40th anniversary of the nation­ ernments are affiliated with wide lobbying group's existence. USSA through United Council, USSA is the merger of the na­ providing for about $7,000 of tional Student Lobby and the USSAs annual budget, accord­ CALCULATORS U.S. National Student Associat­ ing to Serrano. ion, which was formed in Madi­ UW-Madison, which withdrew son in 1947. full membership from UC last Members of the Wisconsin del­ year, has a separate membership, egation also complained that providing for about $22,000 of there was too much emphasis on USSAs annual budget. at the UWM Bookstore social issues at the USSA con­ UC has been a member of vention. USSA for more than 20 years, "The general discussion was Serrano said. ma mm immm mm/ma w

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—Photo by Debbie Kaaikiola A resident of of the Mexi­ can village of Real de Catorce reluctantly posed with his burros.

$K.:O:-X*:V:-:V; In Mexico, struggle for health care persists over the CPR; you, set up the EKG; you, Herminia was only 15. Her by Debbie Kaaikiola go scrub; you, monitor. Stat!" family had little more than each Then he turned to the rest of us: "You, other. We prayed. We prayed, UWM student hey had just finished lower abdomi­ get in the other room and pray." He and we waited. Debbie Kaa&iola, a nal surgery on a 15-year-old girl and dispatched someone to tell the clinic During the next two days we former Post staff were preparing to remove a cyst on workers to "drop everything and get on heard guardedly optimistic re­ member, returned re­ «•' T her breast when she began to come out of their knees NOW." The hospital did not ports from Rodriguez. cently from a trip to have a defibrillator, which uses electric Wednesday night she came the anesthesia. As they put her back un­ Mexico. During her shocks to restore normal heart rhythm — around, and by Thursday she der, she had a sudden violent reaction to two-week stay there, the gas and went into cardiac arrest. standard equipment for American para­ was leaning against the pillows medic units. They would have to open her and talking — mostly complain­ she had a wide vari­ Immediately someone began cardiopul­ up and massage the heart. ing that her chest hurt. Testing ety of experiences, monary resuscitation while others scurried Some of the doctors shook their heads showed no brain damage. including working in for equipment and help. Medical director sadly. "Too long," they said, "too long." That night even the doctors a local hospital and Roberto Rodriguez rushed in, just having Fifteen minutes, twenty. If they succeeded cried. meeting with local finished a hernia operation in the other in restarting the heart brain damage was This was just one of the re­ government officials OR, and began to bark orders: "You, take practically guaranteed. markable events I witnessed as I and the common took part in the July 25-Aug. 8 man alike. Medical Group Missions project. Doctors and nurses from the Monterrey area joined ranks with i about 30 American medical and support personnel to form the medical- The MDs, dentists, dental surgeons and dental-surgical unit. We worked in Mate­ the GYN set up in the clinic; the opthal­ huala, a town of 100,000 on Mexico's arid rnologist and the surgeons would work in high plain, nestled between the rocky the hospital. The rest of us spread out to spines of the east and west Sierra Madre. cover as much area as we could. The regu­ Being the first such group ever allowed in lar staff at both places would help with the region, we had no idea what to expect. registration, charts and lab and surgery As the team gathered in Monterrey, we schedules. interpreters — there weren't that many of I interpreted for the opthalmology team. us — realized we'd be working from Cone was assisted by his wife Pat, who breakfast to bedtime since not even all the accompanies him on all the projects. The team members spoke the same language. scrub nurse, Candy DeGeare, worked with There weren't many Yanks in the group the doctor in Oklahoma a few years back either. Tim Buchanan, a family practition­ and is an old friend of the Cones. That er from Wauwatosa, was the only other made for a congenial atmosphere, which Wisconsinite besides me. came in handy when things got crazy. Although as a first-timer I'd been Once in Matehuala we organized the warned about the huge crowds these pro­ health center into a clinic, surveying avail­ jects attract, I couldn't help being boggled mm able space and staff and converting the by the sheer wall of humanity that lined up sea of huge cartons, which were stuffed at the sites. with drugs and supplies, into a free dis­ "Buenos dias!" the IMSS nurse called pensary. Knowing that few patients could from the registration desk the first Mon­ afford to buy prescriptions^ each doctor day. Smiling, she waved a hand across the brought along as many cases of supplies packed waiting room. "All for you!" I tried as the airline would permit. Some were to smile but I couldn't lift my jaw off the Augustin Morales Pena, 80, underwent cataract surgery. In the inset photo he is shown donations from drug company reps; some floor. several days later. the doctors had bought. It turned out she was joking; the first day they limited the number of patients to gauge how fast we worked. After that, Medical Group Missions is a division of the Christian Medical husbands' areas of jurisdiction — the mayor's wife personally though, the crowd more or less was all for Society, an international association of medical professionals. looked after us, from making arrangements to helping prepare us. On an ideal day we did about 80 con­ MGM sponsors many projects per year In the Caribbean and Cen­ our meals. We had expected basically to be ignored, except by the sultations in the morning and four or five tral and South America. For two weeks teams offer free medical patients, but were treated like celebrities. surgeries after lunch. Two days we fin­ *'; care in depressed areas. On Saturday we visited San Luis Potosi, the state capital.The ished ahead of schedule; I went over to The Matehuala project was a pilot program, a cooperative ef­ first stop was Tangamanga, a huge park. Near the entrance, 4,000 the clinic, once to translate for Buchanan and once to help the nursing team. fort between MGM, the San Luis Potosi State Board of Health and boy and girl scouts camped beside a reservoir. Water from an old There isn't an opthalrnologist within the social agency Desarrollo Integral de la Familia (Integral Family fire hose arched over dozens of cavorting boys. Some girls came hundreds of miles, though, so we were Development). Government involvement usually stops granting by; the boys pitched mudbalb at the girls, who ran for cover. Our usually pretty much in demand. At first we entry; MGM then works with a local church. guide left the bus, yelling for them to stop. Cheerfully they aimed saw patients who had been told to see an We worked side by side with DIF and attended lots of goodwill at her instead. We made a dash for it. opthalrnologist by local doctors but hadn't speeches by state and local authorities. Of course there were Past the reservoir were hiking and biking trails and a conven­ been able to get to one; after that we saw changes in MGM procedures. Evangelism was restricted. We also tion center. We checked out the international horse jumping com­ people who had rarely, if ever, been to see had extra technical paperwork, all to be done in Spanish. petition, the Probursa Cup, happening farther on. After what we'd any kind of doctor before at all. The for­ We lost autonomy but gained "the best facilities ever seen on a seen all week, we could sense the money in the air. mer had medical charts; the latter had blank forms with the patient's name pen­ The governor came to welcome us at lunch, and a local dance project," according to John Cone, a Louisiana opthalrnologist and ned in at the top. In between quite a few seven-time MGMer. We had space in the health center and in the troupe performed. We finished with downtown shopping. Sun­ hospital and DIF staff members came in, 32-bed Mexican Institute of Social Insurance hospital. day we drove to Real de Catorce, a tiny mining town ringed by some with their parents and grandparents DIF provided transportation and extra manpower. As the local in tow. DIF patroness — officials'wives supervise DIF activities in their >age 17 Turn to page 13 Page 12 The UWM Post Wednesday, September 2, 1987 Editorials USSA vote in error The recent vote by members of United Council to withdraw from the United States Student Association is not just unfortunate, it has the potential to leave students without a crucial link to the national scene at a time when that link might be most critical. As the Reagan era draws to a close, it's essential that students in particular gather as much political power as possible to have an impact on the 1988 elections. Without a strong national base of support, it's conceivable that the losses students suffered across the nation could revert even further. The last seven years have seen an administration slash billions of dollars in federal subsidies for higher education while at the same time pouring billions more into the country's military establishment. At the same time that the Reagan administration announced that cuts would be made in federal research dollars for higher education, it revealed •«» that requests from universities willing to investigate the senseless "Star Wars" program would somehow be exempt By proposing to massively cut, and in some cases eliminate, federal grant programs, the Reagan administration has continued its move to cruelly shift the burden of an education from the society that would ul­ timately benefit from an educated populace to the student who ulti­ mately, in many cases, can not pay the increasing costs. On a local level, with the departure of Sen. William Proxmire from the scene, Wisconsin students are presented with a unique opportunity to help elect a senator who can be an effective voice for higher educa­ tion. It would be ridiculous to look to Republican Senator Bob Kast- en's support on these issues as his record on education funding is abysmal to say the least. USSA has a strong record on furthering the student cause. Most re­ cently, the group, working in conjunction with other educational advo­ cacy groups, was able to gather support in Congress for increasing support for Guaranteed Student Loan subsidies by almost $2.3 billion. With the budget cutting mood on Capitol Hill and the shadow of the deficit looming, that is quite an accomplishment. / Although there are legitimate complaints about the recent USSA convention in Madison, pulling out leaves Wisconsin students without any input to the agenda in Washington. It's a link we can't afford to lose. Security lacking * This Sunday throngs of new and returning UWM students uprooted Fiscal report could set agenda themselves from their hometowns, moving their lives and possessions into the Sandburg Halls. New dorm residents were greeted by long lines, red-shirted smiling housefellows, and empty dorm rooms. But hough the calendar says paints a somewhat distressing one thing was missing — the residence security one would expect in a differently, for a growing picture of increased poverty, few­ number of people 1988 has On Politics er high-paying manufacturing dormitory at a major metropolitan university. T jobs and a greater reliance on The sexual assault of a 17-year-old dorm resident in June obviously already begun. Over the next 14 by Mike McCallister months, Milwaukeeans will help i i residential property taxes to pay illustrates that the Sandburg towers are not immune to area crime. The for local services. assault and others like it in the past, coupled with numerous property elect a new mayor, a new U.S. of news for interested voters and thefts, also show that the security system now in place is ineffective. senator, a new president and political junkies. Since 1977, the total value of The assailant, who was not a student, entered the dorm's lobby, rode probably a new representative to Since this is a new venture, I taxable property has shrunk by the elevator and wandered the halls — unconfronted by security until Congress from the Fifth District solicit your comments, as well as 23 percent, with the manufactur­ after the assault on the North Side. your suggestions, gossip, etc. Call ing portion of the base cut in half. While it generally is agreed among housing officials and police To help you sort out the doz­ or write us at the Post. statewide that there is no way to crime-proof a dormitory, systems that ens of personalities who will be * * * require identification from residents or keys to operate elevators are competing for your attention and A new report by the city comp­ Similarly, the residential tax more effective. your vote, as well as to better un­ troller's office may provide a use­ burden has shifted since 1973 Associate Director of Housing Pat Prischman's suggestion that derstand the issues which serve ful backdrop to the mayoral cam­ from 46 percent of the total to 58 tighter dorm security would prompt attempts by residents to circum­ as the backdrop of the cam­ paign. percent, with the share coming vent security measures is no basis for the loose system currrently em­ paigns, The Post has offered me The "Analysis of Fiscal from manufacturing cut from 12 ployed. this space to offer a weekly dose Trends," published August 14, There is nothing wrong with a system that allows students to have guests enter and leave the dorms at their leisure, but these basic rights of renters can be provided in a secure setting. UWM housing officials 1, need to take a good look at other metropolitan universities, such as Marquette, where IDs are required from each individual entering the PERCENTAGE OF HOUSEHOLDS BY GROSS INCOME CLASSES builidng. Or even the schools in lower crime areas, like Madison and ( 1975 DOLLARS ) Whitewater, where dorms are locked after a certain hour and are only accessible to residents, are systems that should be examined. Stationing personnel at specific doors after a certain time and lock­ ing others would be a cost-effective way to help avert criminal activity in the Sandburg towers since stringent security has a high negative correlation with crime. Other campuses have shown that it is possible to provide a safe envi­ ronment without impinging on students' rights to make their own hours and have an open social life. Housing officials might even be • • A ($15,000 and Over) surprised by the open reception most students have for more secure living quarters. 111 B ($10,00 - $14,999)

LETS HEAR FROM YOU HI C ($5,500 - $9,999) The UWM Post is committed to a free, uninhibited, diverse and robust discussion of the issues. As such, we encourage our readers to submit $H§ D (Under $5,500) 'letters to the editor' and opinion pieces on issues of current interest To be eligible for publication, letters and opinion pieces must include, for purposes of verification, the author's name, address, and phone num­ ber. Names will be withheld if a compelling reason is given. The UWM Ml X will not accept letters or opinion/perspectives pieces previously printed in other publications. Submissions must be typed and double-spaced. The preferred length 1975 1980 for letters is 300 words. Opinion/perspectives pieces should be between Years 1985 500-600 words in length. Deadlines for submissions are Monday and Wednesday at 2 p.m. The Post reserves the right to edit these articles. Submissions can be mailed to: The UWM Post Editorial Editor, 2200 E. Kenwood Blvd., P.O. Box 413, Union Box 88, Milwaukee, Wi. 53201; or they Source: Marketing Economics Guide can be dropped off at our office in the UWM Union, EG80. UWM POST GRAPHIC

Editor in Chief—Michael Mathias Entertainment Editors—Rachel Budowle, Advertising Manager—Sandra Hill Published by the UWM Post Inc., an independent, non-profit corporation. Publication of the Post is a collective Managing Editor—Ron Schultz Tim Forkes Advertising Representatives—Pat Butch, effort of the newspaper's editors, staff, and contributors. All submissions become the property of the UWM Post Associate Editors—Dave Kallmann, Copy Editor—Robin Watkins Cheryl Muth Inc. Staff members are solely responsible for the content and policies of the paper. Lisa Lien Photo Editor—Tony Carza Business Manager—Susan Scharmach Published Tuesday and Thursday during the academic year, except for holidays and exam periods. Summer: News Editor—Michael Szymanski Graphic Artist—Mike Thompson Distribution—Eugene Erasmus weekly. Subscription rates: $17.50 year, $10 semester; 3rd class delivery. Sports Editor—Doug Kirchberg Systems Operator—Dan Schramm Offices are located in the UWM Union, EC60, 2200 E. Kenwood Blvd., Milwaukee, Wl. 53201. Phone: 963-4578 Wednesday, September 2,1987 The UWM Post Page 13

Many of the older women companied by their mayor's wife. placed herbs against their tem­ Imagine, if you will, the wife of a Mexico ples to ward off certain illnesses rural Wisconsin mayor sitting on From page 11 but removed them before enter­ a rickety bus with 30 or so ing the office. townsfolk in need of medical Inside the charts I found minia­ One woman forgot. When the care for a half-day's ride to Mil: ture biographies, staccato ac­ doctor, unable to contain his cu­ waukee. Add endless hours in counts of daily life. "Diet: rice, riosity any longer, asked her why hospital waiting rooms, making tortillas. Meat once every 2-3 on earth she had a leaf pressed sure everyone gets taken care of, wks. Drinks unboiled water. Sta­ to her forehead, she quickly and top it off with another The NEW CHANCERY tus: married, 12 children. Share reached up, snatched it off and bumpy journey home. 4-rm adobe home with widowed shoved it into her purse. Our first surgery candidate was mother and 2 aunts. Occupa­ "Herbs for the pain," she ex­ Augustin Morales Pena, 80, a on Downer presents: tion: rancher (goats), herb vend­ plained. Quietly he asked to see reserved, dignified sort of man or. No company plan." it. She hesitated a moment, eyes weathered by time and hard Although school is now a must down, then put it into his out­ work. After examining Morales' for young people, the schooling stretched hand. After examining eyes, the doctor told me to ask if entry on the older people's charts it with interest, he gave it back. he wanted one of his cataracts Back to School Party often simply read "no". "Well, that's fine," he said. removed; his chances of seeing To preserve people's dignity, "Can't hurt, anyway." She looked again were very good. Mil September 6th we repeated medication instruc­ up and smiled. Handing her a "The doctor says that if you tions three times, although they prescription, he added, "Now have the surgery you will proba­ received a written set. That way you just make sure you use this bly see again," I told him. He said Drink Specials 8-12 pm most people didn't have to tell us too." Out she went, herbs in one nothing. if they did not know how to read. hand and eye drops in the other. I explained that any type of Surgery authorizations, however, We were impressed with the surgery involves a risk, but it ap­ called for signatures. Those who strong family and community ties peared that his vision behind the Win a free ten speed bicycle could not write signed by thumb­ of the people we met. Every el­ cataract was still useful. In any (winner must be present to win) print, ending the mystery of why derly person that came to see the case the decision was up to him. the hospital provided us with opthalrnologist, save one, came Again no response; I was afraid stamp pads but no stamps. accompanied-and her daughter he hadn't understood. He looked Present this ad for a free health beverage Cost and superstition combine arrived later to pick her up. carefully at each one of us in for a reliance on herbal cures and Whole families came in togeth­ turn. folk medicine. While many folk er. Some of the ranchers took "Well of course I want to see," LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL remedies have been proven sci­ turns driving their neighbors to he said, as if the answer were so entifically sound, there just isn't the clinic and hospital. obvious he didn't know why I AT THE CHANCERY an herb that can cure something People from far-off villages even bothered to ask. like a cataract. came in community buses, ac- I thought of my own grandfa­ ther, who also had gradually been blinded by cataracts. In his fifties he was told that his diabe­ tes made them inoperable. Thirty GRAND OPENING SALE! years later new techniques had made surgery possible, but with There's a New Reader in Town the stubbornness that age brings he calmly told the doctor that it was impossible. Exhaustive ex­ Milwaukee's Newest planations of the new methods only left Grandpa convinced that Full Service Bookstore the doctor was too young to know What he was talking about. Grandpa died two years ago; he JUNEAU VILLAGE READER never did see again. As the days went by I watched 1108 N. Jackson St. 347-1616 17 grandmas and grandpas un­ dergo cataract surgery. All of juneau village reader Mon. - Fri. 9-8 Sat. 9:30-5 them , were able to make out shapes and colors from formerly / "blind" eyes just one day after Special Orders Welcome - Phone & Mail Orders surgery, and their vision would Free Gift Wrap - Ample Free Parking improve daily over the next four months. One woman cried when we of- fered to remove her cataract, saying, "It's the saddest thing, not to see." The day after surgery she sat very still, holding tightly to her ALL PENGUIN BOOKS daughter's hand while the doctor removed the eye patch. When it came off, she cried again. It was ALL 1988 CALENDARS the first time in years she had 30°/

MISSION The UWM Bookstore is a university- owned store, functioning as a break­ even service department of UWM Auxiliary Services. Its mission is based on the principle that items sold: 1) must be required or recommended for courses or prog­ rams at UWM, 2) are necessary to supplement or complement courses and programs and enhance the cul­ tural and academic significance of .UWM, or 3) serve the personal con­ venience of student life. The store attempts to furnish all the tools needed in the educational process for the University's community of HMMiON students, faculty and staff.

Sales from the bookstore's break­ even operation are used to defray the cost of merchandise sold, as well as direct and indirect operating ex­ penses: salaries, fringe benefits, rent, Union Operations, capital improve­ Additional information and verifica­ Today, textbook publishers seldom ments, etc. tion of identification is required in or­ provide a "suggested retail price." der to write a check for merchandise, Instead, college stores now deter­ The UWM Bookstore is located in which makes accepting a check at a mine their prices based upon the the far east end of the Student register a time-consuming process. cost of the book and the operational Union. It is the biggest shopping area .Checks must be for the exact amount needs of their store. The UWM on campus and one the largest col­ of purchase. To help the lines move Bookstore maintains a low 20% mar­ lege bookstores in the nation^ be­ faster, it is advisable to pay with cash, gin on these textbooks. In other longing to the National Association Mastercard or Visa. For your added words, only 20 cents on the dollar of of College Stores, the American convenience, there are usually one or the price paid goes to the UWM Booksellers Association and the Na­ two "cash only" lines located at the Bookstore. From this 20 cents we tional Art Materials Trade Associat­ front of the store during "bookrush." must pay our expenses: labor, rent, ion. On the first of its two levels freight, etc. Recent surveys indicate there is a wide variety of general that over 75% of major university col­ reading books, classroom supplies Self-Service lege stores are pricing their textbooks and gift merchandise, while the higher than the UWM Bookstore. The UWM Bookstore is a self-service downstairs area features textbooks store. Self service was designed to 1) for UWM courses. allow students to purchase merchan­ Used Books dise as quickly as possible, 2) allow Our many services offered include: service to students at the lowest pos­ In order to aid the student in fighting sible prices, 3) allow students to se­ the high cost of books, the UWM • Check Cashing lect their own used books, and 4) al­ Bookstore tries to supply used text­ • Postage Stamps low customers to browse in areas books whenever possible. In addi­ • Money Orders that would otherwise be "off- limits." tion to purchasing books directly • Used Book Buy However, "self-service" does not from students on this campus, the •Special Orders mean "help yourself." Under the UWM Bookstore has its list of text­ •video Rentals laws of the State of Wisconsin, our books screened by several used •Typewriter Rentals University Police Department will book wholesalers across the country. •Greyhound Bus Tickets prosecute anyone apprehended for This gives the UWM Bookstore the •Special Events Tickets shoplifting in the UWM Bookstore. •Graduation Apparel opportunity to obtain used text­ •Gift Certificates books from other campuses. It also •Film and Film Processing gives our students an opportunity to TEXTBOOKS sell their books even if they're not The UWM Bookstore accepts both being used on this campus. Mastercard and Visa for all purchases. The largest department in the UWM Bookstore, from which more than Quantities of used books are limited, Regular store hours during the semes­ 67% of our sales are derived, is the however, since some students elect ter are: textbook department located in the not to sell their books. Also, books Mon. thru Thur. 8 AM —6:30 PM lower level of the store. The sale of very recently published or revised Friday 8 AM — 4 PM textbooks is the reason for the store's and those published by foreign, small and specialized publishers are sel­ Saturday 10 AM —2 PM existence. Textbooks are the "tools dom available used. of the trade" of being a student. Special vacation hours and extended If you choose to sell your books, they bookrush hours are posted in promi­ will usually be worth the most when nent locations throughout the Stu­ High Prices sold at the end of the semester dur­ dent Union. ing the week of final exams. During The UWM Bookstore is committed that time, the UWM Bookstore buys Standing In Lines to minimizing the price of textbooks from a list we have compiled of t to our students. Textbook publishers books needed for the upcoming se­ Your first exposure to the UWM are in business to make a profit and mester. If your books appear on the Bookstore could very well be in the price their books in order to obtain list, and are in reasonably good con­ form of waiting in long lines during sufficient return on their investment. dition, we will pay you 50% of the our textbook rush period at the be­ Publisher's book prices are based current price of a new copy. This is ginning of each semester. Long lines upon their costs, which inclade pa­ true regardless of where or at what for textbooks purchases are tradition­ per, printing, binding, labor, royalties, price you purchased it, even if you^ al in college bookstores and addi­ advertising and promotion. The in­ bought it second hand. Other books tional temporary student help is em­ creased use of graphics and compli­ not currently needed at UWM "may ployed in all departments of the store mentary texts, supplements and oth­ be purchased at the prevailing na­ so we can keep lines moving as er services offered to college faculty tional wholesale market value. This quickly as possible. However, with contribute to the rise in textbook value varies depending on the age, 26,000 students buying their text­ prices. edition, supply and popularity of the books within a one week period at book, but averages between 20% and the start of classes, it is difficult to en­ 25% of the current new price. tirely eliminate all of the resulting in­ convenience. \\ Servin Campus ( A variety of remaindered books, re­ prints and imports are available year round, as well as over 300 different magazine titles.

Whether you are looking for science NiW fiction or the classics, our General Reading Department offers you a large and ever-changing selection of reading material.

CUSTOMER SERVICE Unfortunately, some books we can not buy. Books that have gone out- of-print, or have been revised, filled SUPPLIES Our Service Desk, located at the front in workbooks, and books published of the store, offers a check-cashing by foreign or small presses and asso­ Our Supply Department, located to service, money orders, Greyhound ciations are eenerallv of no value. your right as you enter the store, fea­ Bus tickets, typewriter rentals, video tures a wide selection of classroom rentals, used bookbuy, special book items, office supplies, art materials orders, film and film processing. The Occasional Out-Of-Stock and gifts. Service Desk also handles all refunds *0\ and exchanges. The classroom and office supply sec­ It is the objective of the UWM tion of the department contains ac­ Bookstore to have enough books on counting paper, ring binders, report Check Cashing hand at the beginning of the semes­ covers, pocket folders,, filler paper, ter to allow each student to purchase pens, pencils, typewriter ribbons, his or her books by the first day of resume supplies, correcting fluid, Personal checks must be made pay­ classes. There are many factors we business stationery and desk able to the UWM Bookstore. Checks must consider to determine how accessories. A specialized section will be accepted at the cash register many are enough. These include the features art and engineering supplies, for the exact amount of purchase actual enrollment, number of books including"poster board, technical only. Two good forms of identifica­ that students will purchase from pens, graph paper, ink, paint brushes, tion must also be presented in order sources other than our bookstore tracing paper, calculators, floppy for a check to be accepted. and the number of students who will disks and magnetic tape. not buy all their books. Variations in Check cashing at our Service Desk these factors make book buying an The gift section contains numerous can only be done with a UWM inexact process. The returning of convenience items including candy, Bookstore check cashing card. Two unsold textbooks is very expensive cigarettes, snack food and health and forms of identification are required in for both the bookstore and the pub­ beauty aids. It also features class order to apply. You may pick up a lishers, therefore the bookstore tries rings, emblematic sportswear, mugs, numbered check cashing card from to avoid having excessive overstock decals, posters, greeting cards, gift our Service Desk, which must be after the prime selling period. This wrap, social stationery, records and used with a picture I.D. when cashing can result in an occasional shortage. blank and pre-recorded cassette a check for cash. Check cashing lim­ tapes. its at our Service Desk are $25 for per­ If you find the book you need is not sonal checks and $200 for UWM pay­ available, first ask if the books are on roll checks. Travelers checks may *"— order, it may be that they have yet to GENERAL READING also be cashed up to $50. There is a be received. Second, check with our 15 cent service fee per check. A competitors to see if they have a Our General Reading Department, lo­ mandatory $5.00 per check service copy. Third, if no one has a copy and cated to your left as you enter the charge for checks written for mer­ no more are on order, ask your in­ store, offers a wide selection of paper­ chandise and a $7.00 per check serv­ structor to call the UWM Bookstore backs, selected hardcovers, faculty ice charge for checks written for cash and let us know how many students publications, gift books and refer­ is applicable in the event a check is still want to purchase the book, so ence works. Although these books returned by your bank for any reason. that we can reorder the correct are not required for specific courses, amount. Try to buy all of your books they are carried to provide supple­ as soon as possible, don't wait until mentary and recreational reading to Refund Policy just before you need them. Then, if the University community. we happen to be sold out, we will have time to order additional copies. There are over 18,000 titles stocked 1) Cash register receipt is required in the General Reading Department. for all refunds or exchanges. Books are displayed within broad 2) All merchandise returned must be Marking Book: subject heading and are usually ar­ in saleable condition. All new books ranged alphabetically by author. Our must be free of any markings. Covers Publishers will only accept returns services include special ordering and pages cannot be bent or torn in from the bookstore that are clean books, which are still in print but not any way. and in resalable condition. Because in stock at the UWM Bookstore. Al­ 3) New and used textbooks may be of this, we price most books with an though there is no service charge for returned for a full refund through the erasable, non-permanent charcoal. special orders, a 50% deposit is re­ third Saturday of classes for the Fall/ So, please don't write in your books quired. Spring semesters. Following the third week of classes, all textbook sales are until you are sure you need them, final. since we can not refund books if you 4) All other merchandise may be re­ have marked them in any way. turned within one week, except as posted. 5) Defective merchandise may be re­ turned or exchanged within a reason­ Community since 1956 // able period of time. 229- 4201 - Page 16 The UWM Post Wednesday, September 2, 1987 T- Key recommendations in. the point a deputy secretary to han­ on jobs, "will there be enough, only declared black candidate's On Politics report include the establishment dle job creation issues in the city. where will they come from and affair were former State Sen. of a Metropolitan Strategic Donna Horowitz Richards has what will they pay?" Monroe Swan, UWM professor From page 12 Development Commission, and called for reliance on community (and former assistant chancellor) the re- establishment of a growth resources and "appropriate tech­ Ernest Spaights and community percent to four over the same formula for state aid to nology" for economic develop­ A short note on the launching education professor Walter period. municipalities. ment. of the Lee Edward Holloway Farrell of the Milwaukee Afro The study shows that the City Comptroller James The five candidates will debate mayoral campaign. Holloway American Council. percentage of households in the McCann said in an interview that economic development issues on held a fundraiser at his campaign Spaights is also listed as a co­ city living on annual incomes less an essential tool for future Sept. 9 at 7 p.m. on Channel 10. headquarters on the west side signer for Conta's $3,000 loan, than $5,000 has increased since financial planning for city The debate, sponsored by the Friday night. while Farrell has also contributed 1975 from 18.5 percent to 25.9 government was a reliable way of Public Policy Forum, will center Among those attending the to Norquist's campaign. percent, measured in 1975 determining how much money dollars, while over the same the city could expect from the period the number of state each year. households making $15,000 Prior to the mid-1980s, state shrunk from 44.4 percent to 31.3 aids were tied to economic percent. growth, McCann said. Aid money The report also shows that would grow as the economy Milwaukee is far from immune to grew. "If the economy went up the shift to a service economy, eight percent, shared revenue noting that since 1975 when 33 went up eight percent," McCann percent of Milwaukee workers said, up to a ceiling of 12 were employed in manufacturing percent. jobs and 22 percent in service McCann also said that he was jobs, ten years later those planning to send a letter asking numbers had almost completely the candidates for mayor to reversed. In 1985, 24 percent of respond to some of the concerns Milwaukeeans held in .the report. manufacturing jobs and 30 Judging from some of the early percent were employed in the rhetoric in the mayoral service industry. campaign, economic The -economic impact of the development will be one of the shift is clear. The report cites major issues in the campaign. state Department of Industry, -Both State Sen. John Norquist Labor and Human Relations and former acting Gov. Martin figures, estimating annual wages Schreiber have stressed their for 1986 in manufacturing were support for private sector initia­ $26,012, while in service jobs tives for more employment, while the estimate was only $16,772. Dennis Conta promises to ap-

•%•

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Banquet Facilities Up to 200 COMPLIMENTARY WELCOMES 2856 N. Oakland HORS' D OEUVRES 332-6323 3 - 6 PM Monday - Friday •YOU BACK*

Join us for a welcome back get together on Norris Allergy Injections Wednesday, Sept. 2 at 5:00pm in the Milwaukee Student Birth Control Room (Union W191, enter through the Blood Pressure Screening Ballroom) with soft drinks, snacks and good Health company. Counseling Service Dental Also come to our picnic Sunday, Sept. 13 \ "More than just a clinic" Dermatology place and time to be announced at meeting or available at our office Union East 341 Developmental Groups Monday - Friday phone 229-6555. •*« 8 am - 5 pm Gynecology 963-4716 Health Education We have informational and social meetings Health Assessment throughout the semester on the 1st Wednesday WEEKLY HEALTH T Autoimmune deficiency syndrome and 3rd Monday of every month. Watch signs for (AIDS) is a viral disease which ren­ Illness details or pick up a schedule. ders the body's immune system inef­ fective. Transmission of the HTLV- Immunizations III (AIDS) virus can occur while (a) engaging in sexual intercourse with "1 ~1 "1 1 "1 "T 1 T ~\ '"» "J "I 1 T 1 -|"-|~I~1~V~I~I~I Laboratory i i i "tfi T n i an infected person, (b) using con­ fcTI""l-l~l~l""|-l-|-|-|-|-|-|-| -i-ii-ininn taminated needles (IV drug dsers) ,- I'T T: T 1 1 T.I 1 and (c) receiving contaminated Psychiatric Counseling i ™ . i i r\ "i i i "i "l •--» 1 n i i T *)-I-TI i i blood products (blood transfusions). —I —I —I —I —I —I "T»1 "I 1 With questions and concerns re­ -) -1 -* .-1 ~v *i "i- -» -v n ~i ~i i~\ -i i i i i i V ~" Sports Medicine i i T '"» i i ~i "i t ~\ i ~\ n • i i n -i "i -i -i -i ~I~I~~i ~i I i ~w-#i i ~i n n garding AIDS, call an AIDS counse­ n~inn~i~i~i-in~inn~i"1 "J 1 1 T ~! -~l ~l 1-1 "1 "I i nn T-iin-nHnn lor at 229-4716. -inn-i-innin-innnnnn-i-inn ~iw ~i i -i-ji-in-in~inn~inn-i-i-i-i-in-in Vi ~i Wednesday, September 2,1987 The UWM Post Page 17 Coaches help battle registration woes

by Doug Kirchberg concern is that they don't acci­ Pleyte said, "in the ten years that dentally play an ineligible player. I've coached I've never had even "In certain schools, like busi­ close to an ineligible player play­ Badge Prismacolor Pencil Sets ness, it's almost to the point ing." Airbrushes Permanent, where they might have to change "I don't know what can r Although all the coaches tend 25% Off lightfast, their major for a semester in or­ be done about it. It's a to agree that helping their stu­ water-resistant der to be working toward a de­ burden, but you really dents schedule courses is not an gree and be eligible," Pleyte said. Colors can be can't give them prefer­ easy task, they realize that it's Newsprint Pads easily blended "I don't know what can be ential treatment." something that must be done. on most sur­ done about it. It's a burden, but "It's not frustrating, it's just 100 sheets —Tom Pleyte something that has to be done," per pad. faces. Available you really can't give them prefer­ ential treatment." Pleyte said. "It's a task, a lot of Sizes: 9"xl2", in sets of 12, 24, time and a lot of sleepless nights 12"xl8\ 36,48, 60, 72. Markel said that, even with all If that were to happen the school trying to get the whole thing the potential problems, schedul­ could be penalized and the done. 14"xl7", 25% off. coach could be fired. ,, ing isn't that bad if the athletes "I think that's the whole point, 18 x24" Pleyte said that the system has is that when you're used to the 25% Off Rotring Mechanical make sure to get their registra­ many checks and balances to system it's not a bad thing at all. Pencil Set tion forms in early. avoid such a situation. And the It's just something that has to be According to Pleyte, the main system must be working, for as done." Hyplar & Liquitex Acrylic 25% Off Schreiber focuses on credentials 3 fine line mechanical pencils From page 8 mic development) is to take care up without a proper sense of of our own," he said. "We as a one's self," he said. (0.3mm, 0.5mm, 0.7mm) azine, which he referred to as a community (should) do every­ The training program also financial management journal Reg. $7.95 thing we can to help our existing would help relieve the housing during the interview. Last year, Special $5^49 businesses be as strong as possi­ problem in the city. he started First Transcontinental ble and to help them open up He said many houses were left Life Insurance Co., which is now new markets." vacant because people lost their Gesso Opaque active in 31 states. He called for an educational/ high-paying jobs in the recession, priming for canvas, He said his experience with the Arttec Tracing Pads job training program in basic and could no longer afford to wood, masonite, Sentry audit taught him that "I 1 manufacturing to give young maintain the property. There 100 sheets eo ' may not be able to play first chair plastic, and most &*** people the skills to draw new were other cases, he said, where per pad. violin, but I can conduct the sym­ other smooth or manufacturers to the city. "individuals were put into a phony better than any other per­ Sizes: 9"xl2", M homeowning situation, and they textured surfaces. son can," Concurrent with this program, ll"xl7"," Schreiber said he supported the had no concept of what home 16 oz. Squeeze Lee Dreyfuss, the Republican 14"xl7", Greater Milwaukee Committee's ownership meant, from the bottle $3.79 who beat Schreiber in 1978 and recent proposal for a "One on standpoint of maintaining a 19"x24" later became his boss at Sentry, One gallon pail « One" program oriented toward home." said he chose Schreiber to con­ 1/3 Off $15.99 students who are identified as duct the company audit because He called for a partnership being at risk of dropping out. "I knew I could trust him," and with vocational schools, business Rembrandt Pastel Sets said his private sector experience "Many of our young people do and financial communities and Design Markers and was "precisely what he needed" not have a substantial male role the building trades to come up 25% model, (or) a positive self-image. with the necessary capital for this Sets 20% Off to be a good mayor. In a recent off interview, Dreyfuss said, "I would We have our jobs cut out for us, program. go out of my way to help not only teaching basic skills, but Schreiber, while noting that (Schreiber) become mayor." also to establish role models and the mayor has no power over the also to establish basic confidence school budget, said it is the On issues, Schreiber cites the and belief in what people can be­ mayor's job to make education a economy, education and housing Ask for our coupon book for more back-to-school specials come," he said. priority. as the key problems facing the city. He said such a program also He said the goals of public ed­ would help deter youth from, ucation should be to ensure that He said half of any new jobs joining gangs. "Those gangs are people have basic skills for em­ .PALETTE SHOPo ovr created in the city would come a symptom of inadequate educa­ ployment, and to establish a part­ 2563 NDowner Ave. Mil* (4M)963-1346# \ from existing businesses, and 80 tion, a lack of employment (and) nership between the business percent of new jobs would come six blocks from U.W.M. a childhood in which they grew community and the schools. from small business. (414)272-3780 Main Store: 342 N. Water St. "Rule number one (of econo- Medicine in Mexico From page 11 crumbled rock, hug the slopes.

mountains. To enter, traffic passes We met the mayor and his wife through a 2.5-mile tunnel, dug with at the town hall, then toured the pick and shovel by the Spanish in town: an ornate church; the coin the 1600s. The tunnel is one and silver exchange; the stone wagon wide; telephones at each amphitheater, a tiny plaza boasting end notify travelers which way traf­ the only greenery. fic is moving. The town's buildings and streets, made of the same —Debbie Kaaikiola

WOODLAND BOOK CENTER 263-5001 720 EAST LOCUST AVENUE *-* OPEN TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY NOON TO 8 PM SATURDAY AND SUNDAY NOON TO 5 PM STUDENT MEMBERSHIPS $10 Membership: Subscription to newsletter and other member materials, plus 10% discount on books, periodicals and records for one year $30 Membership: Subscription to newsletter and other member materials, plus 10% discount on books, periodicals and records for one year, plus free admission to any ten September 4, 5 & 6 performance/music/reading events for one year. 7:30, 9:45 and 12:15 CLIP AND SAVE! THIS AD WORTH 10% DISCOUNT Students $1.50, Public $2 ON YOUR NEXT BOOK, PERIODICAL OR RECORD PURCHASE AT WOODLAND PATTERN Sponsored by the Sandburg Commons Activities Board Page 18 The UWM Post Wednesday, September 2, 1987 We're Coming For You

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PARKING AND TRANSIT 229-4000

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Wednesday, September 2, 1987 The UWM Post Page 19 Sports Gansler counting on experience, strong defense *+> Gansler said part of the Panther scoring by Doug Kirchberg problem was that they depended too heavily upon one or two players to pro­ ith seven seniors and a strong vide much of the scoring punch. If those core of recruits, UWM soccer players didn't score, the team didn't score. W coach Bob Gansler is confident Gansler promises that won't happen this that his team will have a successful season. year. "We have the makings of a competent "The scoring responsibility is going to team," Gansler said. "I feel we have a tal­ be spread over more people," Gansler ented enough squad that if we play up to said. "Scoring in our intrasquad games expectations and avoid injuries we will has begun to come from a lot of people. have a commendable season. We're going to get it from different sources "I don't think we're going to have a su­ which is going to make us tougher to fig­ per season, but we should play sound and ure out. entertaining soccer." "I think our front runners will be Tihi Defense, as in recent years, should be a (Prpa), Mark (Mcintosh), and (Mike) strong point for the Panthers this season. Becker who can score from all over. Senior goalkeeper Joe Stacy, who started Goran (Kralj) has a good long range shot. every game for UWM last season boasting (Mark) Biebel and (Ted) Kluth are young a 1.05 goals against average, will guard players who could provide some scoring." the Panther net again this year. Gansler has four recruits which could UWM also has three senior defenders, vie for starting positions, three are all-state co-captain Charlie Ernst, Tim Bisswurm, players from Wisconsin and the fourth, a and Gottfried Eichler, who have seen ex­ player from who ranked among tensive playing time since their freshman the top 50 in the nation. year. The signees from Wisconsin are Biebel, "They (the defenders) play very well to­ Chris Blankenburg and Eddie Miller. gether now, as they should," Gansler said. Biebel played forward at Catholic Memori­ "We're much more flexible now. We can al and led the metro conference in scoring, combine man-to-man coverage with the Blankenburg is a defender from Thomas zone and do some switching, things which More and Miller is a midfielder from only an experienced team can do." Wauwatosa East. Last season the Panther's offense had a Indiana's Goran Kralj was a late comer difficult time putting the ball into the net. In fact, they were shutout by eight oppo­ Turn to page 20 nents. UWM's Banks has choice between 2 soccer leagues

by Dave Kallmann

ell, it looks like Panther soccer standout Jimmy Banks will be plying his trade in the Wibi g leagues this fall, but in exactly whose colors and in which league is still up in the air. The 2 2-year-old forward/midfielder went in the first round of both the Major Indoor Soccer League and American Indoor Soccer Association drafts this «»# summer. The MISL's Kansas City Comets made Banks the 10th player overall chosen in that draft in June, and the Milwaukee Wave tabbed him as the top pick in —Post photo by Dave Kallmann the August AISA draft. Senior defender Charlie Banks was injured much of last season, and scored four goals and added five assists. Ernst clowned diiring a The 5-foot-8-inch, 150-pound Banks had 13 goals and 12 assists in two years with UWM after recent practice session at transferring from UW-Parkside. He was a graduate Engelmann Field. of Milwaukee Custer High School. Turn to page 20 Jimmy Banks Antrim puts in full summer looking for new cage recruits pus visit with a potential recruit Southern Illinois who played on three good junior college players named to the NAIA Academic by Andy Olson and received word that one of a state championship team at from Iowa." All-American team last season. the top high school prospects in Milwaukee Washington High Joining the Panther sqaud are Kukla, a 6'6" powerforward f you spent any time at Brad­ Milwaukee is interested in the School. 6-foot-3-inch guards Clarence sat out last season after trans­ ford Beach.this summer, one UWM program. Wright and Odell Chamberlain, ferring from UW-Platteville, Hunter was able to convince person you probably didn't see One of the first tasks facing and speedster Hollins Terry, where he played one year under I Andy Ronan to follow him to playing volleyball or lounging in Antrim when he arrived at UWM who Antrim called "a program coach Bo Ryan. UWM from Miami of Ohio. the sun is Steve Antrim. was the selection of his assistant 5'8"". All three are expected to Among other players' returning Ronan, a native of the Virgin Is­ coaches. He chose Greg Capper, see considerable action this year. from last year are juniors Since he was- hired to replace lands, recently competed in the an assistant under Ray Swetalla Maurice Turner and Mike Ray Swetalla as Men's Basketball Pan American Games as a mem­ Antrim also experienced suc­ at UWM, and Ron Hunter, a for­ McNabb and sophomores Coach at UWM last April, Antrim ber of the Virgin Islands team. cess recruiting in theChicago has been working frantically to mer player and coach at Miami of Scott Johnson and Chris When asked to assess his first area, landing 6'3" guard Daryl get ready ior the 1987-'88 sea­ Ohio. Coffey. One of the highlights recruiting season at UWM, Arnold and 6'4" forward Rich son. "The first thing you do when Stejskal from Chicago-area high of the recruiting season cavre Antrim appeared to breathe a recently when Maurice Poole > "I really didn't have a summer you're trying to build a program sigh of relief. schools. vacation," Antrim said last week. is surround yourself with quality Two of the top players return­ 6'2" guard transferred to UWM "We recruited just about every people. I feel I've done that with "We were lucky," he said. "I ing from last year's team an. Erik from Iowa State, where day from April 9 until now." Greg and Ron," Antrim said, came from a program (Iowa Schten and Rob Kukla. played under Antrim and Cy­ It wasn't hard to believe "They have both been terrific to State) where we had some suc­ clone Head Coach Johnny Orr. Antrim when, during the course work with and had an excellent cess. We made the final sixteen in Schten, a 6'8" forward/center Poole, like Ronan and Ross, will of a 45-minute interview he summer recruiting." the NCAA tournament one year led the Panthers in scoring and sit out the 1987-'88 campaign talked on the phone to an in­ Capper was instrumental in and played on television a lot. rebounding last year. A senior coming transfer, set up a cam­ signing Billy Ross, a transfer from That exposure helped us sign from Madison, Schten was Turn to page 22 Page 20 The UWM Post Sports Wednesday, September 2, 1987 7 seniors to lead soccer team From page 19 most of these teams already, but putting us under the conference to UWM but is expected to pro­ label makes the rivalries more vide additional strength at the keen. We're hopeful that some­ midfielder position. time the conference will get an Kluth, who is the all-time lead­ automatic NCAA tournament ing scorer at Marquette High and bid." studied at UWM last year, is now UWM will still be competing in academically eligible to play and the Wisconsin Intercollegiate is expected to be part of the Pan­ Soccer League (WISL) this sea-, ther scoring threat. son and Gansler is hoping that the intrastate rivalries will contin­ The Panthers will be compet­ ue. ing in the newly formed Big Cen­ tral Six Conference this year. In­ "The seniors have only lost cluded in the conference are one game in the state — to SIU-Edwardsville, Northern Green Bay," Gansler said. Illinois, Marquette, Quincy and "We've won the WISL for the last Cincinnati. two years so that's important to them. They're playing people "There are some good soccer they've known for a long" time. schools in the conference," These are kind of bragging rights Gansler said. "We've played games." Bob Gansler Banks has 2 options for pro career From page 19 of the Wave, and he is expected on someone who was also a first- to meet with Kansas City soon. round MISL pick. He said he He came into the season with a Banks is in St. Louis with the US thought that it would have been broken jaw, and then injured his Olympic team, preparing for a more of a gamble not to select knee. Banks broke his jaw late in game against Trinidad and Toba­ Banks. the summer playing for the go- "Between us offering him a Bavarians in a club game. Gansler said he believed that contract, and the possibility of Because he was injured for a Kansas City would be Banks' first things not working out (in Kansas big portion of his senior year, he choice. City), we think we could get him," did not get the recognition he de­ Knezic said. served, according to UWM "He has had conversations Banks termed the MISL "the Coach Bob Gansler. Gansler said with the Wave, and I think he has —UWM Post photo ultimate" league for soccer play­ he considered Banks one of the indicated to them that he wanted Jon Szczepanski (left) is one of seven seniors on the UWM soccer ers, but said that there were fac­ top 20 collegiate players in the to take a look at what Kansas team who were among Coach Bob Gansler's original recruits. tors which might make him opt country. City can do for him," Gansler said. for the AISA. Banks, who was involved with Panthers down Rockford, 2-0 Gansler said that if things don't "A lot of guys go to the MISL the US team in the Pan Ameri­ and sit out," Banks said. "I think work out for the best with the can Games at the time of the in Milwaukee I might get more Brookfield — Mark Macintosh and Mike Becker each scored a goal Comets, Banks would go to the AISA draft, said he had not de­ playing time. to give the UWM soccer team a 2-0 victory in an exhibition game Wave. against Rockford College. cided which team he would rath­ er play for. "Also, it's my hometown. Macintosh opened the scoring with a rebound of Tihi Prpa's free Wave General Manager Peter There is nothing like playing in kick, which hit the post and bounced out. Becker's goal was a header After the Pan Am Games, Knezic said he knew it was a your hometown, in front of the rebound of a Jon Szczepanski free kick. Banks met with representatives gamble to use a first-round pick home fans."

UWM Men's Soccer Panther/Lite Invitational

UW-Milwaukee Saturday, September 5 1:30 p.m. UW-Madison vs. St. Louis St. Louis Game #2 UW-Milwaukee vs. Hartwick Sunday, September 6 Hartwick 1:30 p.m. UW-Madison vs. Hartwick Game #2 UW-Milwaukee vs. St. Louis UW-Madison At UWM's Engelmann Field

Great Taste... Less Filling Wednesday, September 2, 1987 The UWM Post Sports Page 21 Inexperience to test UWM volleyball Team packed with talent, but players are untried

the Panthers have won at least 57 by Doug Kirchberg matches, losing no more than eight. Pleyte doesn't anticipate winning 90 percent of ith only one senior on this year's his matches again this year, but he doesn't squad the UWM volleyball team expect to lose too many either. W lacks the experience of previous years. But according to Coach Tom Pleyte "I'm not looking for a gaudy record that this team has great potential. has losses in the single figures again," "The potential on this team is really, Pleyte said. "I don't think that's very reas­ really good," Pleyte said. "But we're hav­ onable. The last few years we haven't had ing problems because the whole team is more than eight losses out of 60 to 70 new. They either fall apart or play together games, this year we'll have a few more — losses at the beginning of the year. But by the middle of the season I think we'll be a very, very good team." "The potential on This year will be a rebuild­ this team is real­ ing year for UWM. The team ly, really good. lost six players from last year's roster and has eight freshmen But we're having and sophomores on the problems be­ squad. cause the whole "There are spots to fill and team is new." the newcomers are filling —Tom Pleyte them with authority," Asst. Coach Kim Kort said. "They're not tentative about — anything, they're anxious about playing." and you just don't know which they'll do. The Panthers will receive an automatic Right now we just don't have enough ex­ bid into the NAIA National tournament perience. this year because they are the host of the "As usual, I expect that at the beginning tournament. So this year appears to be as of the year we'll have a few little problems good time as any for a rebuilding year. But — could be losses, might not be. But we according to senior captain Denise Bill- often start slow so I'm not particularly con­ man, that's not how the team wants to get cerned. As long as we keep improving to the tournament. we'll be strong by the time nationals come "We want to earn our way there," around." Billman said. "We want to show that we The slow start in recent years that Pleyte deserve to be in the tournament." speaks of is three of four losses in 10 Turn to page 24 —Post photo by Dave Kallmann matches. In each of the past three seasons Captain Denise Billmann is the only senior on the 1987 UWM volleyball squad. Greil another in line of outstanding hitters

It might be premature to speak of the possi­ good hit, there was a good set and before that by Doug Kirchberg bility of post-season honors at the beginning a good pass and everyone contributed." of the season, but if one goes by past history, The team will depend upon Greil to be a he UWM women's volleyball team has Greil would seem to be a strong candidate. leader in scoring. In her own words her role long been known to have a strong out­ According to Pleyte, any such honors would will be, "to score, to put the ball down and Tside hitting attack. According to Coach depend upon how well the team does. score." Tom Pleyte this year will be no exception, According to Pleyte, the team's outside with junior Beth Greil taking on a leadership "Her post season honors will depend upon based attack will have them depending heavi­ role in that position. how the whole team plays," Pleyte said. "She ly upon Greil, especially in the beginning of "Beth is the only person on the team who could conceivably get enough attention to the season. make All American status, but if we play poor­ has started here for three years," Pleyte said. "In the beginning of the year we'll probably ly no one will notice her." "We've always had one outstanding outside rely upon her too much," Pleyte said. "But as hitter on the squad and this year Beth is it. Greil is rather humble about her important the year goes on other people will score more "She follows nicely in a long line of out­ role on the team. She realizes that it's going and take some of the pressure off of her. standing outside hitters. There was Lisa to be a team effort that will make the team "Right now we have a tremedous amount Goodnature, Kathy Machmueller, Carol win or lose. of depth in our hitting. But when we get in Busche, Maureen Pitrof, Kim Kort and now "I don't like being singled out," Greil said. Beth Greil Beth." "Volleyball is such a team sport. If you get a Turn to page 22 BLOOD DRIVE SEPT. 21 WISCONSIN ROOM 10:00 - 3:30 Cocktails & Dancing 1901 E. North Ave. • 271-0244 SEPT. 22 SANDBURG (H* Every Tuesday FLICKS 10:00 - 4:00 25$ c7riugs FOR MORE $150 for ditchers z INFO CALL The UWM Men's Baseball team will hold an informational 7-10 P.M. sign-up meeting Thursday, from 2-4 p.m., in Bolton Hall room 40. 229-4929 Milwaukee's Eastside Night Club In addition to players, the team $2.50 Pitchers 10-close is looking for volunteer statisti­ VSU cians and managers. The number to call for more information is NO COVER.WITH-COLLEGE ID 229-5670. Page 22 The UWM Post Sports Wednesday, September 2, 1987 Antrim's summer busy Greil getting tougher fall in an intense pre-season con­ From page 21 come around by the middle of From page 19 ditioning program consisting of the season." and become eligible in the fall of running, jumping and stationary trouble, or need a side-out, we'll With Greil on the team the 1988. bike riding. just look to Beth." sqaud has lost only 16 matches, When asked what attributes he while winning 125. The team Pleyte said that Greil sets a made it to the NAIA National looked for in recruits, Antrim "We want to gear our con­ good example for the younger was quick to answer. ditioning program to fit our style tournament during both her players, both playing wise and freshman and sophomore years, "Speed," he said, "We are go­ of play," Antrim said, "We have a with her excellent attitude. Her ing to run, run, run this year." tremendous facility here at the and now the team will be in it attitude is best reflected in her again her junior year. "We're trying to establish a Norris Health Center and we're expectations for the season. style ofplay, and recruit players relying heavily on Marty Moore She has played in the impor­ to fit the style. Hopefully, when (Panther Athletic Trainer) to help "I really think we'll have a tant games with some excellent the players leave after gradua­ our players realize their full po­ good team," Greil said. "There's players. And this year it will be tion, the style will remain." tential." no one person that will really Greil's turn to make good use of "Weare basically looking for stand out. We're going to have everything she has learned, and s A glance at the Panther sched­ and all around good team. We take on a leadership role for the players who can get up and Steve Antrim down the floor, because we are ule reveals that the team will might have a slow start, but we'll UWM squad. going to try and press and fast have to be in top condition to be break for the entire game," competitive. Gone are traditional Antrim said. UWM foes like Rosary College and Marian. Instead, this year's When asked if he would con­ slate features regional powers duct a walk-on tryout, Antrim like Northern Michigan, South­ replied, "Certainly. UWM is a big ern Illinois, North Dakota and fAI 6E.MILSrLR. school, and there could be a Ferris State. player out there that we don't - -know about." "I forget sometimes how tough Antrim cautioned that the our schedule is," Antrim said, tryouts were geared toward more "Just about everybody we play serious players, and that players won 20 games last year. It's a who didn't play in high school or schedule the likes of which hasn't have been away from the game been seen here since UWM for a while would have a tough played in Division I. time making the squad. 5TYLE-6 "We have about 20 guys right "With our schedule, we're now that we know about, and going to need all the support we they are some good players," can get at our home games, Antrim said. because it's going to be hard to The Panthers will spend this beat these teams on the road." AT "fit-

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M At this crossroad A R you will find Y L E.AOJ 0?VLR. APAPTdP A UJTHERAM Ti CAMPUS rR-^M PL6ICTN6 D MiniSTRY 6U&M TTE.P TM c;i2ATKlotsche Center. from the start. We feel that this program to the incoming fresh­ T Department this year is to chance this year. We hope they The largest basketball promo­ year there will be a lot of people men," Sports Information Direc­ promote their men's basketball will come out and watch at least tion of the year will be the Chan­ interested in the team." tor Larry Pitrof said. "All 3,000 program, a program that in re­ one game. I think that it's going cellor's Game. It is scheduled to Pitrof said that the pep band freshmen and all the students liv­ cent years has had great difficulty to be an exciting season. That's be the Panther season opener at they had last season, Traffic Jam, ing in the dorms have been in generating any revenue for the something UWM basketball fans the Klotsche Center on Novem­ will be back for men's basketball mailed UWM student athletic department. aren't used to seeing." ber 22, against Ferris State. Pitrof once again this year. pass applications." is hoping that the game will be a "Our emphasis unquestionably The athletic department is so A new season-long promotion big draw for UWM. A student athletic pass costs will be men's basketball," Sports excited about their basketball for basketball will be the Information director Larry Pitrof program this year because of the "Our goal is to sell 4,000 tick- $10 and entitles the student to Sandburg three-on-three. Co-ed free admission to all home athlet­ three person teams made up of ic events. There is also a student- representatives from each of the plus-guest pass which costs $15 dorm houses will play a half and serves as a ticket for a stu­ court game to four at halftime. At dent and one guest to each home Golda Meir Library the end of the season the overall athletic event. winners will recieve airfare for three to Florida. Pitrof is also making plans to hold alumni games in soccer, Work Study Positions The NAIA women's volleyball men's basketball and women's nationals will be held at UWM basketball. He hopes that these Fall & Spring semester: this year and will undoubtedly be games will help bring the alumni the largest event of the year for and tradition back to UWM. the UWM athletic program. "Nationals will generate Upcoming soccer promotions enough exceitment in itself," include: the Panther/Miller Lite Pitrof said. "It's a fine event that Invitational on Sept. 5, 6; the fish people will enjoy coming out to fry game on Sept. 11; Home­ watch. It's the best volleyball coming on Sept. 26; and the • Reserve Reading Room teams in the nation playing each Marshall Fields Youth Day on other in Milwaukee. Oct. 11. • Data Entry "When we hosted it here two Little Ceasars will be sponsor­ years ago the media coverage ing the tickets for all home and attention we got was tremen­ events. Each ticket will be a cou­ • Media dous. So naturally we're excited pon that entitles the purchaser to about having it again." a free pizza and a free liter of This year the Sports Informa­ soda with every purchase of a • Music Room tion Department will be gearing whole pizza. and more Intramural program tries to attract women Apply: Library Personnel Office — West Wing s in other years, the main ment, but this year they are hop­ goal of the UWM Intra- ing specifically to increase the fe­ A murals Department is to male participation in the prog­ increase overall student involve- ram.

"We are trying to increase overall involvement, especially women's involvement," assistant FALL SEMESTER 1987-88 intramurals coordinator Eliza­ beth Blaney said. "We want to stress that the women can partici­ pate in any sport, not strictly the INTRAMURAL SPORT OFFERINGS coed ones. The coed teams just require a specific number of men and women." Men/Women Registration Play Begins "I would encourage everyone Sport Coed Deadline The Week of:. Days of play Location to come in and look at what is of­ Volleyball Coed Wed., Sept 16 Sept. 20 Tue, Thur. Klotsche fered; participate, socialize and have a good time," intramural Football M Wed., Sept 16 Sept. 20 M,T,W,F Lincoln Park coordinator M.A. Kelling said. Indoor Soccer M Wed., Sept 16 Sept 20 Wednesdays Klotsche Kelling is hoping that they will Volleyball Coed Wed, Sept 16 Sept. 20 Mon, Wed. Engelmann be able to incorporate more coed Aerobics M,W Wed., Sept. 16 Sept 20 Mon, Wed. Engelmann activities this year. She also hopes that the new activities such 3-on-3 Basketball M Wed., Sept 16 Sept. 20 Sundays Engelmann as aerobics and indoor soccer be­ Domino's Team Tennis 1 team * Wed, Oct 7 October 11 Mondays Klotsche come popular. Call Your Own Coed Wed., Oct 7 October 11 Mondays Klotsche "What sports are offered tend to go along with what is popular," Volleyball (1 court) Kelling said. "A few years ago Floor Hockey Coed Wed, Oct 21 October 25 Tuesdays Engelmann field hockey was big. Now its de­ clining and things like weight lift­ Aerobics M,W Wed., Oct 21 October 25 Mon, Wed. Engelmann ing, aerobics and coed basketball Volleyball Coed Wed., Oct 21 October 25 Mon, Wed. Engelmann are becoming popular." 5-on-5 Basketball M Wed., Oct 21 October 25 Sundays Engelmann Sports offered this fall are: football, coed volleyball, domi­ no's tennis, basketball, floor hockey, indoor soccer, wrestling, To Register: Teams must register IN THE INTRAMURAL OFFICE; room 126 of the Temporary weight lifting, and aerobics. (North) Building. Phone 229-6433 for further information. The intramurals department will also be holding tournaments Forfeit Fees: All teams must submit a $5.00 refundable (if your team does not forfeit any games) forfeit fee. for certain sports such as tennis and golf. Captains' Meeting: IMPORTANT: Teams must send their captain or other team representative to the All members of the UWM stu­ captains' meeting for their sport or the team will be DROPPED from the league. dent body, faculty and staff are eligible to participate. Only inter­ • Register individually in the IM Office for informal volleyball play. collegiate team members are in­ eligible to partake in intramural activities. * Space is very limited for Domino's Tennis, so sign up early. Priority will be given to those who sign up a whole team (2 men, 2 women minimum to a team.) Any one interested in partici­ pating in the UWM intramurals program should visit the intra­ murals office in room 126 of the Call 229-6433 for Intramural information! Athletic and Intramurals building Office Hours: Mon-Thurs, 10:00-4:00 or phone 229-6433. Kelling also stressed that jobs Fri 10:00-3:00 are available for anyone interest­ ed in officiating and scorekeep- Room 126, Temporary Building Oust east of Klotsche) ing should also contact the intra­ murals department. "V* Page 24 The UWM Post Sports Wednesday, September 2,1987 Claus sees hot year for tennis named Academic All-American last year and was by Andy Olson recently inducted into the UWM chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. n a normal day, Coach Betty Claus would have been outside putting the UWM Wom­ Lange will once again be joined by her sister, Tra­ Oen's Tennis team through its paces. cy, a sophomore. Last year the Langes captured the KENWOOD On Wednesday, however, gray skies, cold, damp doubles title at the UW-Whitewater invitational. air and a steady rain forced her to cancel practice. "I look for the Langes to have a great year," Claus said, "On paper they look terrific." "It really hurts to miss a workout this early in the CHURCH season," Claus said as she maneuvered a bucket in Also returning from last year's squad are sopho­ her office to combat a leaky ceiling. "I'd have liked mores Sara Alderson from West Bend, Ellen Sutner to have practiced at Klotsche today, but they aren't from Wauwatosa West and senior Lisa Maetener done refinishing the floor." from Kewaskum. "Ellen, Sue and Lisa will give us experience at the located at Forced inside, Claus spent part of the afternoon 3,4, and 5 singles spots," Claus said, "The competi­ discussing the upcoming season, a campaign in tion will be healthy." 2319 E.Kenwood Blvd. which 60 percent of her squad will be comprised of newcomers. Newcomers expected to contribute include soph­ (across from the Union) b^ omore UW-Madison transfer Raquel Keirn, fresh­ "We were 15-7 last year, and we faced our men Tami Duret from Shorewood and Cathy toughest schedule ever. This year's^chedule is very Krueger from Sussex Hamilton, and senior Mildred similar, so we can't let down at all," Claus said. Budiono from Indonesia. Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m. Gone from last year's squad is number one sin­ gles player and three-time team MVP Jill Hauk, who "We're a young team, and many of our girls ha­ Coffee hour following worship. will serve as Claus' assistant this year while she ven't competed at the college level before. Only finishes her last year of school. time will tell how they perform," said Claus, whose Open volleyball 6:30 p.m. (Sundays) team will open its season at home on Sept. 6. "It's tough to lose a player like Jill," Claus said, "She was super — a highly motivated player. She's Claus said that the team would spend the rest of Rick Brewer, Pastor number one in the state in open doubles right now, the pre-season polishing skills and working on con­ so it's great to have her around as a coach even ditioning. Phone — 332-5935 though we'll miss her as a player." "I'm optimistic about this year. We're off to a posi­ Back in the fold from last year is Jenny Lange, a tive start and should have a compatible team," A Member of the United Methodist Church senior from Milwaukee Hamilton, who will play Claus said, "I expect us to finish at least .500.1 look number one singles. An English major, Lange was for a solid season." Thealready

Deb Dummer Volleyball From page 21 UWM will have to depend upon inexperienced setters. The three players expected to handle the setting chores are Stephanie Weber, Vicki Kieliszkowski and Jori Whitford. Weber is a junior who has been moved from just being a hitter to splitting time as a hitter and a setter. Kieliszkowski is a sophomore who had little playing time last year and Whit­ ford is an incoming freshman. "The setting is coming around real fast," Pleyte said. "They're At Rocky Rococo® you don't wait catching on to what I want them we serve it up fast and hot by to do and they're picking it up for the pizza, because it's already waiting slice. Without the wait. very, very quickly. for you. Use these valuable coupons and save on \fe use only quality ingredients and bake "As far as the hitting is con­ Rocky Rococo pizza by the slice. The pizza's cerned we have two real solid up fresh pans of delicious pizza all day long. hot, so what are you waiting for? players that played all the time last year, Beth Griel and Deb Dummer. Other than those two, we just have a lot of people that need to get a lot more experi­ $1.89PizzaDeal $2.99 Meal Deal ence. The only way they can to it is to play." Any Pizza Slice Any Pizza Slice, One-Trip Salad and a Medium Soft Drink and a Medium Soft Drink Like last year, Pleyte said that he has been surprised by how Please present coupon when ordering. Limit one percoupon per customer I Please present coupon when ordering. Limit one per coupon per customer much progress some of his play­ I per visit. Not good in conjunction with any other offer. Cash value • pel/20tr visith of. onNoet centgood. Gooin conjunctiod only at nparticipatin with anyg otheRockr yoffer Rococ. Caso locationsh value. ers have made. Last season he _ l/20th of one cent. Good only at participating Rockv Rococo locations. Offer valid through September 13. 1987. was most surprised by Dummer, I Offer valid through September 13. 1987. who earned a starting position her sophomore year. RockyRococo' RockyRococo® "So far the surprises of the camp are Kris Ostendorf, Liz House, and Joan Chart," Pleyte said. "They have been much, much stronger than we antici­ R)ckyRx:oco pated." Pleyte's first chance to test his The Hottest Name in Pizza: young team will be in the St. Francis Invitational on Sept. 4 in 1815 East Kenilworth-271-6080 Joliet, 111. © 1987, ROCKY ROCOCO INC. Wednesday, September 2, 1987 The UWM Post Sports Page 25 The Post has openings 2 returning national champions for Graphic Artists • Great job for resume offer hope for cross country team • Practical work experience by Doug Kirchberg "I don't get too riled up for an­ • Paid position ything except districts and na­ • Job duties will vary with your skills/interest weak recruiting year in tionals. All our training is geared both men's and women's to those two meets. Hopefully Some paste-up experience required A cross country has not we'll do a little better this year darkened UWM Coach Frank than last year." Union EG80, 963-4578 Markel's outlook for the season. UWM has a total of just five Markel still feels that each team The Post is an equal opportunity employer freshmen on the two cross coun­ can better its performance from try squads, three op the men's last year in both the NAIA District team and two on the women's. Open NOON 14 and National" meets. According to Markel, such low "We're looking to do well at numbers are due to a weaker Daily C'EST LA VIE districts and nationals," Markel core of senior high school ath­ said. "Last year the girls were letes last year. A Gay Bar Dedicated third in districts and a disappoint­ Markel's hope for success this ing 10th at nationals. The guys season rests upon his returnees 1-6 pm to the Overall finished second at districts and which include two NAIA track ran real well to place 13th at na­ national champions, seniors Sunday Advancement of Frank Markel tionals. Ken Lobins and Lynn Bouche. Our Community "We have a mature group this TEA DANCE year," Markel said. "There are a 231 S. 2nd St., lot of juniors and seniors so I Sandwich Buffet Milwaukee shouldn't have to do as much Tap Beer 25 cents coaching this year. They know what they have to do and what to Rail Drinks $1 18UP expect. But they are still going to have to go out and run the races." 9-1 Sun. thru Thrus. Every Monday & Wednesday Markel expects the men's squad to be led by Lobins, ju­ Wednesday $2 BEER BUST niors Jim Koneazny and Eric Thee legal night club Gietzen, and sophomore Kevin BAREBACK 9-2 Bouche. All four athletes are re­ turning runners from last year. NO SHIRT experience for all adults. The only player missing from last year's team is Ralph Welsh who 75c Rail Doubles is out with' an injury.

10c Tap Beer 18 years or older. "Those four should be the main four," Markel said. "And then hopefully there's some sur­ Thursday PIZZA Doors open 8:00 pm - 1 am. prises to round out our squad." 9-1 All of the runners from last * . The Best Pizza in Town Free year's women's team will be back this year. Bouche, Margie Friday With Rail Drink Purchase Park Schweinert, Amy Simonsen, Ann Ward, and Anne Hills are ex­ COMMUNITY NIGHT 9-1 pected to lead the squad. Show Your Support for Avenue "They are the big five for the Our Community $2 Donation women," Markel said. "But here 765-0888 too there could be some sur­ $1.25 Rail Doubles - 25c Tap Beer prises. 500 North Water St. "Both squads should be pretty proper ID required good this year, but next year we'll SPECIALS DO NOT INCLUDE HOLIDAYS have to get a good recruiting year."

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