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            <text>Women enrollment rising</text>
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            <text>Wednesday February 21, 1979&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Vol. 7 No. 21&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
A number of students in&#13;
Parkside's geography department&#13;
are upset about a tenure decision&#13;
made about one of their professors&#13;
^nd have decided to do something&#13;
about it.&#13;
According to Ralph Moody, a&#13;
geography major here at Parkside,&#13;
Professor Henderson of the&#13;
geography department was not&#13;
given tenure by the Personnel&#13;
Review Committee about one year&#13;
ago and thus will not be kept on the&#13;
Preservation Hall of Jazz Band performs Monday Feb. 26th at UWP: SOLD OUTStudents&#13;
Say—&#13;
Parkside Needs Henderson&#13;
staff.&#13;
Moody and two other students,&#13;
Kari Johnson and Michael&#13;
Doperalski, are going to set up a&#13;
table by the book coop on the main&#13;
concourse and are asking anyone&#13;
who has had Professor Henderson&#13;
for a class to support him now by&#13;
signing a petition to the effect that&#13;
Professor Henderson should be&#13;
retained by the university. The&#13;
table will be open Monday and&#13;
Wednesday of this week from 12 till&#13;
5 p.m. and this Thursday from 2-4&#13;
p.m. Petitions can also be found&#13;
outside Molinaro Hall, room 226.&#13;
This petition will be handed to the&#13;
Chancellor for examination. Moody&#13;
says that he already has 50&#13;
signatures but is aiming to get as&#13;
many as possible.&#13;
Moody feels that there is a lot of&#13;
student support for Henderson and&#13;
also feels that Henderson is very&#13;
important to the department. He&#13;
also insists that the reason he and&#13;
his associates are going to this&#13;
trouble is for the good of the&#13;
geography discipline as a whole.&#13;
They feel that, in Moody's words,&#13;
Henderson's loss "would be the&#13;
beginning of the deteriation of the&#13;
department."&#13;
Professor Henderson's area of&#13;
study is cultural geography. Ralph&#13;
Moody commented that this is a&#13;
humanistic element in geography&#13;
that attracts many non-majors to&#13;
geography and is therefore very&#13;
important to the "health" of the&#13;
department. In speaking with other&#13;
students, he says, that many feel&#13;
Henderson to be very knowledge&#13;
able, helpful and open. Also,&#13;
Moody stated that Henderson has&#13;
certain technical specialties that&#13;
tfie rest of the discipline does not&#13;
have.&#13;
In speaking with Professor&#13;
Henderson, he informed us that he&#13;
has been teaching here since 1972.&#13;
He said that his tenure review came&#13;
up about one year ago and that he&#13;
had been recommended to the&#13;
Personnel Review Committee&#13;
unanimously by his division.&#13;
Henderson said that his tenure&#13;
decision was not made public but&#13;
that when some of his students&#13;
came to ask what he would be&#13;
teaching "next year," he had to&#13;
explain that there would be no&#13;
"next year."&#13;
In reference to the petition drive&#13;
being organized by students in his&#13;
behalf, he commented that to the&#13;
best of his knowledge this is&#13;
completely legal in terms of the&#13;
university's policies but that we was&#13;
not sure what kind of effect it&#13;
would have. '&#13;
Professor Henderson commented&#13;
on his particular situation and the&#13;
whole tenure review process by&#13;
saying that it is probably unfair for&#13;
such decisions to be made by&#13;
faculty from other divisions.&#13;
The committee that makes&#13;
tenure decisions is made up of&#13;
faculty representatives from every&#13;
division in the university. Professor&#13;
Henderson does not feel that such a&#13;
group can know, what is exactly&#13;
going on in each department. Also,&#13;
according to Henderson, the&#13;
chances of getting tenure fluctuate&#13;
from year to year depending on&#13;
many different factors.&#13;
Although Professor Henderson&#13;
feels that he hadagood record in&#13;
both teaching and scholarship he&#13;
said, that "pages of publication" is&#13;
the crucial deciding factor. He felt&#13;
that this is an important fact that&#13;
the public should be aware of.&#13;
Women Enrollment Rising&#13;
According to the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Memo, a monthly,&#13;
publication, women will soon&#13;
outnumber men if the present trend&#13;
continues.&#13;
Figures for the first semester of&#13;
the current academic year indicate&#13;
that a total of 147,934 students&#13;
were enrolled in the 13 universities&#13;
and 14 two-year centers. The&#13;
number of women increased 2,200&#13;
to a total of 72,411, while the&#13;
number of men declined 796 to&#13;
75,523.&#13;
When the former University of&#13;
Wisconsin and the State Universities&#13;
merged in 1972 to form the&#13;
included 57,035 women and 76,268&#13;
men, a difference of 19,233.&#13;
However, the gap has been closing&#13;
ever since.&#13;
At Parkside this year there are&#13;
2,395 women and 2,846 men.&#13;
However, women outnumbered&#13;
men at six universities and at nine&#13;
centers this year, as the table below&#13;
demonstrates. The only reason that&#13;
there are more men than women in&#13;
the total system this year, according&#13;
to the Memo, is because of the&#13;
4,098 more men than women at&#13;
UW-Madison&#13;
Who knows, perhaps such terms&#13;
as freshmen and the like, will&#13;
current university system, the total finally disappear from colleges&#13;
enrollment was 133,303. This forever.&#13;
colleges&#13;
Men Women Total&#13;
UW-Eau Claire 4,593 5,901 10,494&#13;
UW-Green Bay 1,825 1,890 3,715&#13;
UW-La Crosse 3,732 4,699 8,431&#13;
UW-Madison 21,723 17,625 39,348&#13;
UW-Milwaukee 12,298 12,491 24,789&#13;
UW-Oshkosh 4,822 5,198 10,020&#13;
UW-Parkside 2,846 2,395 5,241&#13;
UW-Platteville 3,042 1,588 4,630&#13;
UW-River Falls 2,618 2,384 5,002&#13;
UW-Stevens Point 4,548 4,418 8,966&#13;
UW-Stout 3,539 3,487 7,026&#13;
UW-Superior 1,245 1,037 2,282&#13;
UW-Superior 4,703 4,898 9,601&#13;
UWC-Baraboo 254 175 429&#13;
UWC-Barron County 204 203 407&#13;
UWC-Fond du Lac 269 291 560&#13;
UWC-Fox Valley 390 527 917&#13;
UWC-Manitowoc 227 180 407&#13;
UWC-Marathon County 467 467 934&#13;
UWC-Marinette County 193 219 412&#13;
UWC-Marshfield/Wood Co. ' 191 326 517&#13;
UWC-Medford 61 97 158&#13;
UWC-Richland 115 155 270&#13;
UWC-Rock County - 234 300 534&#13;
UWC-Sheboygan County 315 301 616&#13;
UWC-Sheboygan County 315 301 616&#13;
UWC-Washington County 232 308 540&#13;
UWC-Waukesha County 837 851 1,688&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
U.W. Parkside's Minority Student&#13;
is presently celebrating Black&#13;
History Month with a week of&#13;
activities. The events, which began&#13;
on the 17th of February will&#13;
continue through Thursday, February&#13;
22.&#13;
The theme for the 1979&#13;
observance is: History: Torch for&#13;
the Future, 1979.&#13;
One of the faculty advisors for&#13;
the group, John Tyson, Instruction&#13;
Librarian here at Parkside, noted&#13;
that February was chosen as the&#13;
National Afro-American History&#13;
Month by the Association for the&#13;
Study of Afro-American Life and&#13;
History. Their goal is to promote an&#13;
appreciation of the Afro-American&#13;
culture. The celebration originated&#13;
in 1926.&#13;
The Minority Student Union&#13;
presented a Disco dance, lecture&#13;
and a series of films in recognition&#13;
of Black History Week. The weeks&#13;
activities will end with the showing&#13;
of 2 films "Black Music in&#13;
America," and Black African&#13;
Heritage: Africa's Gift," in Union&#13;
207 11:30-1:30 on Wednesday,&#13;
February 21; and Alumni Day for&#13;
U.W. Parkside's Black graduates,&#13;
Union 207 11:30-1:30 on Thursday,&#13;
February 22.&#13;
147,934&#13;
Members of the Minority Student Union discuss events.&#13;
Minority Student Union&#13;
UWP Celebrates Black History Week&#13;
75,523 72,411 &#13;
Wednesday February 21, 1979&#13;
RANGER 2&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
PE building&#13;
Enlarged&#13;
UWP students can look forward&#13;
to an expanded physical education&#13;
facility. On Friday, February 9, the&#13;
regents approved $35,000 in&#13;
planning funds to study enlarging&#13;
the gym and adding classrooms to&#13;
the building. The actual construction&#13;
would begin in 1981 or after&#13;
that, according to Walter Shirer,&#13;
Director of Public Information.&#13;
The regents also approved&#13;
$82,000 to repair the roof of the&#13;
Molinaro Building and $30,000 to&#13;
repair the plaza between the&#13;
Library-Learning Center and the&#13;
Communication-Arts building.&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Budget&#13;
Completed&#13;
Chancellor Guskin, SUFAC, and&#13;
members of the Senate reached&#13;
agreement on the final budget last&#13;
Thursday. The budget was&#13;
increased about $6,500 over the&#13;
P.S.G.A. level set last week. Union&#13;
operations was restored to $194,584&#13;
from $187,000 and P.A.B.&#13;
Performing Arts and Lectures was&#13;
cut $1,000 to a final $7,500 level.&#13;
Union programming, left undetermined&#13;
last week, was set at $13,697.&#13;
S.O.C. was set at an even $20,000.&#13;
All other budgets remain unchanged.&#13;
&#13;
"I want the stipulations&#13;
removed. I'm gonna hang tough on&#13;
it. I'm agreeing to those budget&#13;
levels, with no stipulations except&#13;
for S.O.C.," chancellor Guskin said&#13;
during the negotiations. The S.O.C.&#13;
stipulation remains in effect that&#13;
clubs present their individual&#13;
budgets to the Senate for review.&#13;
All other stipulations passed by the&#13;
Senate were removed at the&#13;
meeting. These are: a motion&#13;
asking for budget accountability&#13;
from the P.A.B.; travel limits set&#13;
for P.A.B. and the Union; possible&#13;
decreases for athletics; and an&#13;
attempt to relieve student dollars&#13;
from the housing budget. The&#13;
administration pays $8,046 and&#13;
students pay $9,486 (from seg fees)&#13;
for the housing budget.&#13;
Faculty Recital&#13;
Sunday&#13;
Pianist Barbara English Maris&#13;
will p resent a faculty recital at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at&#13;
3:30 p.m. on Sunday, February 25.&#13;
The program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Prof. Maris will play Beethoven's&#13;
Sonata in D Major, Op. 28,&#13;
Kabalevsky's Sonata in F Major,&#13;
Op. 46, John Cage's And the Earth&#13;
Shall Bear Again; Mozart's Sonata&#13;
in A Major, K 331, and Liszt's Don&#13;
Juan Fantasy.&#13;
New to the UW-Parkside music&#13;
faculty this year, Prof. Maris&#13;
previously was a member of the&#13;
faculty at the Peabody Institute of&#13;
Baltimore and immediately before&#13;
coming to Parkside held a National&#13;
Endowment for the Humanities&#13;
fellowship-in-residence for college&#13;
teachers at the University of North&#13;
Carolina at Chapel Hill; She also&#13;
was awarded a Fulbright scholarship&#13;
for piano study at the Ecole&#13;
Normale de Musique in Paris. She&#13;
holds a DMA degree from Peabody&#13;
Conservatory and the MM from the&#13;
University of Illinois.&#13;
Her performance credits include&#13;
appearances in Europe and 20&#13;
states including solo recitals,&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they ate solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139," Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Chris Miller Ad Manager&#13;
Mike Holmdohl Photo Editor&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
LlrUa Adams, Sheila Asala, Cathy Brownlee, Molile&#13;
Clarke, Dave Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Dee Goodwin, Rose&#13;
Kolbasnik, Pete Jacket, Thomas Jenn, Nicki Kroll, Kim&#13;
Putman, Carolyn Rudd, Donald Scherrer, Rosemary&#13;
Shierk Chavez Epps &amp; Denlse Sobieski.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Sue Ruetz , T ony Raymond,&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Mathew Poliakon.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
publication on the following Wednesday.&#13;
concerto appearances with&#13;
orchestra, chamber music concerts,&#13;
lecture-recitals and radio and&#13;
television appearances. Her repertoire&#13;
ranges from classic to&#13;
contemporary composers.&#13;
Cancer Programs&#13;
at Rondelle&#13;
Cancer. A disease which takes&#13;
the lives of thousands of people,&#13;
young and old, every year. And&#13;
seemingly without warning. What&#13;
can we do to prevent cancer in our&#13;
lives? What are cancer's warnipg&#13;
signals?&#13;
These questions and more will be&#13;
discussed in a three sess on cancer&#13;
prevention series called "The&#13;
Decision Is Yours", jointly&#13;
sponsored by the American Cancer&#13;
Society and the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater as a public service in an&#13;
effort to teach Racine area&#13;
residents what they can do to&#13;
defend themselves against death&#13;
from cancer. The first step is&#13;
knowing how to identify cancer's&#13;
signs.&#13;
The programs will be held at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater beginning&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. and the topics will&#13;
be presented by four well-known&#13;
Racine area physicians. The topics&#13;
are:&#13;
February 21 — Dr. Sherali&#13;
Khoja, Surgeon, will discuss cancer&#13;
of the lung.&#13;
March 28 — Dr. Donald Cohill,&#13;
Surgeon, and Dr. Richard Odders,&#13;
Oncologist, will discuss cancer of&#13;
the breast.&#13;
April 25 — Dr. Lewis Wright,&#13;
Gastroenterologist, will discuss&#13;
cancer of the colon.&#13;
All of the programs will have&#13;
/isual as well as written materials&#13;
and the doctors will answer specific&#13;
questions.&#13;
Reservations for these free&#13;
programs can be made by calling&#13;
the Golden Rondelle Theater at&#13;
554-2154, two weeks prior to each&#13;
session.&#13;
P. S. G. A.&#13;
If you suddenly became Chancellor of Parkside,&#13;
what would be the first thing you'd do?&#13;
Fred Johnson&#13;
I would probably reinstate an&#13;
effective shuttle-bus system,&#13;
especially in winter.&#13;
Dave Braun&#13;
The parking; I'd like to see a&#13;
better availability of places for&#13;
people that have white stickers so&#13;
you don't have to park in phy-ed or&#13;
Talleni if your classes are at the&#13;
Classroom end of the building.&#13;
Paul Heigei&#13;
I'd put in an appeal system for&#13;
appealing grades. I'd look for more&#13;
student involvement and I'd let&#13;
them be a bigger part of the&#13;
decision-making processes of the&#13;
university.&#13;
Kristin Johnson&#13;
I'd fix the clocks.&#13;
Steve Swinko&#13;
Improve the snow policy. I don't&#13;
see any reason, just because AMC&#13;
is open, yet Carthage and other&#13;
schools are closed, why Parkside is,&#13;
the only one still open.&#13;
By Annette Sabbath&#13;
Elections are coming up soon.&#13;
On March 7th and 8th, you'll have&#13;
the chance to elect a President, a&#13;
Vice President, up to twelve&#13;
Senators at large, up to five&#13;
members of the Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocations Committee,&#13;
and up to five members of&#13;
the Union Operating Board. These&#13;
positions are to be filled by students&#13;
to insure adequate representation&#13;
of student opinions in these vital&#13;
areas. Right now, I'll review some&#13;
of the functions of the offices - in&#13;
case you're not sure just what&#13;
they're there for. And if anything&#13;
sounds interesting, come down to&#13;
the PSGA office and file your&#13;
candidacy with us.&#13;
The President and Vice-President&#13;
form the executive branch of the&#13;
PSGA. The President serves as the&#13;
spokesperson for all students to&#13;
various areas of student concerns.&#13;
The Vice President assists the&#13;
President in these areas and also&#13;
serves as the President of the&#13;
Senate. Both of these positions&#13;
require considerable time and&#13;
energy with a good working&#13;
knowledge of campus politics being&#13;
a desirable asset.&#13;
The Senate forms the legislative&#13;
branch of the PSGA. Senators deal&#13;
with the students on a direct basis&#13;
and are able to get immediately&#13;
involved in the making of policy&#13;
decisions that affect practically&#13;
everything that goes on here. If you&#13;
have a general interest in student&#13;
government, then the Senate is the&#13;
best place to be.&#13;
Two subcommittees of the PSGA&#13;
Senate are the Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocations Committee&#13;
(SUFAC) and the Union&#13;
Operating Board. These represent&#13;
more specialized areas, and deal&#13;
intensively with specific issues.&#13;
The SUFAC committee allocates&#13;
over $500,000 taken in from&#13;
Segregated Fees revenues (that's&#13;
where $120 of your tuition money&#13;
goes!) to various groups on campus&#13;
for their use.&#13;
The Union Operating Board&#13;
oversees all phases of what goes on&#13;
in the Union. That includes just&#13;
about everything that goes on over&#13;
there. Both of these groups have the&#13;
opportunity to make a real impact&#13;
and are extremely important.&#13;
Does it sound interesting?&#13;
Would you like to get involved?&#13;
Then take action on it now. The&#13;
last day for filing for candidacy is&#13;
Friday, February 23rd, so if you are&#13;
interested in any of these offices,&#13;
stop in the PSGA office and get&#13;
involved in student government. &#13;
1 Yon Will Qm 42,QQ [&#13;
If you join C.5.C. before Feb. 26&#13;
Over 600 members take advantage&#13;
of the savings &amp; services offered&#13;
by C.S.C . I Food &amp; Book Co-op, Newsletter!&#13;
Students ™5&#13;
,&#13;
a C.S.C. membership will&#13;
cost onlu $3.00/ur.($&#13;
R^oo)&#13;
*TFH_LEMT MF1LL&#13;
East 5'cJe Op Wooc) Road&#13;
Food Co-op&#13;
PfiRKSlDE VILLAGE&#13;
-g",&#13;
Wednesday February 21, 1979&#13;
RANG iR&#13;
To The Editor .&#13;
I haVe only been out of high&#13;
school for nine years so I am not&#13;
really that much older than the&#13;
average college senior. But at the&#13;
same time, my life experiences are&#13;
very different from the student who&#13;
enters college right from high&#13;
school. The experiences of military&#13;
life, marriage, divorce and assorted&#13;
jobs are mine. But I am only one&#13;
student. There are thousands more&#13;
like me who have more experiences&#13;
in many more ways, who have&#13;
chosen to return to school.&#13;
According to a recent UW&#13;
Memo, once older adults overcome&#13;
their initial fear of returning to&#13;
school, "they get more out of&#13;
college than do many younger&#13;
students." The adult student is N&#13;
faced with different in-class&#13;
problems than just sharpening up&#13;
Adult Students Aware&#13;
written and verbal skills, however.&#13;
For instance, the adult student is&#13;
often faced with the problem of&#13;
relating to a professor who may be&#13;
many years younger but with many&#13;
more years of education. It is not&#13;
difficult to see how a conflict over&#13;
life experience versus book-learning&#13;
in a child development class, for&#13;
example, could occur. Happily, the&#13;
maturity of both sides makes the&#13;
conflict educative.&#13;
Any student will agree that 15&#13;
credits is a full load. Combine that&#13;
with a part-time job and there is&#13;
not much time left for socializing.&#13;
For the adult student with 15&#13;
credits, children, spouse, (or worse,&#13;
children and no spouse), a home to&#13;
maintain, and very possibly a&#13;
part-time job, there is little time left&#13;
over for just plain relaxing. In other&#13;
words, the older adult has different&#13;
needs and expectations.&#13;
Over a third of the UW-Parkside&#13;
population falls in the older adult&#13;
category making it the largest (and&#13;
still growing) group of students on&#13;
campus. Therefore, it is time for&#13;
the adult students to play a part&#13;
consistent with their numbers&#13;
(remember, nearly one out of every&#13;
three students is an older adult) on&#13;
the UW-P campus. But where to&#13;
begin? Begin by gathering your&#13;
thoughts on this article and then if&#13;
you want to play a part consider&#13;
joining the Adult Student&#13;
Association. To join or for more&#13;
information contact me on&#13;
Mondays and Wednesdays in&#13;
WLLC D175, or call 553-2269.&#13;
Mary Lynn Maki&#13;
Student Declares Candidacy&#13;
I would like to take - th is&#13;
opportunity to announce my&#13;
candidacy for the office of&#13;
President of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government (PSGA). I am a&#13;
Political Science Major with a&#13;
cummulative Grade Point Average&#13;
of 3.5.&#13;
I feel that I am qualified to hold&#13;
this office for the following reasons;&#13;
I have served on the Student&#13;
Government Senate for over two&#13;
years. I served one elected term as&#13;
President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
Senate. I also served as Acting&#13;
Vice-President upon the resignation&#13;
of Vice-President Elect,&#13;
Harvey V. Hedden.&#13;
Among my other activities, I am&#13;
a member of the Parkside Debate&#13;
and Forensics Club and a member&#13;
of ti.e Student Organizational&#13;
Council (SOC).&#13;
As Student Government President,&#13;
I would try my best to act for&#13;
the interest of all the students here&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Mary F. Braun&#13;
Senator at-large&#13;
Debate and Forensics Team&#13;
SOC member&#13;
UW Budget&#13;
Increase 5.9%&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
According to the Milwaukee&#13;
Journal, Tuesday, February 13, the&#13;
biennial budget for the University&#13;
of Wisconsin, as recommended by&#13;
the Dreyfus administration will be&#13;
$1.8 billion. This is an increase of&#13;
5.9% over the $1.7 billion budget&#13;
for the 1976-1978 budget period.&#13;
However, it should be clear that&#13;
with inflation of 8 or 9% per year,&#13;
this "increase" is not really an&#13;
increase at all. The most important&#13;
aspects of this budget recommendation&#13;
for the University of&#13;
Wisconsin student is that many&#13;
new proposals that would have held&#13;
back tuition increases and made&#13;
more work study monies available,&#13;
have been cut.&#13;
The $1.8 billion budget will be&#13;
spent as follows: $893.6 million in&#13;
1979-80 and $921.5 million in&#13;
1980-81. The 5.9% "increase"&#13;
includes increases for capital&#13;
equipment replacement; additional&#13;
faculty training; support for&#13;
minority students; and money for&#13;
building construction.&#13;
Also the Dreyfus proposal&#13;
includes the forgiveness of a&#13;
$823,600 debt that the university&#13;
system incurred through reduced&#13;
enrollments at the Greenbay,&#13;
Oshkosh and Superior campuses.&#13;
However, the total university&#13;
enrollment this past year is the&#13;
highest ever.&#13;
Candidates Present Platform&#13;
As candidates for the positions of&#13;
President and Vice-President of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, we would like to&#13;
inform students how we stand on&#13;
these issues.&#13;
The issue of double degrees has&#13;
been coming up over and over this&#13;
semester. Students may not, receive&#13;
more than one Bachelor's degree&#13;
from this University. We feel that&#13;
by not allowing students to receive&#13;
two degrees it limits the number of&#13;
students who might otherwise&#13;
choose to complete their degree at&#13;
this campus, as well as limiting the&#13;
number of students who might wish&#13;
to return for a second degree.&#13;
Despite the fact that prior to a&#13;
Faculty Senate action taken&#13;
November 1978, there was no&#13;
ground on which to deny a student&#13;
two degrees, this non-existant&#13;
ruling has been enforced in all but&#13;
one instance, in Spring 1978.&#13;
Any student may in essence&#13;
complete 240 credits at Parkside&#13;
and still not receive more than one&#13;
degree. If a policy was set, at the&#13;
very least, to allow two degrees&#13;
within 150-170 credits completed,&#13;
similar to the policy of other&#13;
UW-System schools, students at&#13;
Parkside would know where they&#13;
stand. It is unfortunate, but in this&#13;
society the more papers you have to&#13;
wave under a prospective employers&#13;
nose the better. And UW-Parkside&#13;
is not keeping pace with this trend.&#13;
Grade Appeals as another area&#13;
of contention at this time. There is&#13;
no specific procedure for appealing&#13;
a grade, though it is agreed by both&#13;
faculty members and students that&#13;
a comprehensive procedure is&#13;
needed. Academic Policies committee&#13;
has drafted a proposed&#13;
procedure which as a basic outline&#13;
is not bad, but it could be more&#13;
specific in detailing procedures.&#13;
The proposal as it stands, is too&#13;
vague and as a result will do more&#13;
harm than good.&#13;
Students on tenure committees is&#13;
not a new idea. We think that&#13;
students should have a say in which&#13;
faculty members are tenured.&#13;
Students are the ones who sit&#13;
through endless lectures, we are the&#13;
ones who know what kind of&#13;
teachers our instructors are. So,&#13;
shouldn't we voice our opinions and&#13;
have votes on who these instructors&#13;
will be?&#13;
Elections will be held March 7&#13;
and 8,1979. Please, vote!&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Tim M.Zimmer&#13;
Presidential Candidate&#13;
Mary A. Mortl&#13;
Vice-Presidential Candidate&#13;
. i i, i - °&#13;
v Raymond&#13;
An informal college/industry dialogue was presented on&#13;
Wednesday February 14th in the Galbraith Conference Center.&#13;
Pictured is Herbert E. Markley chairman of the board of the&#13;
National Association of Manufactureres who was the featured&#13;
speaker. &#13;
Wednesday February 21, 1979 HANGER&#13;
Talk Focuses on Male Problems&#13;
by Mollie Clarke&#13;
When Professor Wayne Johnson&#13;
(Philosophy) mentioned names like&#13;
Paul Newman, Robert Redford,&#13;
John Travolta, and Woody Allen to&#13;
students and faculty attending last&#13;
week's Brown Bag Lunch, he was&#13;
surprised at their different&#13;
responses.&#13;
Professor Johnson asked his&#13;
audience why they thought these&#13;
men were or were not ideal or&#13;
interesting men. Though no&#13;
conclusions were reached during&#13;
the discussion that followed,&#13;
participants undoubtedly grew&#13;
more aware of the problems&#13;
American men have who find&#13;
themselves caught up in the&#13;
"macho bind."&#13;
Professor Johnson expressed&#13;
some of the ideas he read about in&#13;
Herb Goldberg's book, The&#13;
Hazards of Being Male. According&#13;
to Goldberg, one of the main&#13;
problems American-men face today&#13;
is that they are often afraid to&#13;
express their feelings openly or to&#13;
ask for professional help. Men may&#13;
be afraid to support one another&#13;
because others may believe they are&#13;
homosexuals. Men may also be&#13;
afraid to ask for help because&#13;
others may think that something is&#13;
wrong with them.&#13;
According to Goldberg; there are&#13;
more men as in-patients in&#13;
hospitals than women; the rate of&#13;
men dying from cancer is 40%&#13;
higher than that of women, twice as&#13;
many men die from heart disease as&#13;
women; the death rate of divorced&#13;
men in general is three times that of&#13;
divorced women; and men are three&#13;
times more successful at suicide&#13;
than females are.&#13;
An interesting point that came&#13;
up in the discussion was that&#13;
women use suicide as a cry for help.&#13;
What ever happened to the&#13;
"aggressive, successful, cool&#13;
male?"&#13;
Divorce, which is an extremely&#13;
costly affair for men nowadays, is&#13;
another major dilemma men must&#13;
face. Goldberg suggests that men,&#13;
as well as women should fight for&#13;
what is really theirs. Also, in a&#13;
marriage, men need not always feel&#13;
totally responsible for their wives,&#13;
but they should "honor their own&#13;
needs."&#13;
Goldberg also comments that&#13;
impotency isn't always a physical&#13;
problem. Men, indeed, don't&#13;
always want sex. They may not&#13;
want to be physically close to their&#13;
partners at times, especially when&#13;
they are unable to express their&#13;
feelings openly. Another interesting&#13;
point that was mentioned du ing&#13;
the discussion was the question of&#13;
what a good relationship and&#13;
marriage is made of.&#13;
Though men and women have&#13;
inherited stereotyped roles, the&#13;
problem is at least now being&#13;
examined. No longer is the saying,&#13;
"we love little girls fo»- w hat they&#13;
are — boys for what they will&#13;
become" accurate and fair.&#13;
Carnival Short of Success&#13;
by Denise Sobieski&#13;
Recalling the S.O.C. Winter&#13;
Carnival, one can rephrase the&#13;
question, "Whoever said snow&#13;
wasn't fun? to "Whoever said snow&#13;
was fun?" It's obvious students and&#13;
faculty forgot to bring their&#13;
mittens, scarves, and hats with&#13;
them last week. The cold weather&#13;
kept just about everyone indoors,&#13;
instead of outside participating in&#13;
the snow sculpture, sled dog race,&#13;
challenge tug-of-war, and snow ball&#13;
roll. What had been planned to be&#13;
a weeklong festivity of indoor and&#13;
outdoor events, ended up being a&#13;
pretty normal week at Parkside&#13;
with a few extra indoor activities.&#13;
The carnival opened with a Gong&#13;
Show, providing a few laughs for all&#13;
those visiting the Square that&#13;
Monday evening. The audience was&#13;
treated to a few crazy musical acts,&#13;
a look at shadow boxing, attempts&#13;
at comedy, and last but not least,&#13;
Mean Gene the Dancing Machine.&#13;
The favorites, surviving gonging,&#13;
were Vince with his Dueling&#13;
Appendages, the fortunate winner,&#13;
FILM PRESENTS&#13;
PAUL NEWMAN&#13;
SLAP SHOT&#13;
Fri. F eb.23 8 P.M.&#13;
Sun. Feb. 25 7:30 P.M&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
and Tim, the Rocky Horror Show&#13;
transvestite. All in all, it was a great&#13;
time for performers and audience&#13;
alike.&#13;
The remainder of the week&#13;
wasn't without its good points.&#13;
Tuesday, students hungrily peered&#13;
at the goodies that representatives&#13;
of campus groups were selling at&#13;
the S.O.C. fair. Other delectables&#13;
were available Thursday and&#13;
Friday by the Saga foods indoor&#13;
picnic.&#13;
Music appreciators enjoyed the&#13;
various musical activities throughout&#13;
the week—the Parkside Jazz&#13;
Ensemble, Scott Alarik, the Miller&#13;
Brothers, and a dance on Saturday&#13;
with the group Orphan.&#13;
The apathy of students and&#13;
faculty here at Parkside kept the&#13;
1st S.O.C. Winter Carnival from&#13;
being a total success. The winter's&#13;
chilling weather didn't help either.&#13;
Hopefully next year, the campus&#13;
will become more involved and the&#13;
weather will fair better for the 2nd&#13;
annual S.O.C. Winter Carnival.&#13;
TEXTBOOKS ARE BEING&#13;
SHIPPED BACK TO&#13;
THE PUBLISHERS&#13;
MAKE ALL YOUR FINAL&#13;
•&#13;
TEXT PURCHASES NOW!&#13;
UW Parkside Bookstore """'J,*"'.'""&#13;
&lt; Saturday 1 0 a .m. - 1 p .m. :&#13;
Thomas Dvorak director of theWind Ensemble&#13;
Photo by M. Holmdohl&#13;
Wind Ensemble Presents&#13;
Free Concert&#13;
The Symphonic Wind Ensemble&#13;
of the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will present a free public&#13;
concert featuring two faculty&#13;
soloists at 8 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
February 21 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater under the direction of&#13;
Thomas Dvorak.&#13;
Soprano Carol Irwin and pianist&#13;
August Wegner of the UW-P music&#13;
faculty will join the ensemble in the&#13;
band's version of Ralph Vaughan&#13;
Williams' Folk Song Suite.&#13;
The program will open with&#13;
Walter Piston's Fanfare for the&#13;
Fighting French. Also programmed&#13;
are Vincent Persichetti's Serenade&#13;
No. 1 for ten wind instruments,&#13;
Theodore Dollarhide's Jungles and&#13;
a concluding section of marches by&#13;
Charles Ives and Hilmar&#13;
Luckhardt.&#13;
Dvorak commented that the&#13;
program is designed to expose both&#13;
Parkside wind students and their&#13;
audience to serious new music for&#13;
band by contemporary young&#13;
composers, such as Dollarhide.&#13;
Before joining the UW-Parkside&#13;
music faculty last fall, Dvorak&#13;
taught at the University of&#13;
Michigan in Ann Arbor where he&#13;
was a member of the music&#13;
education and band faculties with&#13;
major responsibilities for teaching&#13;
and conducting and direction of the&#13;
University of Michigan Youth&#13;
Band and Wind Ensemble. He also&#13;
has taught at the National Music&#13;
Camp at Interlochen, Michigan.&#13;
Clocks O ff Again&#13;
by Linda Adams&#13;
All the clocks here on campus&#13;
have been re-set in the last month,&#13;
according to Physical Plant&#13;
source. But many of them still&#13;
aren't accurate.&#13;
The Simplex clock system here&#13;
operates from a master control&#13;
clock in "Greenquist. It sends a&#13;
pulse to repeater clocks in adjacent&#13;
buildings. These relay power to&#13;
other clocks. By the time the&#13;
voltage travels to repeater clocks, it&#13;
loses power. This is where the time&#13;
loss and other problems begin.&#13;
Physical Plant employees will&#13;
first re-set a faulty clock and make&#13;
a mechanical adjustment to help it&#13;
catch up to the pulse. If that fails,&#13;
the clock is replaced. But, as Ken&#13;
Miller a Physical Plant electrician&#13;
says, "We often find we didn't&#13;
remove the problem, we just&#13;
changed the clock."&#13;
Defective clocks can be sent&#13;
back, but the Simplex company&#13;
charges over five dollars more for a&#13;
new one. Seven years ago, when&#13;
Greenquist was the only building&#13;
here, there were few problems with&#13;
the system, according to Physical&#13;
Plant. One remedy, which Miller&#13;
termed "a last resort," would be to&#13;
install a master clock in each&#13;
building. Sources at the Physical&#13;
Plant say the cost of that would be&#13;
very high, although they had no&#13;
exact figures.&#13;
"This bothers us probably more&#13;
than it bothers students," said&#13;
Miller. The Physical Plant gets&#13;
complaints occasionally from&#13;
department heads, and claims no&#13;
direct complaints from students.&#13;
Maintenance men usually report a&#13;
clock that's out of order. Physical&#13;
Plant's phone number is 553-2333&#13;
and is situated just north of Tallent&#13;
Hall on Wood Road.&#13;
George Feichter, an electronics&#13;
technician for Racine Unified&#13;
Schools, estimates Unified has "a&#13;
95% Simplex system" in 35&#13;
buildings. There are few problems&#13;
with it, he explained, "but each of&#13;
our buildings has a master clock."&#13;
A Simplex company spokesman&#13;
in Milwaukee gave a general&#13;
estimate for the type of system here&#13;
at $1,000 for a master clock, which&#13;
does not include installation.&#13;
However, Physical plant spokesman&#13;
Heinz Butt says the original&#13;
cost for the master clock was 2,500,&#13;
and he estimates it would be more&#13;
than twice that now. &#13;
Wednesday February 21, 1979&#13;
.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'i'iiliiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini,,,,,&#13;
f It Jus t Shows To Go Ya.&#13;
,&#13;
The Selling of George&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
In the beginning there were 13&#13;
colonies under English rule, and&#13;
someone said, "let there be&#13;
rebellion," and so there was.&#13;
Who was that someone who&#13;
uttered those words? Could it have&#13;
gre&#13;
f fat&#13;
K&#13;
h&#13;
" Ge&#13;
°&#13;
rge w&#13;
^&#13;
at did he come up with?&#13;
Washington whose birthday we He came up „i,h an incredible&#13;
honor every year on Presidents story about some malicious kid who&#13;
Day. (I wonder it ever- be chopped down his father's cherry&#13;
famous enough to have my birthday tree and then didn't get in troubk&#13;
changed to a Monday to give every for it because he ,old&#13;
8&#13;
his&#13;
banker in the nation a day off?) truth&#13;
George was just one of our Now,&#13;
Tenure Recommendations&#13;
Up for Review&#13;
jail or formed a line to the gallows.&#13;
The best example of this PR&#13;
person's work is George Washington&#13;
s image. Can you imagine the&#13;
sleepness nights that guy spent&#13;
thinking of ways to promote George&#13;
Washington as a leader? And then&#13;
"founding fathers" who had liberty&#13;
and the pursuit of happiness in his&#13;
heart—or did he? Who really&#13;
knows what those guys had on their&#13;
minds when they decided to reoel&#13;
against the mother country? Like&#13;
many who start uprisings, they were&#13;
labeled "tyrants" at first.&#13;
Somewhere along the line, I&#13;
think they must have discovered the&#13;
greatest public relations guy that&#13;
ever lived. (It could've been a&#13;
woman though. Personally, I&#13;
suspect Betsy Ross.) If they hadn't,&#13;
I'm sure that they would've either&#13;
lived out their lives in a rat infested&#13;
it seems to me that the&#13;
kid's dad made a mistake&#13;
somewhere. Why didn't he ask&#13;
George why he did it or give him a&#13;
lecture about respecting other&#13;
people's property?&#13;
Who knows, maybe George was&#13;
just practicing for the main event.&#13;
He could've been sick of his parents&#13;
and wanted to get rid of them.&#13;
(Maybe that's where Lizzie Bordon&#13;
got the idea.)&#13;
As it was, George's father spoiled&#13;
him. It was bad enough being the&#13;
son of a rich plantation owner, but&#13;
being able to do what he wanted&#13;
was even worse.&#13;
George then grew up as a vain&#13;
man, wanting everything for&#13;
himself, including the people of a&#13;
whole country. But he ran into&#13;
problems getting his wishes. He&#13;
first had to fight for a country and&#13;
then get the people to believe that&#13;
he created it himself.&#13;
He somehow managed to become&#13;
the first President of the United&#13;
States. The citizens of the country&#13;
didn't even vote. But once he got&#13;
into office, what did he do? Who&#13;
knows? 1 suppose he spent plenty of 1&#13;
days at Mount Vernon, the Camp |&#13;
David of its time.&#13;
I could just imagine what&#13;
would've happened if someone&#13;
would've bugged his office, at is&#13;
known that he died of syphillis.)&#13;
He must've thought he was really&#13;
some kind of Don Juan. He did&#13;
everything to improve his looks. He&#13;
even tried over a dozen pair of false&#13;
teeth; of which I think only his&#13;
dentist could love.&#13;
All of that just proved his vanity §&#13;
though. I wonder what gool of I&#13;
George would do if he knew that he 1&#13;
shared his day of honor with Ab| e&#13;
Lincoln?&#13;
by Carol A. Breigenzer&#13;
The Personnel Review Committee,&#13;
which reviews candidates for&#13;
tenure, has passed on five&#13;
recommendations to Vice-Chancellor&#13;
Lorman Ratner for approval.&#13;
The PSC decides upon candidates&#13;
recommended to them by the&#13;
various divisions. Faculty that are&#13;
eligible for tenure must pass&#13;
divisional approval to be considered&#13;
by the PSC.&#13;
The 12 member committee is&#13;
made up of professors selected&#13;
from each of the eight divisions,&#13;
with the remaining four members&#13;
elected at large, with no more than&#13;
two members per division on the&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Paul Kliene, committee chairperson,&#13;
said that technically, the&#13;
committee does not have the right&#13;
to decide who gets tenure and who&#13;
does not. "We make recommendations&#13;
on those we feel should be&#13;
granted tenure. The final decision&#13;
is made by the Vice Chancellor and&#13;
Chancellor." Kliene also pointed&#13;
out that tenure appointments are&#13;
not official until approved by the&#13;
Board of Rent Regents.&#13;
A number of criteria are&#13;
considered by the PSC when&#13;
making tenure recommendations.&#13;
The teacher evaluation forms that&#13;
are filled out every semester are&#13;
summarized and put into a file.&#13;
This file is discussed along with&#13;
teaching ability, research (not&#13;
necessarily published works) and&#13;
the person's service to the&#13;
university, community and profession.&#13;
A person from each division is&#13;
invited to attend the hearings, so&#13;
that any questions about the&#13;
candidate can be asked. A simple&#13;
majority vote by committee&#13;
members is needed for a candidate&#13;
to be approved.&#13;
The committee's recommendations&#13;
and all other pertinent&#13;
documents were given to the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor on February 12.&#13;
He will announce the results of the&#13;
tenure hearings in a few weeks.&#13;
. . . . . . . . . , . : ; * " U C , "&#13;
B 4 1 0 , 6 lo a o w f t a t h e w a n t e d s h a r e d h i s d a y o f h o n o r w i t h A b e = . m&#13;
lived out their lives in a rat infested was even worse. Lincoln' 2 ft M AA mA E ^ mm A • • £*&#13;
- in...................... j vuncerr ruuTUiCS&#13;
Student Works Anthropology Field Studies&#13;
Programs Far and Near&#13;
by Denise Sobieski&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
is offering two separate&#13;
applied archaeological field school&#13;
programs this summer. Both have&#13;
prerequisite training and provide&#13;
the students with field experience&#13;
as they develop anthropology&#13;
techniques and attitudes.&#13;
Dr. Florence Shipek, Assistant&#13;
Professor in Anthropology at&#13;
Parkside, in the past year has&#13;
organized a Cultural Resource&#13;
Management: Archaeology project.&#13;
The main objective of this field&#13;
study is to train students in all&#13;
phases of cultural resource&#13;
management.&#13;
The study will be conducted at&#13;
an archaeological site in southern&#13;
Kenosha County. This particular&#13;
site, located on a major Native&#13;
American trading trail, is in danger&#13;
of destruction. The site, because of&#13;
it s importance to human history, is,&#13;
to be excavated.&#13;
In addition to excavation,&#13;
cultural resource managment&#13;
includes the managing and&#13;
preservation of cultural resources.&#13;
A wide variety of archaeological&#13;
work will be involved in the project.&#13;
Students may even have the&#13;
opportunity to assist in the creation&#13;
of museum displays for the&#13;
Kenosha Public Museum, or for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Dp to six hours of credit can be&#13;
earned by the students, Dates for&#13;
the Cultural Resource Management:&#13;
Archaeological project are&#13;
June 1 . juiy 23, 1979.&#13;
Non-university applicants are&#13;
encouraged to attend so as to have&#13;
a w'^&#13;
e range of interested persons.&#13;
Another Anthropology field&#13;
study school is to be conducted in&#13;
Arizona on the Kaibab Paiute&#13;
reservation. Dr. Richard Stoffle,&#13;
Assistant Professor of Anthropology,&#13;
for several summers has&#13;
brought students to the Kaibab&#13;
Paiute reservation in Arizona to&#13;
work on anthropology projects.&#13;
This year's project is to set up a&#13;
museum at the Paiute reservation.&#13;
The museum's purpose is to serve&#13;
as an informational tourist center&#13;
for the adjacent camp grounds and&#13;
to protect and display items of&#13;
importance, historically and culturally,&#13;
to the Kaibab Paiute.&#13;
Past trips to An? &gt;na by Dr.&#13;
Stoffle and his student, have been&#13;
quite rewarding to a'l those&#13;
involved. Several papers have been&#13;
written as a result of the studies at&#13;
the Kaibab Paiute reservation.&#13;
Everyone that has participated in&#13;
the field study school has found it&#13;
to be fun and satisfactory. "There&#13;
is committment because the work is&#13;
meaningful," Dr. Stoffle says.&#13;
Persons with a diversity of&#13;
backgrounds will find the field&#13;
study school attractive. Photography,&#13;
videotaping, interviewing,&#13;
drawing, and document research&#13;
will all play an important role in the&#13;
project.&#13;
Up to six credits can be earned.&#13;
It will last approximately six&#13;
weeks. May 21 to July 1, 1979 is&#13;
being considered as the date of the&#13;
project.&#13;
For more information on either&#13;
of the field study school classes&#13;
being offered, contact Dr. Florence&#13;
Shipek, Moln. 349, Dr. Richard&#13;
Stoffle, Moln. 349, or talk to&#13;
students in the anthropology lab,&#13;
Moln. 321.&#13;
A concert of original works by&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
student composers will be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
February 23, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater under sponsorship&#13;
of the Parkside Chapter of the&#13;
Music Educators National Conference.&#13;
&#13;
The student composers are&#13;
Geoffrey Stanton, Racine, who is&#13;
represented by a coral work and&#13;
organ compositions; Anthony&#13;
Burke, Racine, represented by a&#13;
composition for flute, guitar and&#13;
clarinet; and Donald Crouch,&#13;
Kenosha, represented by choral&#13;
works.&#13;
Students assisting as vocalists&#13;
will be Cynthia Ackerman, Racine,&#13;
Kim Hetland, Sturtevant, Cheryl&#13;
Dowman, Racine, Debra Scheckel,&#13;
Kenosha, Jeffrey Honore, Kenosha,&#13;
Steven Schuster, Racine, David&#13;
Kapralian, Racine, and Timothy&#13;
Thompson, Racine. Instrumentalist&#13;
will be Ann Roland, Racine,&#13;
flute; Jill Kortum, Racine, clarinet;&#13;
and Burke, guitar; Stanton, organ;&#13;
and Miss Scheckel, piano.&#13;
TOUR GUIDE&#13;
This position on the staff of J ohnson's Wax Golden Rondelle is&#13;
primarily responsible for conducting tours of the company's&#13;
Frank Lloyd Wright Buildings and other facilities, and assisting&#13;
with theatre activities including correspondence and general&#13;
clerical work.&#13;
Applicants should have experience in public contact work, be&#13;
able to communicate effectively,and be comfortable speaking&#13;
before groups.&#13;
This is a part-time position offering between ten and twenty&#13;
hours per week including some evening and week-end work.&#13;
Candidates should be able to work two full days if needed.&#13;
Send resume or letter including past work experience to:&#13;
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE&#13;
S.C. JOHNSON AND SON, INC.&#13;
2512 WILLOW ROAD&#13;
MAIL STATION 327&#13;
STURTEVANT, WISCONSIN 53177&#13;
Equal Opportunity Employer&#13;
lb&#13;
V* lb&#13;
5i89&#13;
com.V*° G00D&#13;
lrtUe- MON - FRI&#13;
11 - 2&#13;
U p&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION. &#13;
Wednesday February 21, 1979&#13;
Radaers S, Hammerstein&#13;
RANGER 6&#13;
Production Lacks Charisma&#13;
by Thomas Jena&#13;
Persons attending the February&#13;
15th performance of An Evening&#13;
with Rodgers and Hammerstein&#13;
were treated to songs from the&#13;
musicals Oklahoma!, South Pacific,&#13;
The King and I, and The Sound&#13;
of Music. You would think that any&#13;
show highlighting such music&#13;
would be respectable, but the group&#13;
that stopped at Parkside's&#13;
Communication Arts Theater last&#13;
Thursday barely managed that.&#13;
Three women and four men sang&#13;
and danced to the songs of the&#13;
musical duo, one actor playing the&#13;
role of a stage manager reminiscing&#13;
over the lives of Rodgers and&#13;
Hammerstein (actors portraying&#13;
the composers themselves never&#13;
showed up, as advertising originally&#13;
promised).&#13;
Small problems plagued the&#13;
show. The actresses, inundated&#13;
with make-up, wore inappropriately&#13;
bright pink and green gowns and&#13;
sat on fourescent green, blue and&#13;
red chairs—all set against a drab,&#13;
high-schoolish cardboard backdrop&#13;
depicting the backstage of a&#13;
theater. The mechanical movements&#13;
of the hoofers made them&#13;
look more like puppets out of the&#13;
TV show David and Goliath than&#13;
professionals on stage.&#13;
Vocally, the troupe was very&#13;
talented. Yet they never sang to&#13;
their full potential, being drowned&#13;
out by their three piece band too&#13;
often. One actress, Diane Disque,&#13;
displayed extraordinary skill: she&#13;
gave life to the show with solos from&#13;
the musicals South Pacific and&#13;
Allegro (a pleasing version of "The&#13;
Gentleman is a Dope" in the later).&#13;
It's a shame her skills weren't&#13;
utilized more.&#13;
The only thing that saved the&#13;
show was a final medley of tunes&#13;
from The Sound of Music, even&#13;
though it lacked the infectious&#13;
enthusiasm which had made it so&#13;
popular. Nonetheless, audience&#13;
response was favorable, though it&#13;
seemed the crowd didn't so much&#13;
enjoy the performing of the actors&#13;
as much as the memories the show&#13;
provoked.&#13;
All in all, it was a lethargic Great&#13;
America type production, lacking&#13;
the style and charisma which&#13;
Richard Rodgers and Oscar&#13;
Hammerstein have come to&#13;
represent.&#13;
'Marriage'&#13;
fhe Guthrie Theater —&#13;
America's pre-eminent regional&#13;
theater company—will present&#13;
Nikolai Gogol's "Marriage,"&#13;
staged by guest director Anatoli&#13;
Efros of Moscow's Malaya&#13;
Bronnaya Theatre, Mpnday and&#13;
Tuesday, March 5 and 6, at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Efros, one of Russia's most&#13;
original and internationally acclaimed&#13;
theatrical artists, is&#13;
making his American directing&#13;
debut with this production.&#13;
The March 5 evening performance&#13;
already is sold out. Reserved&#13;
seat tickets for the March 6&#13;
performance at 8 p.m. are still&#13;
available although about 50&#13;
percent of the house has been sold&#13;
for that performance. Tickets for&#13;
that show at $7 each are available&#13;
in person or by mail from the&#13;
UW-P Union Information Center&#13;
(Kenosha, WI53141).&#13;
In addition, there will be a&#13;
special student matinee at 12:30&#13;
Still Available&#13;
p.m. on March 6. The student price&#13;
for this performance is $3 and&#13;
teachers should call 553-2233 for&#13;
block booking information. For the&#13;
matinee only, the $3 price also will&#13;
be honored for senior citizens&#13;
ordering in blocks of 10 or more.&#13;
All orders must be made in advance&#13;
and matinee seating is not reserved.&#13;
"Marriage" centers around a&#13;
hestitant bachelor who reluctantly&#13;
considers marriage, with some&#13;
encouragement from his married&#13;
friend. But the town's local&#13;
matchmaker has already lined up&#13;
an odd assortment of suitors for the&#13;
young woman in mind, and the&#13;
bachelor's friend crudely arranges&#13;
a triumph over his rivals. A surprise&#13;
ending tops off the fast-paced&#13;
Russian comedy.&#13;
During a visit to the Soviet Union&#13;
two years ago, Guthrie Artistic&#13;
Director Alvin Epstein had the&#13;
opportunity to see the Malaya&#13;
Bronnaya Production of&#13;
"Marriage" and invited Efros to&#13;
direct the play at the Guthrie.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap At U nion Square&#13;
|p20 Contemporary Entertainment&#13;
JAZZ NIGHTCLUB&#13;
Featuring&#13;
NEXUS &amp; OPUS&#13;
Sat. Feb. 2 4 8 P .M.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
ADVANCE SALES ALL TICKETS&#13;
$1.50 U.W.-P Students $2.00 AT THE&#13;
DOOR $2.00 Guest&#13;
Opus 8:30-9:30&#13;
Nexus 10-12:30 I.D's Required&#13;
Epstein will make his Guthrie&#13;
acting debut as Kochkariev, the&#13;
married friend. This is Epstein's&#13;
first season with the Guthrie,&#13;
during which he staged the&#13;
American premiere production of&#13;
Henrik Ibsen's "The Pretenders."&#13;
As a performer, Epstein has&#13;
appeared on and off-Broadway in&#13;
such major roles as Lucky in athe&#13;
Broadway production of "Waiting&#13;
for Godot" with Bert Lahr, the Fool&#13;
in Orson Welles' production of&#13;
"King Lear" and Trotsky in Paddy&#13;
Chayefsky's "Passion of Josef D."&#13;
Epstein received an Obie Aware&#13;
for Distinguished Performance&#13;
off-Broadway in "Dynamite&#13;
Tonight." He has also toured&#13;
across the country with Martha&#13;
Schlamme in "The World of Kurt&#13;
Weill," performing Weill's songs in&#13;
German and English. Most&#13;
recently, Epstein was the Associate&#13;
Director of the Yale Repertory&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Classified&#13;
Ads&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
Help Wanted: flexible hours, Installing&#13;
custom-fit stereos into new cars. Excellent&#13;
advancement opportunities in a fastgrowing&#13;
company. Ideal for Business&#13;
students who want an early start. Reliable&#13;
persons only call 554-6635 for appointment&#13;
between 10 a.m. andl p.m.&#13;
Typing—Term papers, resumes, notes, etc.&#13;
For more Information call 637-3199 except&#13;
Wed. evenings.&#13;
W.E.A.I. Student Assistance Program Is&#13;
interviewing applicants to fill several&#13;
part-time openings. Evening/weekend&#13;
hours available at $5.50 hr. display. Call&#13;
658-0625 ext. 21.&#13;
Child Care Available. Call after 2 p.m.&#13;
552-7211.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1977 Cutlass, Brougham. Must sell.&#13;
Reasonable! Call anytime 632-8483, Racine.&#13;
Two smart hounds (Female) 9 wks. Under 15&#13;
lbs. when grown. Kenosha 652-1835. $5.00.&#13;
LOST&#13;
February 8: White and blue contact case&#13;
with pair of blue contacts. Call 762-6022&#13;
(Ask for Don.)&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Happy belated Birthday, Timmerl How does&#13;
it feel to be over the hill? Toots&#13;
Bibly Study: Inter-Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship will hold an informal Bible study&#13;
at Jane Naleid's house, 442 Wolff St.&#13;
(639-3712) this Friday at 7:15 p.m. Everyone&#13;
is Invited!&#13;
Position Available: PSGA is seeking a&#13;
recording secretary. The position will be&#13;
open March 13, 1979. For further&#13;
information contact Rusty Smith.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
EVENTS POLICY&#13;
All events must be turned in to the Ranger office by 10:00 a.m.&#13;
on the Thursday previous to the Wednesday issue that they will&#13;
appear in. •&#13;
, Wednesday, February 21&#13;
Movie "Breaking Out of the Doll's House" will be shown at 12&#13;
noon in MOLN 130. This movie is being shown in conjunction with&#13;
a series of lectures and seminars to be held at a later date. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Concert at 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre with Tom&#13;
Dvorak conducting the Parkside Symphonic Wind Ensemble. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public. .&#13;
PSGA Outreach Table The PSGA Inc. Senate will once again be&#13;
available to discuss SUFAC, the coming elections, and any campus&#13;
problems that you would like to discuss. From 10:00 to 8-00 in&#13;
MOLN. Hall.&#13;
Movies "Black Music in America," and Black African Heritage:&#13;
Africa's Gift," Union 207 for Black History Week.&#13;
Thursday, February 22&#13;
PSGA Outreach Table Same time and place as Wednesday.&#13;
Lecture—Discussion at 12:30 p.m. in MOLN 236 on Evangelism:&#13;
The Christian Character. What should Christians be like when they&#13;
witness. Sponsored by IVCF.&#13;
Meeting Pre-Med Club meeting at 7:30 in WLLC D1 lounge. Dr.&#13;
D.H. Klehm from MCW will speak on Family Practice. MSGT Ray&#13;
Wolf will also be present to answer questions on military medicine&#13;
Alumni Day For U.W. Parkside's Black Graduates, Union 207&#13;
11:30-1:30.&#13;
Friday, February 23&#13;
Meeting The Minority Student Union will meet at 12:00 in Union&#13;
207 and will be discussing things that happen during Black History&#13;
Week. The Union will also be looking for suggestions on&#13;
upcoming events.&#13;
Earth Science Colloquium at 12 noon in GR 113. Mike Anderson&#13;
of Parkside's Chemistry discipline will give a talk and slide&#13;
presentation entitled "I May Not Be Ansel Adams But Yosemite&#13;
Doesn't Care!!" The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Seminar Chem/Life Science, at 2 p.m. in MOLN 107. The program&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
Concert MENC student compositions at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. The program is free and open to the&#13;
public. r&#13;
Movie "Slapshot" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
rheatre. Admission at the door is $1 for a Parkside student and $1&#13;
for a guest. Sponsred by PAB.&#13;
Lecture Discussion at 2 p.m. in MOLN 236 on The Identity of&#13;
n „ ™ , S&#13;
'&#13;
S second of t e n talk s C h r i s t i a n b a s i c s s p o n s o r e d&#13;
by IVCF. Everyone is encouraged to come take part.&#13;
Saturday, February 24&#13;
Kiddie Flicks "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" will be shown at 1 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theatre for the Parkside community and their&#13;
families. Admission for children is $1 and parents are admitted&#13;
tree when accompanying a child. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
Dance at 9 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Opus" and "Nexus "&#13;
Adm.ss.on at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $2 for'a&#13;
guest. Sponsored by PAB. ID cards will be required at the door.&#13;
Sunday, February 25 .&#13;
Recital by Prof. Barbara Maris at the piano. The program begins&#13;
opentothe&#13;
1public.&#13;
6 C°&#13;
mmUniCati&#13;
°&#13;
n Arts Centre a&#13;
"&#13;
d is free and&#13;
Cinema Theatre.'" * ?:3&#13;
° P&#13;
'&#13;
m' » the Union&#13;
Discussion The discussion "Ernest Che Guevara: Theory and&#13;
ractice of the Guerilla," announced for Sunday, February 25 has&#13;
o u • i Monday, February 26&#13;
"Retfut&#13;
12&#13;
"&#13;
0&#13;
°a f" U"&#13;
i0n 106&#13;
' Pr0f&#13;
' John Harbes&#13;
°° wi»&#13;
talk on Revolution in Africa: Round Two." The program is free and open to the public. program is tree&#13;
Ha&#13;
" IaZZ Band at 8 P'&#13;
min&#13;
the&#13;
union Cinema Theatre. All seats have been sold.&#13;
* , ^ Tuesday, February 27&#13;
Sib-i'V3&#13;
/ TAn associa,e of Mr&#13;
-&#13;
s&#13;
°&#13;
ieri&lt;&#13;
aik&#13;
the public The pr&#13;
°&#13;
8ram is free a&#13;
"&#13;
d&#13;
°P&#13;
a&#13;
" 'o&#13;
p., .... „ Wednesday,February28&#13;
Ke™onwmrbe sr '&#13;
taly) a&#13;
"&#13;
d&#13;
"&#13;
Cops&#13;
" starrin« Bust&#13;
"&#13;
enjoy Admission f • 0°°" Un&#13;
'°&#13;
n 104&#13;
-&#13;
106&#13;
-&#13;
ByO lunch and&#13;
Life " '&#13;
S ^ t0 Parkside P&#13;
e&#13;
°P&gt;e. Sponsored by Student&#13;
featuri&#13;
"&#13;
8 Jim Post &#13;
SURPLUS CLOTHING&#13;
SALE&#13;
* NEW AND USED ITEMS&#13;
* MOUTON-STYLE WINTER CAPS&#13;
* WINTER WOOL TROUSERS&#13;
* RAYON/POLESTER PANTS&#13;
* PLUS MORE&#13;
50-90% OFF&#13;
FRIDAY FEB. 23 TALENT HALL&#13;
8 A.M.-4 P.M. ROOM 186&#13;
ITEMS SOLD AS IS ALL SALES FINAL&#13;
Free Public Lecture Thursday&#13;
"The Nuclear Family and Its&#13;
Critics" will be the topic of a free&#13;
public lecture by Rochester&#13;
University history professor Christopher&#13;
Lasch, author of the widely&#13;
acclaimed 1977 study "Haven in a&#13;
Heartless World: The Family&#13;
Besieged," at 2:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday, February 22, at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
in Molinaro Hall Room 107.&#13;
Prof. Lasch's other books include&#13;
"The New Radicalism in America,"&#13;
"The Agony of American Life" and&#13;
the newly-published "The Culture&#13;
of Narcissism: American Life in an&#13;
Age of Diminishing Expectations,"&#13;
in which Lasch warns of "creeping&#13;
trivialization" in virtually every&#13;
facet of life in the contemporary&#13;
U.S. Reviewers have praised the&#13;
new book for its "Formidable&#13;
intellectual grasp" and "moral&#13;
conviction rarely found in&#13;
contemporary value-neutral history."&#13;
&#13;
n&#13;
£5&#13;
r a il)&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
Wednesday February 21, 1979&#13;
RANG FR&#13;
KIDDIE F LICKS&#13;
'The Warriors'&#13;
The Lost Children of&#13;
by Pete Little&#13;
They live in the large cities of&#13;
America, crowded together like rats&#13;
amidst a desolate world of&#13;
worthless tenements, caged storefronts,&#13;
and burned-out buildings.&#13;
They are a wild breed, herding&#13;
together in packs. Their pride and&#13;
honor is their territory, their turf.&#13;
They will defend it against all&#13;
invaders, all trespassers. They are&#13;
suspicious and distrusting of&#13;
others, quick to provoke at the hint&#13;
of a threat.&#13;
Their loyalty is to their gang, and&#13;
to the Warlord who leads it. They&#13;
are shadows of the night, shrouded&#13;
by their savage instinct for the&#13;
street. They are strong, they are&#13;
many. They are the youth of&#13;
America.&#13;
New York City, 1978, far from&#13;
the towering skyscrapers, far from&#13;
the expensive restaurants, far from&#13;
the museums and galleries. They&#13;
have their own laws, and their own&#13;
order. They cannot flee the city,&#13;
they must deal with it; with the&#13;
police, the run-down neighborhoods,&#13;
or rival gangs, the fight&#13;
never ends, never loosens its hold&#13;
on their fate.&#13;
The Warriors is a gang from&#13;
Coney Island, a forgotten corner of&#13;
New York that has long since lost&#13;
its battle with poverty. They are one&#13;
of the smaller gangs, yet tougher&#13;
and more resiliant than most. As&#13;
the film opens, the Warriors are&#13;
one of a hundred or more gangs&#13;
gathered in an outdoor arena. They&#13;
are all listening to a speaker, who&#13;
implores them to lay down their&#13;
differences, to put an end to the&#13;
rivalries which tear them apart.&#13;
The speaker realizes the tremendous&#13;
potential of a united force,&#13;
and wishes to create an&#13;
organization that both the police&#13;
and the populace will have to&#13;
answer to.&#13;
The Warriors watch as a rival&#13;
gang member shoots the speaker,&#13;
killing him. But no one else sees it,&#13;
and soon police sirens are heard&#13;
closing in from every direction.&#13;
Chaos ensues as the gangs scatter&#13;
in all directions, many being&#13;
apprehended by the police. The&#13;
killer accuses the Warriors of the&#13;
assassination, and the word goes&#13;
out. Dead or alive, the Warriors&#13;
must be found.&#13;
They are far from home, over&#13;
twenty miles from their turf. Every&#13;
gang in the city is searching for&#13;
them, stalking them through the&#13;
dark streets. They must battle one&#13;
gang after another, using clubs,&#13;
hands, knives, and instincts.&#13;
Diplomacy is of no use, negotiation&#13;
out of the question.&#13;
Walter Hill, writer-director of&#13;
"The Warriors," has created a&#13;
tense and compelling film. He is a&#13;
near-master of tone or mood, his&#13;
dark colors and exotic images&#13;
realizing a cold slickness that&#13;
attacks the viewer's senses. The city&#13;
is not pretty, it is a hollow,&#13;
fear-ridden jungle in which one's&#13;
gang is one's all. Mr. Hill's stylistic&#13;
awareness functions to bring out&#13;
the erriness, the vulnerability of the&#13;
city's nether regions.&#13;
The director concentrates strongly&#13;
on style, sometimes at the&#13;
expense of acting or dialogue. By&#13;
doing so, he creates a certain&#13;
mystique around his characters,&#13;
their many battles taking on the air&#13;
of ritual.&#13;
By showing nothing of the&#13;
member's home life, of of how or&#13;
why they joined the gangs, the film&#13;
emphasizes how important, how&#13;
consuming the gang element is in&#13;
Sat., F eb. 2 4&#13;
1:00 P.M.&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
$1.00 per c hild&#13;
[Adult free when accompanied by child]&#13;
Paradise&#13;
their life. They know only too well&#13;
that the world does not promise&#13;
much, and must meet it on its own&#13;
terms, with its own sense of&#13;
disillusionment.&#13;
It is a bleak picture Mr. Hill&#13;
paints, but an engaging one for the&#13;
movie-goer. His sharp photography&#13;
and keen sense of music contribute&#13;
to his brilliant sense of cinema. His&#13;
characters are somehow removed&#13;
from reality, caught in a relentless&#13;
world all their own. I would not call&#13;
his picture a 'slice-of-life' type film,&#13;
because he transcends reality with&#13;
brutal stylization and skillful&#13;
imagination. On top of this he lays&#13;
his subtle sense of humor, a type of&#13;
camp to keep the whole thing on&#13;
edge.&#13;
"The Warriors" is the first of the&#13;
youth gang films to arrive so far.&#13;
There are at least seven or eight&#13;
others on the way, most taking&#13;
place either in Los Angeles or New&#13;
York. After viewing Mr. Hill's&#13;
outstanding version, I have a&#13;
feeling the rest will be somewhat of&#13;
a letdown. The others will probably&#13;
have more social comment to them,&#13;
but I don't think they will look as&#13;
smooth and angry as "The&#13;
Warriors". I don't think anyone&#13;
will be able to capture the obscure&#13;
social mystique of the gangs to the&#13;
extent that Walter Hill has.&#13;
"The Warriors" is entertainment&#13;
of the first order. The action and&#13;
suspense are played out with&#13;
considerable flair, taking the viewer&#13;
to a foreign world, dark and&#13;
unforgiving. The film assaults the&#13;
senses, the middle-class sensibility&#13;
that is so hard to let go of. I&#13;
recommend it only to those who&#13;
enjoy good, quality cinema. To&#13;
those who have seen enough lousy&#13;
pictures in their day to know better.&#13;
Sign&#13;
Language&#13;
Parkside's making noticeable strides towards greater accessibility, with&#13;
reconstruction of inadequate or barrier parts of its campus. Much is&#13;
visible. But I believe the greatest reconstruction, as the greatest battle,&#13;
isn't visible, at least at the onset.. .because it occurs within the human&#13;
mind. I'm proud of Parkside, of it's Administration, Faculty, Staff, and&#13;
students, and their composite construction! Let's be pleased with&#13;
us.. .but, please, let's not be complacent yet! There's still so much left to&#13;
do! &#13;
Wednesday February 21, 1979 RANGER 8&#13;
UWP First&#13;
in WICA&#13;
UW-Parkside has again been&#13;
seeded first in the Wisconsin&#13;
Independent College Assn. (WICA)&#13;
playoffs beginning Tuesday, February&#13;
27.&#13;
Parkside, four-time defending&#13;
NAIA District 14 champion, has a&#13;
16-8 record this season and will&#13;
receive a bye in the first round.&#13;
Milton was seeded second,&#13;
Lakeland third, St. Norbert fourth&#13;
Carroll fifth, Mt. Senario sixth and&#13;
Northland seventh.&#13;
St. Norbert (8-13) will host&#13;
Carroll (7-16) on February 27 with&#13;
the winner of that game playing at&#13;
UW-Parkside Thursday, March 1.&#13;
In the other bracker, Lakeland&#13;
(14-13) will host Mt. Senario and&#13;
Milton will host Northland, with&#13;
the Tuesday winners meeting at&#13;
Milton or Northland March 1.&#13;
The winners on March 1 will&#13;
advance to the NAIA District 14&#13;
tournament the following week,&#13;
with the winner at Parkside hosting&#13;
the Wisconsin State University&#13;
Conference runner-up and the&#13;
lower bracket winner traveling to&#13;
the site of the WSUC champion,&#13;
both on Monday, March 5.&#13;
The Monday district semi-final&#13;
winners will meet Wednesday,&#13;
March 7, at the WSUC site for the&#13;
district title and berth in the NAIA&#13;
national tournament March 12-17&#13;
in Kansas City.&#13;
Parkside Nordic Ski Club&#13;
1st Roce Here Success&#13;
The Parkside Nordic Ski Club&#13;
held its first Annual Parkside Silva&#13;
Cup race at the National Crosscountry&#13;
track here at Parkside.&#13;
Mark Dix of Milwaukee,&#13;
competing in the 20-and-over class&#13;
for the United States Ski&#13;
Association skiers, completed the&#13;
15 kilometer distance in 61&#13;
minutes.&#13;
The race was declared a success&#13;
by officials of the Ski Club and&#13;
hopes are that this race will be the&#13;
first of a long line of cross-country&#13;
races at Parkside.&#13;
Entrants numbered 170 for the&#13;
race, which included novice skiers&#13;
who went 2.4 miles.&#13;
USSA&#13;
Men 20 &amp; Over — 1. Mark Dix,&#13;
Milwaukee 61:00; 2. Robert&#13;
Mandli, Sturtevant.&#13;
Girls 15 and under — 1. Jill&#13;
Lindstrom, Chicago, 80:58 (top&#13;
female).&#13;
COLLEGIATE&#13;
Women 18-24 — 1. Maryann&#13;
Cairns, Racine 100:25; 2. Sharon&#13;
Svendson, Racine.&#13;
CITIZENS&#13;
Girls 13 &amp; under — 1. Renee&#13;
Tyree, Racine.&#13;
Girls 14-15 — 1. Wendy&#13;
Leetzow, Delavan; 2. Valerie&#13;
DeBock, Kenosha.&#13;
Women 20-29— 1. Kathy Odau,&#13;
Racine 101:51; 2. Jane Smith,&#13;
Burlington; 3. Barbara Barry,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Women 50-59 — 1. Mary Jo&#13;
Reichling, Woodstock, 111 1 27:50;&#13;
2. Donna Dwiggins, Batavia, 111.; 3.&#13;
Millie Carlson, Kenosha.&#13;
Boys 13 &amp; under — 1. Jim Lane,&#13;
Crystal, Lake, 111. 78:46; 2. Steve&#13;
Firebaugh, Racine.&#13;
Boys 16-19 — 1. Kai Hansen,&#13;
Union Grove, 75:52; 2. Tom&#13;
Bastings, Janesville; 3. Dave Beyer,&#13;
Janesville.&#13;
Men 30-39 — 1. Bill Olson,&#13;
Kenosha 68:11 (fourth overall); 2.&#13;
Jim Heil, Crystal Lake, 111.; 3. Fritz&#13;
Hansen, Union Grove.&#13;
Men 40-49— 1. John Lindstrom,&#13;
Chicago 78:28; 2. Wendall&#13;
Kumlieu, Walworth; 3. Morris&#13;
Firebaugh, Racine.&#13;
Men 50-59 — 1. Wes Riutta,&#13;
Kenosha 93:06; 2. Jim Guritz,&#13;
Thornton 111; 3. Tom Dwiggins,&#13;
Batavia, 111.&#13;
NOVICE&#13;
8 &amp; under — 1. Dan Moran,&#13;
Kenosha, 25:00; 2. Matt Riutta,&#13;
Kenosha; 3. Marc Riutta, Kenosha.&#13;
9-12 years — 1. Joe Leetzow,&#13;
Delavan 19:05; 2. Michelle Ropac,&#13;
Racine; 3. Susan Firebaugh,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Boys 13-15 — 1. Stevel Slagle,&#13;
Kenosha, 17:02; 2. Robert&#13;
McQuillen, Racine; 3. Brian&#13;
Neilsen, Racine.&#13;
Men 16 &amp; Over —- 1. Tom&#13;
Kelley, Racine 16:00; 2. Paul&#13;
Knuuti, Kenosha; 3. Barry Smith,&#13;
Janesville.&#13;
Women 16 &amp; Over — 1. Joyce&#13;
Firebaugh, Racine 20:02; 2. Lee&#13;
Palmer, Elkhorn, 21:30; 3. Laila&#13;
Knuuti, Kenosha.&#13;
CELEBRATE MARDI GRAS&#13;
AT&#13;
JASPER'S TAP&#13;
FEB. 2 7&#13;
2827-63rd Street&#13;
-20' TAP BEER&#13;
-PARTY FAVORS&#13;
-FREE DRINK FOR&#13;
ANYONE IN COSTUME&#13;
-&#13;
s1&#13;
00 OFF LARGE PIZZA&#13;
WITH THIS AD&#13;
A*&#13;
Ripley Scores, Believe It or Not&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Ail-Americans have been known&#13;
to perform like All-Americans.&#13;
Senior center Ron Ripley did just&#13;
that for the UW-Green Bay&#13;
Phoenix as he put on a one man&#13;
show to put the Rangers out of the&#13;
game in the first half last&#13;
Wednesday in Green. Bay. Ripley&#13;
scored 16 points and took down 4&#13;
rebounds as Green Bay jumped off&#13;
to a 28-19 halftime lead.&#13;
Parkside easily handled Green&#13;
Bay in their first encounter earlier&#13;
this season at Parkside. That win&#13;
over the Phoenix started the&#13;
Rangers on an impressive nine&#13;
game winning streak that lasted&#13;
until the Ranger's trip to Green&#13;
Bay.&#13;
Green Bay got off to a quick 17-9&#13;
lead after ten minutes of play. At&#13;
this point the Rangers had to foul&#13;
in order to get any chance at&#13;
stealing the ball from Green Bay,&#13;
who was not anxious to give the&#13;
Rangers any more opportunities at&#13;
the basket than was absolutely&#13;
necessary.&#13;
Lonnie Lewis, Parkside's conference&#13;
player of the year, was unable&#13;
to stop Ripley in the first half as he&#13;
accumulated three quick fouls in&#13;
the first seven minutes of the game.&#13;
Lester Thompson replaced Lewis at&#13;
that point but was not any more&#13;
effective as he got two quick fouls&#13;
and had seven points scored against&#13;
him by Ripley.&#13;
The second half was a different&#13;
story as the Rangers outscored&#13;
Green Bay 27-23 but couldn't quite&#13;
catchup. Ripley sat out most of the&#13;
second half as a result of a double&#13;
foul call on Ripley and Lonnie&#13;
Lewis as the game was getting a&#13;
little too physical for the refs.&#13;
Green Bay went to a four corner&#13;
offense to stall and as a result the&#13;
Rangers had to come out and foul if&#13;
they were to have any cTance. i his&#13;
failed however as Parkside&#13;
accomplished nothing but eliminating&#13;
players from the game. Senior&#13;
guard Joe Foots was the first to foul&#13;
out with ten minutes left in the&#13;
game. Lewis left shortly after.&#13;
Reggie Anderson and Alex&#13;
Jennings also fouled out in the&#13;
closing minutes. Guard Walter&#13;
Green and Thompson ended the&#13;
game with four fouls a piece as the&#13;
Rangers couldn't quite catch up at&#13;
the end and lost a 51-46 decision.&#13;
Marvin Chones and Thompson&#13;
led the Rangers with 12 points a&#13;
piece.&#13;
Returning home turned out to be&#13;
very profitable for the Rangers as&#13;
they mauled a weak IndianaPurdue&#13;
Indianapolis team by a&#13;
score of 84-47. Parkside dictated&#13;
totally the pace of the game. Coach&#13;
Stephens mentioned that his main&#13;
concern in this game was to make&#13;
sure that no one got hurt. Everyone&#13;
got a chance to play in this one as&#13;
Marvin Chones led all scorers with&#13;
21 points. Lester Thompson had 13&#13;
points and Reggie Anderson added&#13;
12 for the Rangers.&#13;
The Rangers left no doubt as to&#13;
the outcome of the game as they&#13;
jumped off to a quick 28-9 lead.&#13;
This win ran The Rangers record&#13;
to 16-8, with two regular season&#13;
games left on the schedule.&#13;
Parkside travels to Whitewater&#13;
Wednesday and will host a tough&#13;
Quincy team in the season finale&#13;
this Saturday. Qunincy ended the&#13;
season last year as the number&#13;
three team in the country in the&#13;
NAIA tournament in Kansas City.&#13;
The Rangers received more good&#13;
news Monday morning. The&#13;
Wisconsin Independant College&#13;
Association held it's annual&#13;
meeting last weekend to pick an&#13;
All-Conference team. 6-4 senior&#13;
guard Joe Foots, 6-7 senior forward&#13;
Marvin Chones and 6-8 junior&#13;
forward-center Lonnie Lewis made&#13;
the ten man team. Lewis who&#13;
averages 13 points and 10 rebounds&#13;
a game was also picked as the&#13;
WICA player of the year. Parkside&#13;
coach Steve Stephens was picked as&#13;
the Coach of the Year.&#13;
. - When it's 6 weeks into the semester&#13;
and 34 books have just arrived for a class of 38&#13;
...it's no tune to get filled up.&#13;
Lite Beer from Miller.&#13;
Everything you always wanted&#13;
in a beer. And less. </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 7, issue 21, February 21, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>1979-02-21</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69314">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
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