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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>PSGA elections March 11-12 - Presidential candidates</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
••••• PSGA elections March 11-12&#13;
Presidential&#13;
candidates:&#13;
Stories by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Jim Kreuser&#13;
Jim Kreuser, sophomore, is a&#13;
political science major, currently&#13;
a senator, and is running for the&#13;
office of President of PSGA.&#13;
Jim wants to set up an&#13;
emergency loan fund for students,&#13;
currently there is one, but it's&#13;
always dry. The fund will be used&#13;
as lay over for financial aid&#13;
checks that are late.&#13;
Kreuser also wants to work with&#13;
the new SOC president, when&#13;
elected later in the spring, to form&#13;
some cohesion between PSGA and&#13;
SOC. He would like to set down&#13;
some guidelines and procedures,&#13;
so at meetings they're not always&#13;
fighting for money.&#13;
Planning on taking a closer grip&#13;
on the Physical Plant is another&#13;
thing Kreuser wants to do when he&#13;
gets in office. The administration&#13;
tell the physical plant what to do&#13;
and their jobs get done first, according&#13;
to Kreuser. Students have&#13;
to wait for things to get done, lor&#13;
example there has been a gaping&#13;
hole in the rec center for the past&#13;
year and a half. He wants to know&#13;
where they are putting their&#13;
priorities.&#13;
He's running on a campaign of&#13;
questioning faculty and its&#13;
spending.&#13;
He would like to implement a&#13;
new thing at registration time&#13;
where students would sign a form,&#13;
which would bond them for a&#13;
certain amount, if caught for&#13;
vandalism. Students would have&#13;
their records held until they paid&#13;
for the damage. He'll be checking&#13;
on the legalities over the summer.&#13;
Jim's for effective government.&#13;
He wants things to be run cut and&#13;
dry, black and white and PSGA is&#13;
not going to be caught with a&#13;
bunch of gray all over the place&#13;
JIM KREUSER&#13;
and nothing getting done. He will&#13;
make sure things will get done.&#13;
Kay Mullikin&#13;
Kay Mullikin, junior, is a&#13;
business major and currently the&#13;
vice president of PSGA.&#13;
Kay wants PSGA more up on the&#13;
issues that they need to be up on so&#13;
that they know what might effect&#13;
the students and they can get this&#13;
information out to the students.&#13;
Example of this: the Sexual&#13;
harassment.The Board of Hegents&#13;
have to make sure they think of&#13;
the students way of how they&#13;
would like to handle the situation.&#13;
With PSGA growing bigger, Kay&#13;
says that it has to continue to let&#13;
the students know what's going on&#13;
even though they may not get&#13;
involved. They still need to know&#13;
how this is going to effect them.&#13;
There are a lot of things that&#13;
students have a right, because of&#13;
Merger's law, to have a say in&#13;
everything that effects them,&#13;
according to Kay.&#13;
When someone comes in with a&#13;
problem we have to know before&#13;
the students, so PSGA can, if not&#13;
give an answer, they can give&#13;
them an explanation.&#13;
There are some internal&#13;
organizational restructuring that&#13;
has to be done within PSGA and&#13;
KAY MU LLIKIN&#13;
SOC that are being worked on&#13;
currently. Kay thinks SOC should&#13;
spend time on club activities. She&#13;
does not think they should spend&#13;
their time so much on budgeting.&#13;
With the new proposal, she feels&#13;
that this kind of c uts that out.&#13;
With the continuation growth of&#13;
PSGA they should have a better&#13;
chance to let other students know&#13;
what's going on. They need to&#13;
reach out to other students to see&#13;
what their problems or their&#13;
feelings are on certain issues. We&#13;
have to let students know we are&#13;
looking out for them.&#13;
Jan Oechler&#13;
Jan Oechler, junior, is a&#13;
business major and currently SOC&#13;
president who is running for the&#13;
position of President.&#13;
Jan feels students have to start&#13;
speaking up and get students&#13;
involved, even if it means to get a&#13;
rally together. Students don't&#13;
realize that they do have a big&#13;
voice in what is going to happen to&#13;
them and they are not using that&#13;
voice now.&#13;
She feels that a night bus is&#13;
necessary so people who are out&#13;
here from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. don't&#13;
have to drive. She would be&#13;
looking into the parking situation,&#13;
such as a shuttle bus from Tallent&#13;
JAN OECHLER&#13;
Hall, opening up the east parking&#13;
lot again and running a shuttle bus&#13;
from there, and getting security to&#13;
really give out the tickets to the&#13;
people who don't have a sticker or&#13;
who are parked illegally.&#13;
Jan thinks that SOC d oes need&#13;
some work and that is something&#13;
she would like to accomplish while&#13;
in office. .&#13;
Tuition is going to be a big topic&#13;
next year with financial aid being&#13;
cut and she is looking into the&#13;
problem in case something does&#13;
happen. She feels that the cut&#13;
might be beneficial to Parkside&#13;
because people probably won't be&#13;
able to afford Madison or&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
She thinks that the older&#13;
students' voice needs to be heard&#13;
because they are paying tuition.&#13;
She thinks that they have to get&#13;
involved.&#13;
The Senate meetings need to be&#13;
publicized, the minutes and the&#13;
agenda need to be publicized also.&#13;
Basically, students need to&#13;
become involved with issues that&#13;
come up during the year, according&#13;
to Jan.&#13;
Gary Strathman&#13;
Gary Strathman, sophomore, is&#13;
a business major and is running&#13;
for president.&#13;
GARY STRATHMAN&#13;
He would like people to get more&#13;
interested in what is going on&#13;
around Parkside. He wants to&#13;
bring the student government to&#13;
the attention of the student&#13;
population because he had many&#13;
questions like, president of w hat?&#13;
He'll be running on the party&#13;
issue. He wants to make people&#13;
feel decent about the parties. It&#13;
seems to him that the same people&#13;
attend the dances and maybe it's&#13;
time for some fresh ideas on how&#13;
to get people to go to the dances.&#13;
He figures by spending money on&#13;
students in ways they appreciate&#13;
will make them feel better and get&#13;
them interested in something.&#13;
He would like to work on the&#13;
grievance committee problems&#13;
because some students seem to be&#13;
disenchanted with the way the&#13;
situation has been handled as far&#13;
as grades. To get an open avenue&#13;
to debate with the professors was&#13;
an idea.&#13;
Gary wants to get more people&#13;
involved in PSGA by making it&#13;
highly visible and make it appealing.&#13;
According to Gary, the&#13;
mood of the school is 'what is it&#13;
going to do for me?' He feels that&#13;
one way to get people to the Senate&#13;
meetings would be to have a small&#13;
door prize or by bringing up&#13;
controversial issues.&#13;
Vice-presidential candidates:&#13;
(Pictures on Page 2) Stories by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Kathy Bambrough&#13;
Kathy Bambrough, freshman,&#13;
an Organizational communication&#13;
major, a member of the PSGA&#13;
senate, is running for the office of&#13;
Vice President.&#13;
Kathy wants to see the Senate&#13;
more advertised and to let the&#13;
students know what is going on,&#13;
not just bits and pieces through&#13;
Contact articles in the Ranger.&#13;
She would like the Senate to move&#13;
out into the student body because&#13;
it seems that the students don't&#13;
want to come to PSGA with their&#13;
problems. She wants the Senate to&#13;
go out and look for the problems&#13;
rather than to sit around the office&#13;
and wait for them to come in.&#13;
She feels if a person like herself&#13;
or someone else in the Senate that&#13;
understands the SOC situation and&#13;
the proposal, working with SOC at&#13;
first would get things running&#13;
smoothly.&#13;
She feels that students should&#13;
have a voice, not necessarily a&#13;
vote, in tenure decisions. Kathy&#13;
would like to see the library kept&#13;
open 24 hours, Sunday through&#13;
Thursday. Other campuses have it&#13;
and it works very well. She thinks&#13;
a lot of students would be there till&#13;
2 or 3 in the morning and would&#13;
come early in the morning.&#13;
To help report sexual&#13;
harassment, she feels that a&#13;
hotline should be set up where&#13;
nobody would know who they were&#13;
talking to and there wouldn't be a&#13;
problem of b eing afraid to report&#13;
it.&#13;
Kathy thinks that the Senate&#13;
needs a strong V.P. and they need&#13;
to put a lot of t ime and effort into&#13;
making the Senate work.&#13;
Chuck Neu&#13;
Chuck Neu, junior, is a math&#13;
major and a member of the Senate&#13;
and is running for Vice President.&#13;
According to Chuck, the major&#13;
problem of t he Senate is a lack of&#13;
communication between the&#13;
students and the Senate and the&#13;
other organizations. The Senate is&#13;
supposed to represent the&#13;
students' interests. Most of the&#13;
students don't realize that they&#13;
can come to the Senate meetings.&#13;
He feels that SOC needs time to&#13;
reorganize internally. They have&#13;
to have the major input on the&#13;
Senate proposal, because&#13;
otherwise they have to implement&#13;
it and live with it.&#13;
The major thing inside of PS GA&#13;
is to motivate the committees.&#13;
The only problem he feels is to&#13;
find out what the students want.&#13;
Due to Merger's law, the students&#13;
have a right to have input on what&#13;
will effect them.&#13;
Chuck believes that there needs&#13;
to be enough protection for the&#13;
harassed and the harassee. And&#13;
that there is student representation&#13;
on the committee on sexual&#13;
harassment.&#13;
He feels the book co-op will have&#13;
accessable hours during peak&#13;
times during the semester and all&#13;
through the semester. It will have&#13;
two work / study students and one&#13;
manager. They need people to put&#13;
time into it.&#13;
Chuck is supporting the evening&#13;
bus services for the eight week&#13;
trial period.&#13;
Chuck also stated that they need&#13;
to advertise the fact that the&#13;
senate is the voice and that they&#13;
can't represent you without first&#13;
listening to you.&#13;
Kathy Seliga&#13;
Kathy Seliga, junior, is an&#13;
accounting major and is running&#13;
for the office erf Vice President.&#13;
One of the main reasons that she&#13;
decided to run is to get more input&#13;
and involvement from the non -&#13;
traditional student. The student&#13;
body is comprised of 40% of the&#13;
non - traditional students and she&#13;
feels that they should voice their&#13;
opinions.&#13;
One of the big things she feels&#13;
that students should be voicing&#13;
their opinion on is the evening bus&#13;
service due to the fact that a lot of&#13;
people do attend at night and they&#13;
have no bus service. She thinks&#13;
there should be one bus leaving at&#13;
least at 9:30 p.m. and maybe an&#13;
early one at 6:30 or 7 p.m.&#13;
Other issues that would be of&#13;
concern to students would be the&#13;
courses being offered, and when&#13;
they're offered, information on&#13;
the different type of child care and&#13;
car pools that could be formed.&#13;
She feels the students should&#13;
determine the hours of the Book&#13;
Co-op. She feels the PSGA&#13;
meeting, topics, time and place of&#13;
the meeting should be posted.&#13;
Kathy feels that what is needed&#13;
is input from the students.&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Toxic chemicals denounced&#13;
• "Matchmaker" opens&#13;
• Basketball team in&#13;
championship game &#13;
2 Thursday, March 5,1981 RANGER&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Jim Kreuser for PSGA President&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
In recent years, the PSGA&#13;
presidents have been unsympathetic&#13;
to the Union and&#13;
students in general. The administration&#13;
has drastically cut&#13;
back on the Union without so&#13;
much as a fight or a reasonable&#13;
and extensive line of questioning&#13;
from the past "President."&#13;
Finally there is a candidate&#13;
running who knows the workings&#13;
of the Union and all of its functions.&#13;
I believe he could fully be&#13;
comprehensive of the students&#13;
needs along with the budgeting of&#13;
fiscal expenditures. Jim Kreuser&#13;
is this presidential candidate who&#13;
will challenge administrative&#13;
spending instead of worrying&#13;
about just budgeting. He has kept&#13;
administration honest with care&#13;
and respectability. He also takes a&#13;
firm hand in that he refuses to&#13;
rubber stamp administrative&#13;
whims.&#13;
Kreuser also takes a stand&#13;
against the basic skills&#13;
requirements and sees a great&#13;
need for an emergency loan fund.&#13;
Jim Kreuser has been on the&#13;
Senate for over a year and knows&#13;
how it functions. His emphasis has&#13;
been on student services, parking&#13;
appeals committee and helping&#13;
individual students with administrative&#13;
problems.&#13;
Jan Oechler, another candidate&#13;
for president, has been president&#13;
of t he unorganized S.O.C. Clearly&#13;
seeing that she could not effectively&#13;
run S.O.C., a subcommittee&#13;
of the Senate, it is&#13;
unclear to me how she could run&#13;
the Senate.&#13;
Kay Mulliken is the third&#13;
candidate that I know is running&#13;
for president. The past semester,&#13;
while she was in office, she has&#13;
done an adequate job; not a great&#13;
job, but an adequate one. The&#13;
question is: Do we want a great&#13;
student government president, or&#13;
an adequate one?&#13;
Lets all make this coming year&#13;
different and vote for someone&#13;
who will watch out for the students&#13;
needs and is willing to question&#13;
administration. JIM KREUSER&#13;
FOR PRESIDENT OF YOUR&#13;
STUDENT GOVERNMENT!!&#13;
Steve Mertz&#13;
PSGA Vice-presidential candidates:&#13;
KATHY BAMBROUGH CHUCK NEU KATHY SELIGA&#13;
Students run for Senate&#13;
by Dan Galbraith&#13;
Kathy Slama&#13;
Kathy Slama, senior, is a life&#13;
science major, a member of the&#13;
senate and is running for a seat on&#13;
the senate.&#13;
Kathy wants the reorganization&#13;
and restructing of the SOC&#13;
budgeting process to be implemented&#13;
as smoothly as possible&#13;
while opening the communication&#13;
between SOC and the Senate.&#13;
She wants to publicize the&#13;
happenings of student government&#13;
so that it is more available to&#13;
the student body.&#13;
According to Kathy, there are&#13;
faculty member committees that&#13;
have student voting member seats&#13;
that are not presently used to their&#13;
fullest. She would like to see these&#13;
student seats filled with qualified&#13;
people, who will voice their&#13;
opinions and inform the students&#13;
of the committees' activities.&#13;
To inform the students of what&#13;
is happening, he said he would&#13;
maybe publish a bulletin and by&#13;
having direct contact with&#13;
students.&#13;
Michael Loos&#13;
Michael Loos, junior, an&#13;
engineering technology major,&#13;
currently a Senator, is running for&#13;
a seat on the Senate.&#13;
Michael has been working on&#13;
the parking problems and intends&#13;
to present the results of a recent&#13;
survey to Asst. Chancellor Gary&#13;
Goetz. He is also interested in the&#13;
Book Co-op and SOC. He is&#13;
planning on continuing his work&#13;
with the Student Services Committee&#13;
to help the students.&#13;
He is planning on using his&#13;
position to help the students in any&#13;
way on any problem.&#13;
Joe Ripp&#13;
Joe Ripp, senior, is a life science&#13;
and anthropology major and is&#13;
running for a seat on the Senate.&#13;
Joe wants to see more students&#13;
get involved. If an issue would&#13;
arise, that he would vote on, he&#13;
would ask for students' opinions.&#13;
In classes and the friends that he&#13;
knows directly, he would keep&#13;
them involved.&#13;
He would continue working on&#13;
the Student Services committee.&#13;
While on that committee he will be&#13;
looking into the closing of t he post&#13;
office for private mail.&#13;
Steve Kaufman&#13;
Steve Kaufman, junior, a&#13;
sociology major, currently a&#13;
Senator, is running for a seat on&#13;
the Senate.&#13;
His main concern is in&#13;
developing the book co-op into a&#13;
workable student service. He has&#13;
already been elected to manage&#13;
the service if re-elected.&#13;
Among the many changes that&#13;
will come for the book co-op will&#13;
be the elimination of m embership&#13;
requirements and fees. The&#13;
service will be absolutely without&#13;
any charge for selling or buying&#13;
books. This plans to greatly expand&#13;
the business hours. He believes&#13;
that there is a tremendous amount&#13;
of potential in a book exchange&#13;
service of this type and that it&#13;
would enable students to save a&#13;
great deal of money.&#13;
Brad Faust&#13;
Brad Faust, sophomore, a&#13;
business and psychology major, is&#13;
running for a senate seat.&#13;
Brad basically feels that the&#13;
athletes at Parkside do not have&#13;
any representation in the senate&#13;
and he would like to fill that need.&#13;
He feels that students should be&#13;
able to approach him with their&#13;
problems and that will be the&#13;
basis for his involvement in&#13;
PSGA. He said that he can't&#13;
promise that he can change every&#13;
situation, but he said he would try&#13;
his best.&#13;
Louis Valldejuli&#13;
Louis Valldejuli, freshman, a&#13;
political science major is running&#13;
for a senate position.&#13;
He believes one of the problems&#13;
on our campus is the lack of&#13;
communication between different&#13;
interest groups that form the&#13;
student body. He thinks that we&#13;
need to make sure that our voices&#13;
and our opinions are heard loud&#13;
and clear in the United Council.&#13;
Louis wants to make sure that&#13;
student money is used for the&#13;
benefit of the student body. He is&#13;
trying very hard by learning&#13;
about all aspects of our institution&#13;
to join different interest groups&#13;
with the purpose of finding exactly&#13;
what the students want for our&#13;
school.&#13;
Viewpoint RANGER Photos&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
Should degree - seeking students be required to take the&#13;
Collegiate Skills Requirements?&#13;
Lori Belashka, sophomore:&#13;
"No, if you can pass your&#13;
classes that should be enough.&#13;
You shouldn't have to worry about&#13;
these requirements when you&#13;
have other tests to worry about."&#13;
Michelle, Kuchera, freshman:&#13;
"Yes, there are a lot of people&#13;
who don't really know how to read&#13;
very well and they passed high&#13;
school because someone wanted to&#13;
get rid of them."&#13;
Donna Sahakian, freshman&#13;
"Yes. There are a lot of people&#13;
who don't really know how to read&#13;
very well and they passed high&#13;
school because someone wanted to&#13;
get rid of them."&#13;
Ron Pedersen, senior:&#13;
"Hell no! They told me you need&#13;
them to get through college, I'm&#13;
almost done with college and I&#13;
haven't needed them. If you're&#13;
going through college, you should&#13;
be smart enough. I'm a music&#13;
major; why should I need math?&#13;
They should give a music theory&#13;
test to math majors."&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Felland Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Brian Passino Editor&#13;
Ginger Heigeson copy Editor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Dave Cramer, Mike Farrell, Dan Galbraith, Mike Holmdohl,&#13;
Carol Kiees, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer, Bruce Preston, Kim&#13;
Schlater, Janet Wells, Jeff Wicks&#13;
iS&#13;
,&#13;
wr&#13;
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di,ed by students of UW-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
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Un,on Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
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will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
Reserves Si" S If Tu&#13;
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Publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content S re,usin&#13;
9 to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Reagan introduces&#13;
economic proposal&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 5,1981&#13;
Maris contract not renewed&#13;
by Susan J. Aulise&#13;
6 *• can no longer&#13;
Procrastinate and hope things will&#13;
get better. They will not. If we do&#13;
not act forcefully, and now, the&#13;
economy will get worse."&#13;
With these words President&#13;
Reagan introduced the most&#13;
dramatic economic proposal since&#13;
Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal —&#13;
and while the New Deal is not yet&#13;
dead and buried, the Reagan&#13;
proposal has certainly chipped&#13;
away at its veneer.&#13;
The Reagan economic proposal,&#13;
known at the White House as&#13;
"America's New Beginning: A&#13;
Program for ' Economic&#13;
Recovery" is threefold, concentrating&#13;
on reductions in personal&#13;
tax rates and business&#13;
taxes; spending cuts and other&#13;
measures to reduce the budget&#13;
deficit; and reductions in the&#13;
number of federal regulations.&#13;
The results anticipated by the&#13;
Reagan administration in the&#13;
event that the entire program is&#13;
adopted by Congress are quite&#13;
dramatic. The White House has&#13;
projected that the entire program&#13;
of ta x reductions and budget cuts&#13;
would cut inflation in half in the&#13;
next two years. Specifically, inflation&#13;
would drop from 12.4 per&#13;
cent in 1980 to 11.1 per cent in 1981;&#13;
to 8.3 per cent in 1982; to 6 per cent&#13;
in 1983 and to an impressive 4 per&#13;
cent in 1984.&#13;
In addition to the dramatic drop&#13;
in inflation, real economic growth&#13;
would average four to five per&#13;
cent starting in 1982. Though&#13;
White House projections indicate&#13;
unemployment would rise .4 per&#13;
cent to 7.7 per cent by the end of&#13;
1981, the administration expects a&#13;
slow but steady decline to 5.6 per&#13;
cent by 1986. •&#13;
What exactly do we lose in this&#13;
yet unproven gamble for&#13;
economic stability? President&#13;
Reagan's proposed budget cuts&#13;
for five month old fiscal 1981 total&#13;
$4.8 billion, and for fiscal 1982,&#13;
cuts amount to a whopping $41.4&#13;
billion. With these cuts, hundreds&#13;
of thousands of college students&#13;
will lose their government loans.&#13;
400,000 families will lose their food&#13;
stamps, 300,000 public service&#13;
trainees will lose their jobs,&#13;
millions of a ir travelers will pay&#13;
nine per cent more per one way&#13;
fare, and* that doesn't even&#13;
scratch the surface.&#13;
Nearly everyone will find&#13;
something in the close to 300 pages&#13;
of c uts that will affect his or her&#13;
daily life. Of course, there are,&#13;
despite assertions by Office of&#13;
Management and Budget (OMB)&#13;
Director David Stockman to the&#13;
contrary, some "sacred cows" —&#13;
areas which escape the budget&#13;
office cleaver unscathed.&#13;
Some are explainable, like&#13;
defense. True to his campaign&#13;
promises, President Reagan will&#13;
not only exempt the Defense&#13;
Department from cuts but increase&#13;
real defense spending by&#13;
almost $100 billion by 1984.&#13;
Other "sacred cows" are less&#13;
explainable. Among the vast&#13;
number of cuts are significant&#13;
drops in dairy price supports, an&#13;
area of special concern in&#13;
Wisconsin, while tobacco subsidies&#13;
remain untouched.&#13;
The area of the Reagan proposal&#13;
most enthusiastically pitched by&#13;
the administration is the two part&#13;
plan for tax reductions. This plan,&#13;
basically the Kemp - Roth tax bill,&#13;
would reduce individual tax rates&#13;
by 10 per cent a year for three&#13;
years and provide for more rapid&#13;
depreciation of new plants and&#13;
equipment for business and industry.&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps the most controversial&#13;
aspect of the Reagan plan, and the&#13;
one which he will have the&#13;
greatest difficulty selling to&#13;
Congress, is that first part, individual&#13;
income tax deduction.&#13;
Under this plan, a family of four&#13;
earning $20,000 a year would&#13;
receive tax cuts of $114 in 1981,&#13;
$300 in 1982, $464 in 1983, and $881 in&#13;
1984. On the other hand, a family&#13;
of four making $100,000 a year&#13;
would have its tax burden reduced&#13;
by $920 in 1981, $3,343 in 1982,&#13;
$5,823 in 1983, and $5,974 i n 1984.&#13;
This theory, termed "supply -&#13;
side" economics, assumes that&#13;
middle and upper income&#13;
Americans will spend and save&#13;
more, hence creating more jobs,&#13;
less inflation and a greater incentive&#13;
to work.&#13;
In the second part of t his series,&#13;
we will examine the Reagan tax&#13;
proposal and why Congress and&#13;
the banking community remain&#13;
wary of its success.&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
On Feb. 2, the Fine Arts&#13;
Executive Committee met to&#13;
reconsider their contract renewal&#13;
non-recommendation decision&#13;
made in the case of • Music&#13;
Assistant Professor Barbara&#13;
Maris, who started teaching in the&#13;
fall of 1978, and whose current *&#13;
contract expires in May of 1982.&#13;
Although Maris was awarded a&#13;
distinguished service award for&#13;
teaching excellence on August 29,&#13;
1980, the Fine Arts Executive&#13;
Committee found that her&#13;
creative activity was insufficient&#13;
for recommendation for renewal.&#13;
On N ovember 21, th e Fine Arts&#13;
Executive Committee met and&#13;
deliberated for five hours and&#13;
forty minutes over the Maris case.&#13;
The tenured faculty comprising&#13;
the seven voting members of the&#13;
committee consist of the&#13;
following: Rhoda-Gale Pollack,&#13;
Tim Bell, Frances Bedford, Rollin&#13;
Jansky, Frank Mueller, John&#13;
ASST. PROF.&#13;
BARBARA MARIS&#13;
Murphy, and August Wegner. The&#13;
sealed ballot vote contained seven&#13;
"no" votes.&#13;
Since a candidate for tenure or&#13;
renewal has the right to ask for&#13;
reconsideration and to introduce&#13;
any new material or new perspectives&#13;
on old material, Maris&#13;
requested reconsideration. The&#13;
outcome of the Feb. 2 meeting&#13;
resulted in one "yes" vote and six&#13;
"no" votes.&#13;
Maris, who has played a role in&#13;
communications between&#13;
musicians in the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha area and Parkside&#13;
faculty, stated, "I was very&#13;
disappointed by the decision of the&#13;
committee last November, and I&#13;
was disappointed that the&#13;
majority of the committee chose&#13;
not to reverse their decision&#13;
earlier this month. I feel that the&#13;
Parkside concept of outreach to&#13;
the community, of lifetime&#13;
education, and communication&#13;
between disciplines is terribly&#13;
important to our country. I think&#13;
Parkside has really provided a&#13;
model for institutions throughout&#13;
the United States."&#13;
Parkside lost and found to be disposed&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Bill Carter, Assistant Director&#13;
of Parkside Security, said that&#13;
any persons who have lost items&#13;
on campus should contact&#13;
Security immediately by calling&#13;
553-2455 or by stopping in the&#13;
Security headquarters at Tallent&#13;
Hall in room 188.&#13;
Carter said that Security will be&#13;
disposing of all unclaimed items&#13;
within the next month. Although&#13;
many people ask for "lost and&#13;
found" items at the information&#13;
desks in the Union Building and&#13;
Library Learning Center&#13;
Building, they may not be aware&#13;
of the official "lost and found"&#13;
collected by Security.&#13;
The "lost and found" currently&#13;
contains an overabundance of&#13;
books, glasses, calculators,&#13;
jewelry, tape recorders, watches,&#13;
folders, notebooks, and other&#13;
items, according to Carter.&#13;
Disposal of items will follow a&#13;
set procedure which is used after&#13;
every four to six months of accumulation,&#13;
according to Carter.&#13;
He said that the procedure&#13;
requires that all expensive items&#13;
be turned over to the Madison&#13;
system, while other items are&#13;
distributed to agencies like the&#13;
Lyons Club and Goodwill.&#13;
Bayuzick to talk about Surrealism&#13;
Art Prof. Dennis Bayuzick will&#13;
speak about "The Surrealist&#13;
Vision: a personal perspective on&#13;
dream imagery and the creative&#13;
unconscious in painting" on&#13;
Wednesday, March 11 in CA 125&#13;
from 1 - 2 p. m.&#13;
The program will consist of&#13;
introductory slides and commentary&#13;
surveying the general&#13;
thrust of Surrealist theory,&#13;
psychology and stylistic practice.&#13;
This will be illustrated by selected&#13;
paintings by DeChirico, Ernst,&#13;
Miro, Dali, Magritte, etc. The&#13;
remainder of the lecture will focus&#13;
on the Surrealist influence of Prof.&#13;
Bayuzick's development as an&#13;
artist. He will show slides of his&#13;
own work and will discuss the&#13;
creative methods and themes he&#13;
uses to involve dream - inspiration&#13;
and image - generation. The&#13;
program is free and open to&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Other events planned toy the&#13;
Library - Learning Center are:&#13;
"What happens in the BBC&#13;
Hamlet," a videotape - lecture by&#13;
Prof. Peter Martin, March 30;&#13;
"Electronic flash: do you realize&#13;
the potential?" a photography&#13;
workshop by Jim Maguire, April&#13;
1; a film, "The Battle of A lgiers",&#13;
Part I, April 13; Part II, April 15;&#13;
"Russia", a slide - lecture by&#13;
Prof. Dan McGovern, April 22. All&#13;
programs will be from l - 2 p. m.&#13;
and will take pTace m Union 104"&#13;
except the photography workshop&#13;
which will be held in Television&#13;
Studio, D157A, Comm. Arts.&#13;
The programs will give students&#13;
an opportunity to attend events of&#13;
a varying and cultural nature&#13;
during the free period afforded by&#13;
the Activity Period.&#13;
Population explosion talk to be given&#13;
"Is the Population Explosion&#13;
Still Exploding?" will be the topic&#13;
of a lecture by Richard Walasek, a&#13;
Parkside geography professor&#13;
who specializes in resource issues,&#13;
Radar elected&#13;
to council&#13;
Hannelaore B. Rader, Director&#13;
of Parkside's Library - Learning&#13;
Center, has been elected to a two&#13;
year term as a member - at - large&#13;
of the Council of UW Libraries.&#13;
The Council is a new group&#13;
instituted by University System&#13;
President Robert M. O'Neil to&#13;
augment cooperative library&#13;
planning within the system and to&#13;
provide a base of expert counsel to&#13;
the president on library matters.&#13;
The Council is chaired by Joseph&#13;
Treyz, Director of the UW&#13;
Madison Libraries.&#13;
at 1 p.m. on Thursday, March 19,&#13;
in Molinaro Hall.&#13;
Walasek's talk will explore&#13;
global and national population&#13;
issues including population&#13;
trends, the gap between rich and&#13;
poor nations, pressures on food,&#13;
energy and other resources and&#13;
prospects for slowing population&#13;
growth.&#13;
Persons wishing to attend&#13;
should pre-register by calling the&#13;
University Extension Office&#13;
(Phone 553-2312).&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
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* ATTENTION: 1&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092 or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
*&#13;
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ALL STUDENTS INTERESTED IN&#13;
FINANCIAL AID FOR 1981-82&#13;
Financial aid forms are now available in&#13;
the Financial Aids Office. These forms&#13;
should be filed by March 15,1981. Late&#13;
applications may not be processed in time&#13;
for fall registration. Late Fees will be&#13;
added if you file after June 15,1981!&#13;
Please Stop in Financial Aids Office 284&#13;
Tallent Hall for Forms and Information &#13;
RANGER photo by Kim Schlater&#13;
MARY BETH KELLEHER posing in finished costume.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
"The Place To Buy Records''&#13;
626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
Parkside preview&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Midterms&#13;
fluence on the actors. Breathing&#13;
and movement are limited. The&#13;
actresses have to learn how to&#13;
move naturally in corsets, petticoats&#13;
and long skirts. The feeling&#13;
is different from wearing blue&#13;
jeans and less undergarments.&#13;
"Costumes provide the actors&#13;
with the look and feeling of their&#13;
character," said Thompson.&#13;
Thompson and the other&#13;
designers, director Leon Van&#13;
Dyke, and cast and crew members&#13;
have worked long and hard to&#13;
recreate the time period of 1898.&#13;
As a result, viewing "The Matchmaker"&#13;
is like taking time out&#13;
of the present and becoming part&#13;
of the past.&#13;
"TI4 P AA ATru 11 A 1/ p w\u * kmnuck pnoTo o y Kim&#13;
lit mai CHMAKER cast rehearsing in preparation for tonight's opening performance.&#13;
Play recreates atmosphere&#13;
MEMBERSHIPS:&#13;
ONE MONTH (Introduction) - $20.00&#13;
FOUR MONTH MEMBERSHIP - $95.00&#13;
ONE YEAR MEMBERSHIP - $195.00&#13;
COLLEGE ATHLETES - $150.00&#13;
planned&#13;
Adults returning to college,&#13;
seniors heading for college and&#13;
parents paying for college are&#13;
invited to Parkside Preview, a&#13;
program designed to provide&#13;
information about Parkside's&#13;
academic programs and student&#13;
services, from 6:45 to 9:30 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, March 11, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The program includes an opportunity&#13;
for classroom visits with&#13;
faculty from various fields of&#13;
study and conversation with&#13;
counselors, admissions personnel&#13;
and alumni. Student services to be&#13;
detailed include educational and&#13;
career counseling, career planning&#13;
and placement, special&#13;
services for adult students and&#13;
financial aid, currently a major&#13;
concern of the college-bound.&#13;
The program will conclude with&#13;
a social hour with entertainment&#13;
by the award-winning Parkside&#13;
Jazz Ensemble.&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits,&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
22nd Avenue, Kenosha&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
One time I went without sleep&#13;
for 52 hours straight so I Could&#13;
study for midterms without interruptions.&#13;
Big deal, you may&#13;
say. Who cares?&#13;
Well, for the last ten hours of the&#13;
ordeal, I was seeing little shiny&#13;
people running around my room&#13;
(or at least that's what I thought I&#13;
saw).&#13;
Big deal? It was and it is.&#13;
At that time, I wondered why&#13;
midterms couldn't be scheduled&#13;
&lt;mce ye arly, with the void left by&#13;
extracting the March midterms in&#13;
the spring filled by the insertion of&#13;
an extra Christmas, Independence&#13;
Day or Labor Day.&#13;
Even another President's Birthday&#13;
would probably fit in nicely&#13;
right there in mid - March.&#13;
Anyway, midterm time is&#13;
almost here again. It's time to&#13;
deck the classrooms with balls of&#13;
study sheets again. It's time to&#13;
roast equations over an open fire.&#13;
It's only too bad there's not more&#13;
time left before midterms to write&#13;
to Santa Short - course with pleas&#13;
for passing grades in modular&#13;
classes.&#13;
Despite the jollity and&#13;
merrymaking this season brings&#13;
out in students, for many college&#13;
students it is a time of want. Yes,&#13;
there are lots of c ollege students&#13;
who, like me, will undoubtedly&#13;
unwisely waste their precious&#13;
study time in marathon cramming.&#13;
&#13;
No, it doesn't help to cram. I&#13;
mean, have you ever tried dealing&#13;
coherently with the objectives and&#13;
strategies of the early capitalists&#13;
during the Industrial Revolution&#13;
while shiny little people are&#13;
hopping all over your little blue&#13;
book and question sheet? What&#13;
kind of grade do you think those&#13;
little people will let you get? Do&#13;
you think they care? All they want&#13;
you to do is sleep (your head&#13;
falling down on your hands, the&#13;
little blue book in front of you&#13;
blurring and puffing into a cozy&#13;
little blue pillow, your pen rolling&#13;
off the desk and onto your knees).&#13;
Then, after all that awful coffee&#13;
and those invigorating but nerve -&#13;
shattering cold showers, you flunk&#13;
anyway.&#13;
At some universities in the U.S.&#13;
and elsewhere, students used to&#13;
actually make games out of not&#13;
sleeping. Maybe they were just a&#13;
little neurotic from midterms, but&#13;
they used to (and who knows, cults&#13;
probably still survive those archaic&#13;
habits) dance or kiss or sit&#13;
in crowded Volkswagens for&#13;
extended periods of time —&#13;
without sleeping. It's no wonder&#13;
Volkswagen stopped making&#13;
Beetles.&#13;
Farce provides escape&#13;
NAUTILUS machines are&#13;
designed to increase&#13;
strength, flexibility and&#13;
cardiovascular condition.&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
"The Matchmaker" opens&#13;
tonight in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Time will stand still&#13;
and the year of 1898 will be&#13;
recreated. Since we are in the&#13;
1980's many alterations had to be&#13;
achieved. Anything that meets the&#13;
eye has to be changed.&#13;
Barbara Thompson, costume&#13;
designer, was called upon to help&#13;
with the change. In order to&#13;
complete her task many books&#13;
were searched through.&#13;
Knowledge of the characters is&#13;
required for building their&#13;
costumes. She must decide what&#13;
the character would have pulled&#13;
out of his/her closec to wear that&#13;
day.&#13;
Written material and talk is&#13;
abundant. This information must&#13;
be produced in visual form. She&#13;
sketches and paints the costume&#13;
in the color scheme she has&#13;
chosen. This produces a rendering.&#13;
Renderings allow the&#13;
director and other designers to&#13;
view her ideas.&#13;
Designing for a period show&#13;
requires historical background&#13;
and compromises between the&#13;
styles. She incorporated the&#13;
present princess line for the front&#13;
of D olly's costume and made the&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Thorton Wilder created a large&#13;
cast for "The Matchmaker,"&#13;
which is the original play from&#13;
which "Hello, Dolly" was taken.&#13;
This classical farce is the story of&#13;
a financially successful merchant&#13;
who decides to travel to New York&#13;
to find a wife.&#13;
An old fashioned quality similar&#13;
to that found in vaudeville or&#13;
performances by George Burns&#13;
permeates "The Matchmaker."&#13;
Often a player alone on stage will&#13;
directly address the audience with&#13;
some of Wilder's most witty observations&#13;
(Mi li fe.&#13;
Director Lee Van Dyke&#13;
remarked about Wilder's&#13;
philosophy: "I think he's&#13;
irreverant towards the kind of&#13;
businessman ethic. All of us want&#13;
to escape once in awhile, and&#13;
Wilder shows characters making&#13;
that escape." Parkside's performances&#13;
of "The Matchmaker"&#13;
promise to provide the kind erf&#13;
escape Wilder and Van Dyke&#13;
envision.&#13;
Performances will be given at 8&#13;
p.m. tonight and March 6 and 7.&#13;
On March 8, a Sunday matinee&#13;
will be given at 2 p .m. Admission&#13;
is $2.50 for students, staff, and&#13;
senior citizens; $3.50 f or others.&#13;
Reservations can be made by&#13;
calling 553-2345 or 553-2042.&#13;
THE RENDERING of Dolly's&#13;
costume.&#13;
back completely in period style.&#13;
A d istinct fashion feature from&#13;
1895-1898 affects the design of the&#13;
sleeves. During this period sleeve&#13;
trim at the shoulders was popular.&#13;
If the sleeves were not full, then a&#13;
ruffle was designed at the&#13;
shoulder. Also corsets and petticoats&#13;
were worn by the women.&#13;
Period costumes have an inRANGER&#13;
phoro dy Dan McCormack &#13;
Review&#13;
Streetcar" done in&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 5,1981&#13;
by Wendy Westphal&#13;
When a playwright writes a&#13;
play, he has more than one interpretation&#13;
in mind. He ensures&#13;
that ^the same meaning is&#13;
delivered in whichever interpretation&#13;
is chosen. The&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater&#13;
presents "A Streetcar Named&#13;
Desire" by Tennessee Williams in&#13;
a fashionable style but plays with&#13;
the time element.&#13;
The play lasts for a lenghty&#13;
three hours with two ten-minute&#13;
intermissions. Usually an&#13;
audience is satisfied with one 15-&#13;
minute intermission. By the&#13;
second intermission the play is so&#13;
drawn out that lack of interest sets&#13;
in. This is too bad because the&#13;
actors pull off a very touching&#13;
ending.&#13;
Speaking of the actors, Tom&#13;
Berenger should be commended&#13;
for his performance of Stanley&#13;
Kowalski. Stanley projects a&#13;
roughness and brutish style with&#13;
finesse. His comical air is similar&#13;
to "Wojo" on Barney Miller.&#13;
Peggy Cowles achieves the&#13;
gentle Southern veneer in Blanche&#13;
Du Bois. She seems like a stable&#13;
woman until her illusions of&#13;
grandeur slowly mix with reality.&#13;
But Cowles plays through to the&#13;
end in a remarkable style.&#13;
On the other hand, Stella shows&#13;
little or none of this gentle&#13;
Southern veneer. Janni Brenn&#13;
seems no relation to Blanche. She&#13;
falls down to Stanley's level when&#13;
she should be in between Stanley&#13;
and Blanche. Desire is plainly&#13;
shown in her character.&#13;
style&#13;
J A N N I B R ENN as Stella and&#13;
Tom Berenger as Stanley.&#13;
New Orleans provides&#13;
background for the characters. In&#13;
the Todd Wehr Theater performance&#13;
space is limited. The set&#13;
worked very well for the thrust&#13;
stage. The design allowed for&#13;
street space, the upstairs neighbor's&#13;
level, a kitchen, bedroom,&#13;
bathroom, dressing and sitting&#13;
room to be viewed all at once. The&#13;
see-through curtain which divided&#13;
the room brought laughter to the&#13;
audience. Imagination was put to&#13;
work.&#13;
Not only did the actors move&#13;
well on the set, the property crew&#13;
did a super job. All props were&#13;
moved and placed meticulously in&#13;
their right place. Even a new&#13;
Union workers display art&#13;
Opening in Kenosha is an&#13;
unusual art exhibit. For the first&#13;
time in local history, UAW Local&#13;
72 is sponsoring an Art Contest&#13;
and Exhibit.&#13;
It is a remarkable outpouring of&#13;
creativity. Members of Local 72&#13;
have already produced dozens of&#13;
art pieces for this exhibit. Works&#13;
range from woodcarvings, metal&#13;
sculpture, charcoal drawings, to&#13;
oil and watercolor and includes&#13;
photography.&#13;
Judging will be done by Nancy&#13;
Brigham, head of Publications&#13;
and Public Relations of UAW from&#13;
Solidarity House in Detroit,&#13;
Denise Zingg and Julie Kozenski&#13;
from Spectrum School of A rt. Ms.&#13;
Zingg is also an instructor at&#13;
G.T.I.&#13;
Catherine Doll (winner of UAW&#13;
National Art Contest) will also&#13;
display "Dept. 828 Final&#13;
Assembly" (published on the&#13;
UAW Calendar cover) as well as&#13;
some of her other pieces, entitled&#13;
"Plight of the American&#13;
Auto worker."&#13;
The public is cordially invited&#13;
Sat., March 14 at 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
to view this unique exhibit at UAW&#13;
Local 72 Headquarters, 3615&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha, WI.&#13;
Contact&#13;
U.C. may cut equal votes&#13;
by Kathy Bambrough&#13;
The issue of proportional&#13;
representation was one of the&#13;
main concerns at the last United&#13;
Council meeting held in River&#13;
Falls on February 14.&#13;
United Council is a Wisconsin&#13;
lobbying group which represents&#13;
over 155,000 students in the UW&#13;
System. U.C. Legislative Affairs&#13;
Director Mark Hazelbacker has&#13;
proposed a new constitution which&#13;
includes in it proportional&#13;
representation for the UW Extensions.&#13;
If the new constitution is&#13;
passed it will allow Parkside,&#13;
along with four other UW campuses,&#13;
two voting representatives&#13;
each; another five campuses&#13;
would be allowed three&#13;
representatives; one campus,&#13;
eight votes; and another with&#13;
thirteen representatives. At&#13;
present all schools are allowed&#13;
four voting representatives.&#13;
As Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
chairperson at Parkside, I&#13;
feel this would be unfair to&#13;
Parkside students. U.C. is funded&#13;
by all students covered by their&#13;
constitution. Each student pays 50&#13;
cents per semester as passed by a&#13;
referendum last year. If U.C. is to&#13;
be funded equally by all students,&#13;
I feel all students deserve equal&#13;
say in all voting matters.&#13;
I have told you how I feel; now I&#13;
need to know how you feel! The&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senate needs to know&#13;
what the students want. Come see&#13;
us in our office, just outside the D1&#13;
level of the library.&#13;
Member Parkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this ad! ^osepfi&#13;
4433 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
Chinese lantern hanging overhead&#13;
was replaced with a dusty, half -&#13;
collapsed one to show the passing&#13;
of time.&#13;
In the event of an emergency&#13;
the property crew must take care&#13;
of it. During the first scene,&#13;
Stanley bounced on the bed and it&#13;
fell in. The property crew during&#13;
the scene change struggled with&#13;
putting it back together in front of&#13;
the audience. It was done so well&#13;
the audience thought it was&#13;
supposed to happen. A special&#13;
task well done lends support to the&#13;
whole production.&#13;
They say that clothing makes&#13;
the person. So costumes must&#13;
enhance the character. Blanche&#13;
wore some gorgeous dresses;&#13;
expensive looking but with very&#13;
good taste. An added attraction&#13;
was the variety of street costumes&#13;
which paraded in front of the set&#13;
during scene changes. Far-out&#13;
hookers, punks, mobsters,&#13;
Mexicans and hoodlums back up&#13;
the saying that New Orleans is a&#13;
melting pot melted down.&#13;
"Bowling is a man's game," the&#13;
bowling jackets said loud and&#13;
clear. The tacky, bright, green&#13;
silk jackets with embroidering on&#13;
the back displays the taste these&#13;
men have.&#13;
The MRT achieves a delightful&#13;
and colorful performance of "A&#13;
Streetcar Named Desire." Be&#13;
prepared for a long evening but&#13;
remain for the ending. It's worth&#13;
the wait.&#13;
Performances are nightly except&#13;
Mondays at the Todd Wehr&#13;
Theater in Milwaukee's Performing&#13;
Arts Center until April 5.&#13;
The Streetcar "Desire"&#13;
Your Name&#13;
Printed FREE!&#13;
WITH ANY T-SHIRT&#13;
PURCHASE!&#13;
With this ad only)&#13;
OFFERGOODTHRU&#13;
MARCH9ONLY&#13;
Fashions&#13;
8600 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140&#13;
(414) 694-4123 &#13;
Thursday, March 5,1981&#13;
CominJ,&#13;
Events Toxic chemicals denounced&#13;
UniversitywUltalkon"Bbm^dical^thic^'Th&#13;
1&#13;
'&#13;
T&#13;
' Engel£&#13;
a&#13;
*J&#13;
t of Georgetown&#13;
public. omeaical Ethics. The program is free and open to the&#13;
University ViU tallum" MoH^^i°ni^?™a&#13;
' Prof&#13;
^&#13;
HT&#13;
;. Engelhardt of Georgetown&#13;
is free and open to the&#13;
AY The Matchmaker" at 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre. Tickets&#13;
The program&#13;
are available atth* TTni„«fJ communication Arts Theatre. Tickets&#13;
will be available at thfrdonr^ AH™? ?&#13;
D C,&#13;
en&#13;
.&#13;
ter&#13;
'&#13;
the Fine Arts Division 0fflce and&#13;
citizens and $3.50 fo r other ssion is&#13;
*&#13;
250 for Parkside students and senior&#13;
PLAY "Tt,0 v , .. Friday, March 6&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Matchmaker wlU be repeated at 8 p.nj. in the Communication Arts&#13;
5® Sh0Wn at 8 p m" in the Union Cinema Theatre. Adby&#13;
PAB lS 3 Parkside student and n.50 for a guest. Sponsored&#13;
PLAY "The Matchmaker'&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Saturday, March 7&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Sunday, March 8&#13;
P will be repeated at 2 p.m. in the Communication Arts LAY "The Matchmaker&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
MOVIE "Prizefighter" will be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
D.IIvnir&lt;n Monday, March 9&#13;
r» i TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. Bonnie Smith will talk on "The&#13;
Development of Property Law in the 19th Century." The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
C?S??&#13;
E&#13;
"&#13;
Basi5 Research Skills" at 1:00 p.m. in D110 of he t library. Call ext.&#13;
2312 for more details. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
SEMINAR "Student Study Skills" at 1 p.m. in CA 142. All students are welcome.&#13;
Sponsored by EPS.&#13;
Tuesday, March 10&#13;
SEMINAR "On Surviving Divorce" at 7 p.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 for more&#13;
details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Wednesday, March 11&#13;
COURSE "Financial Management for Minority Owned Businesses" at 9 a m&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension. Call ext. 2312 for more information.&#13;
MOVIE "Power of the Resurrection" from 1-2 p.m. in Union Cinema. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to come and bring their lunch. Sponsored by IVCF.&#13;
LECTURE at 1 p.m. in CA 125. Prof. Dennis Bayuzick will talk on "The Surrealist&#13;
Vision: a Personal Perspective on Dream Imagery and the Creative Unconscious&#13;
in Painting." The program is free and open to Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff.&#13;
OPEN HOUSE Parkside Preview starts at 6:45 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE "In Celebration" will be shown at 7 p.m. at the Golden Rondelle. Call ext.&#13;
2312 for more information. The American Film Theatre Series is sponsored by&#13;
UW-Extension and UW-Parkside.&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
A panel discussion was held&#13;
Feb. 23 as part of the evening&#13;
program of Toxic Chemical&#13;
Awareness Day. The keynote&#13;
speakers stressed the need for&#13;
discontinued use and control over&#13;
chemicals like Dioxin, 2-4-D, 2-4-5-&#13;
T, and Agent Orange. The&#13;
program was sponsored by the&#13;
Student Group Mobilization For&#13;
Survival.&#13;
Tom Larson, President of Local&#13;
320 National Advisory Committee&#13;
on Health and Safety, said, "It is&#13;
estimated by the U. S. Public&#13;
Service that at least 30% of all&#13;
diseases in the U. S. are job -&#13;
related. That means 390,000&#13;
workers are made sick by their&#13;
jobs annually." Yet, according to&#13;
Larson, employers fail to look for&#13;
diseases which often come from&#13;
untested and relatively unknown&#13;
chemicals.&#13;
Larson said that worker compensation&#13;
is not enough. "Work&#13;
hazards are . . . (somewhat) . . .&#13;
easy to take care of", Larson said.&#13;
"Health hazards, on the other&#13;
hand, are more difficult to&#13;
identify. Both the hazard and the&#13;
disease can be invisible. In addition,&#13;
controls can be complicated."&#13;
&#13;
Irene Steeger, Chief Steward of&#13;
Clericals of UW-M and executive&#13;
board member of Local 82 - AFSME,&#13;
said that the big companies&#13;
do not care about their employees&#13;
or do not want to bother with&#13;
safety threatened by some&#13;
chemicals. Steeger said that some&#13;
companies don't even know what&#13;
Parkside Concourse Presents:&#13;
"THE WOODHULL"&#13;
o &lt; m' m - *' Ip! IfJIMp Based on the life of 19th century&#13;
feminist, stockbroker, "free lover," and&#13;
first woman candidate for the&#13;
presidency of the U.S., Victoria&#13;
Woodhull.&#13;
with playwright/actress:&#13;
Elizabeth Garry&#13;
March 14 8 pm&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Tickets available at Union Info Desk&#13;
SI.00 students; SI.50 public&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30o will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AMI&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is qualified&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
Name&#13;
they are using or what effects a&#13;
certain chemical might have on&#13;
an employee.&#13;
"The companies are only&#13;
worried about cost", Steeger said.&#13;
"They are not considering the&#13;
basic safety of the employee."&#13;
Steeger stated that state&#13;
legislation is currently being&#13;
proposed in Madison which will&#13;
provide workers with information&#13;
about what they are working with.&#13;
Attorney Walter Stern, Member&#13;
of the American Academy of&#13;
Forensic Science, said that court&#13;
action is the first step toward&#13;
ending toxic herbicide use in&#13;
Wisconsin. He is currently in-,&#13;
volved in a case against Dow&#13;
Chemical, which Stern says has&#13;
"evicted (safety) from the Statute&#13;
erf Lim itations in our progressive&#13;
state, and where I will powerfully&#13;
suggest to the court that we have&#13;
to revise our thinking in terms of&#13;
chemical exposure." Stern said&#13;
that there are many physical and&#13;
emotional problems caused by the&#13;
exposure of chemicals in "raw&#13;
chemical form", such as Dioxin.&#13;
John Lindquist, WAW - Viet&#13;
Nam Veteran, said that the&#13;
government "used us once, then&#13;
threw us away," referring to his&#13;
involvement in Viet Nam where&#13;
Agent Orange was used to destroy&#13;
jungle vegetation to reduce&#13;
ambush.&#13;
Herbicides like 2-4-5-T and&#13;
others were mixed and sprayed&#13;
over everything, according to&#13;
Lindquist. Ten million gallons of&#13;
Agent Orange and nine million&#13;
gallons of other chemicals were&#13;
dumped on Viet Nam. Lindquist&#13;
said that 193 missions were flown&#13;
in his area during his tour in Viet&#13;
Nam.&#13;
He estimated that between&#13;
250,000 and 500,000 gallons of&#13;
chemicals were in his environment&#13;
at that time. Lindquist&#13;
stated that some of these very&#13;
chemicals being used commercially&#13;
today have been known&#13;
to cause liver disfunctions, nervous&#13;
disorders, cancers, and birth&#13;
defects.&#13;
"We have to fight back in order&#13;
to make sure something like this&#13;
doesn't happen again", Lindquist&#13;
stated. "We have to build a mass&#13;
movement, in our case, fighting&#13;
for compensation, testing, and&#13;
treatment of problems caused by&#13;
Agent Orange."&#13;
"Students are just starting to&#13;
get involved," said Katy Leonard,&#13;
a Parkside Life Science major.&#13;
She stated that toxic wastes effect&#13;
everyone because of where they&#13;
are dumped and how. She gave&#13;
two Milwaukee dump sites and a&#13;
Racine dump site as nearby&#13;
examples. Dumping methods at&#13;
landfill sites are "very discrete,&#13;
very cheap methods," according&#13;
to Leonard. She explained that&#13;
sometimes chemical control&#13;
companies will take chemicals&#13;
and dump them in creek beds.&#13;
"Until 1976, there were no laws&#13;
safeguarding against these&#13;
practices," Leonard said.&#13;
Jeff Myers, a Parkside&#13;
chemistry major, stressed that&#13;
some chemicals are only tested&#13;
once and sometimes it takes many&#13;
tests to get effective results.&#13;
Myers stated that 2-4-D is being&#13;
sprayed on Parkside's campus&#13;
lawn without being posted and&#13;
without workers knowing about its&#13;
toxicity. Myers stated that there&#13;
must be more student involvement,&#13;
referring to a petition&#13;
currently going around to stop&#13;
spraying 2-4-D at Parkside.&#13;
Myers stressed involvement,&#13;
guidelined by the Freedom of&#13;
Information Act, contacting the&#13;
Department of Natural Resources&#13;
about information regarding&#13;
chemicals being used and dumped&#13;
in local areas.&#13;
Lea Zeldin, Editor of Health&#13;
Writers Journal called for better&#13;
control of dangerous chemicals.&#13;
Zeldin described examples of&#13;
factories in Italy and West Germany&#13;
that have been shut down&#13;
and even destroyed brick by brick&#13;
from the inside out in efforts to&#13;
d e c o nta m i n a te h a r m f u l&#13;
chemicals like Dioxin from the&#13;
walls. Zelden said that the time is&#13;
now to get involved in the&#13;
awareness of toxic chemicals.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
SS No..&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
IF YOU LIKE to party vote Kreuser he does it&#13;
hearty.&#13;
APRIL is ZSU month. Calendar of events is&#13;
coming soon.&#13;
U. P. needs Kreuser for president because&#13;
he's a full time student resident.&#13;
WANTED: Willing female for pornographic&#13;
films. Contact - T ed Schlong.&#13;
THE THIRD floor "flash" — the flasher&#13;
endorses Jim — he wants Jim.&#13;
MOLN. 118: "Pop" goes the housepet.&#13;
I BELIEVE Jim Kreuser is the most qualified&#13;
person for the job.&#13;
JUST WHEN you thought it was safe to get&#13;
back in the organization. . . . Zimmer&#13;
Syndrome II.&#13;
WANTED: Kreuser as president of YOUR&#13;
student government.&#13;
AN ANONYMOUS IOP was once as happy as&#13;
could be and then he met Andy his life&#13;
seemed quite dandy but she'll own him&#13;
through eternity. ZEDOSOBU&#13;
IS MONTY HALL Sabine chase - a ll. Chain&#13;
Gang&#13;
KNIGHT — What is the airspeed velocity of&#13;
an unladen swallow?&#13;
YOUR CHOICE isgrim —if you don't vote for&#13;
Jim I Rapido Eduardo&#13;
TO: Steve Ball — Devezen cuando . . .y mas&#13;
vaces . . . Raquel&#13;
KREUSER SCREWSER but he's AGAINST&#13;
sexual harrasment — vote for Jim&#13;
M.M. AND R.S. make a great couple.&#13;
TIM, KIM, AND LORI might love you, but I&#13;
love you more. Otis Reddy&#13;
SUSPECT Zimmer Syndrome? See Dr G A&#13;
Helgeson for quick, painless diagnosis.&#13;
Reasonable fees, confidentiality guaranteed.&#13;
Patent medicine treatments available&#13;
in oral, inhalor and intravenous dosages.&#13;
DAN K. this Tab needs more brandy1 —&#13;
Wisconsin '84&#13;
BLACK SILK uses Andy's because Jeff's is&#13;
too small. lOP's&#13;
TOCS — you are cursed to a life on Lesbos —&#13;
Evets&#13;
lOP's are Ignoble Obstreperous Punks&#13;
Vol tar&#13;
WANTED: 10% magnesium sulfate for&#13;
biology experiment.&#13;
ALSO WANTED: Large tank for bioloqv&#13;
experiment.&#13;
TIRED of your organization? Come see us in&#13;
the organizational displacement office. Tim&#13;
Zimmer and Chris Hammelev — Zimmer&#13;
Syndrome Union (ZSU)&#13;
COMRADES UNITE! It's time for the Union&#13;
Lifers to revolt. Vote Kreuser&#13;
ENSLAVEMENT PARTY Mill. Starring:&#13;
Master Andy over slave Rodnev&#13;
ZEOSUBOD&#13;
JUDY you drive much too fast! Big Bird&#13;
ORGY QUEEN and Pornographer: Can we&#13;
all eskimo pie?&#13;
FERRET: What are you searching for? A fly&#13;
. . trap!? lOP's&#13;
N.O.R.M.A.L. endorses Jim Kreuser&#13;
KNIGHT — what is your: Name? Quest?&#13;
Favorite color?&#13;
WANTED, something slightly wierd or effective&#13;
for our student body. Kreuser as&#13;
president of student government.&#13;
J. BUSSIE—nexttimeyou write an ad please&#13;
try to make tl legible.&#13;
IF YOU DON'T vote Kreuser, you deserve&#13;
what you get!! I&#13;
"= YOU don't vote for Kreuser you're a loser.&#13;
A VOTE for Jim is a vote for sex - n - dru gs - n&#13;
rock - n - r oll.&#13;
TO: Will Prieschel — caminas mucho? Muy&#13;
rapidamente, verdad? Raquel&#13;
FOOD SERVICE supports Jim as president,&#13;
because excellence deserves excellence.&#13;
HBD, try naire, meow • m eow.&#13;
THE JOKE was dead until you brought it up.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
ANYONE wanting to join new choral group&#13;
contact John, 652-5512.&#13;
NEEDS SLEEPING PLACE - Mon. - W ed.&#13;
Kenosha preferred. Call Jack 656-7121.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
GIRLS: Rooms. Racine, near bus route. 634-&#13;
2883 weekdays, 862-2883 w eekends.&#13;
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha&#13;
country setting. 634-2883 weekdays, 862-2883&#13;
weekends.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
EARN while you learn. Assist retired college&#13;
teacher with correspondence reading and&#13;
organization of his library. Hours can be&#13;
arranged to suit your schedule. Call 694-2251&#13;
for appointment.&#13;
BEWILDER your opponents. Impress your&#13;
friends. Learn expert BACKGAMMON&#13;
An"? ranking Milwaukee professional.&#13;
All levels taught. Call Jim at 551 7404 for&#13;
reasonable rates.&#13;
TO THE MEMORY of Maria — We all loved&#13;
you very much. We pray that the Lord&#13;
receives you into His eternal Family. From&#13;
Good Friends.&#13;
/ &#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
an&#13;
FIRST&#13;
"National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR T ELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.i.C.&#13;
Winter to wrestle&#13;
in NCAA-I Mar. 12-14&#13;
Parkside hosts tourney&#13;
hby v rDiaavun e fCr Va amer&#13;
UW-Parkside has been selected&#13;
to host three prestigious fencing&#13;
tournaments in the upcoming&#13;
weeks.&#13;
On Saturday, March 14&#13;
Parkside hosts the Great Lakes&#13;
Championships. The following&#13;
day, Sunday, March 15, Parkside&#13;
plays host—for the first time ever&#13;
— to the Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics for Women&#13;
(AIAW) Region 4 Tournament.&#13;
But the biggest tournament will be&#13;
the National Collegiate Athletic&#13;
Association (NCAA) Championships&#13;
on March 19 through 21.&#13;
The Great Lakes Tournament&#13;
which is free of c harge, begins at&#13;
9:30 a. m. This tournament fields&#13;
the top 25 teams in the midwest&#13;
area, featuring both men's and&#13;
women's competition. Headlining&#13;
this event will be last year's&#13;
champion Wayne State&#13;
(Michigan), and perennial power&#13;
Notre Dame.&#13;
Each team will be represented&#13;
by two fencers at each weapon.&#13;
Captain David Wick and Bruce&#13;
Klappauf will represent Parkside&#13;
in the foil, 6'9" freshman Mark&#13;
Spiess in the epie and Jeff&#13;
McKelvie in the sabre. June&#13;
Bauer and Sabine Claus will&#13;
represent Ranger women fencers&#13;
in the foil.&#13;
The action continues the next&#13;
&lt;&amp;y a s Parkside hosts the AIAW&#13;
Rogion 4 Championships. The&#13;
tl?f&#13;
COmP&#13;
ing teams wil1 be the&#13;
top ftve finishers at the Great&#13;
Lakes Tournament along with the&#13;
top three teams in the Big io&#13;
conference.&#13;
6&#13;
The top three placing teams at&#13;
the regional tournament advance&#13;
to the National AIAW Championships&#13;
at Notre Dame in April.&#13;
The following weekend, March&#13;
- 21, is the men's NCAA&#13;
Championships. Wayne State will&#13;
be attempting to repeat as&#13;
national champions. The competition&#13;
is extremely keen as only&#13;
the top 40 fencers at each weapon&#13;
will be competing.&#13;
The Ranger's best bet to be&#13;
represented is Spiess. However, to&#13;
advance to the NCAA finals, he&#13;
must place in the top six finishers&#13;
at the Great Lakes Tournament.&#13;
This will be the first time in&#13;
history that the NCAA fencing&#13;
championships will have computerized&#13;
scoring, which will&#13;
enable each fencer to know his&#13;
personal standings after each&#13;
match. The new computer&#13;
programming was developed for&#13;
the NCAA by UW - Parkside&#13;
mathematics professor Don Piele.&#13;
Burman, Benzow&#13;
pace team&#13;
me some direction before going&#13;
away to school."&#13;
Since this duo of runners has&#13;
gotten together last fall, they have&#13;
given needed ink to Parkside's&#13;
women's program by contributing&#13;
to a national championship, by&#13;
taking a third place finish in the&#13;
national indoor meet, and capturing&#13;
three individual titles.&#13;
Next year, both of th ese women&#13;
will depart for different schools.&#13;
Burman will be heading west to&#13;
the city of Fort Collins where she&#13;
will pursue a degree in natural&#13;
resources at Colorado State.&#13;
Benzow will be making tracks&#13;
north as she plans to attend the&#13;
University of Minnesota.&#13;
Both women intend on running&#13;
at their new schools next fall, and&#13;
Continued From Page Eight&#13;
they are anxiously anticipating&#13;
running against NCAA Division I&#13;
competition. "There is nothing&#13;
left at this level (NAIA) anymore&#13;
to achieve because I've reached&#13;
all my goals," said Burman, "I'm&#13;
not being conceited, it's just that&#13;
now I must move up to division&#13;
level where I can establish new&#13;
goals to strive for."&#13;
Benzow, on the other hand, is&#13;
greeting the new challenge with&#13;
uncertainty: "I think Minnesota&#13;
might be a little too big, but I'll&#13;
have to take the chance and see&#13;
how I do."&#13;
After the fine performances&#13;
they've had already, both Benzow&#13;
and Burman should find acceptable&#13;
homes on the rosters of&#13;
their new universities next year.&#13;
PARKSIDE WOMEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM ranger Photo by Steve Myers&#13;
Women cagers take title&#13;
by Pete Cramer&#13;
Parkside's women's basketball&#13;
team won their first NAIA District&#13;
Championship game last Thursday&#13;
as they beat their guest team&#13;
Milton 75-70.&#13;
The first half started slow with&#13;
each team playing a little tight.&#13;
Then with 14 minutes left on the&#13;
clock the Rangers started playing&#13;
run and gun offense and broke&#13;
away from Milton 27-11 outscoring&#13;
them 14-6 in a four minute spurt.&#13;
Midway into the first half&#13;
Parkside fell into a slump. Turning&#13;
the ball over five consecutive&#13;
times on three offensive fouls and&#13;
two traveling calls left them&#13;
scoreless for two minutes. Milton&#13;
then applied a tough 2-3 zone&#13;
which forced Parkside to take low&#13;
percentage outside shots and got&#13;
them back into the game against a&#13;
suddenly stagnated Ranger offense.&#13;
&#13;
With under a minute left in the&#13;
first half Milton pulled within one&#13;
point of the Rangers at 35-34. Then&#13;
a last second desperation shot by&#13;
cento1 Laurie Pope gave Parkside&#13;
a 37-34 ha lftime advantage.&#13;
In the second half both teams&#13;
came out smoking, playing a fast&#13;
paced error - free ball game,&#13;
trading hoops with each other for&#13;
the first eight minutes after&#13;
Milton tied the game up early on.&#13;
The last 10 minutes were an&#13;
example of a classic playoff&#13;
game. Underneath the basket a&#13;
hard physical contest began&#13;
between the two teams, with&#13;
Parkside's Laurie Pope controlling&#13;
the boards while Robin&#13;
Henschel and Callie Lee con&#13;
trolled the outside, dominating&#13;
Milton's Cindy Powers and Diane&#13;
Pieper.&#13;
Lead scorers for Parkside were&#13;
Laurie Pope with 21 points anc&#13;
both Callie Lee and Robin Hen&#13;
schel with 17 each. Leading&#13;
rebounder for Parkside wai&#13;
Laurie Pope with 12.&#13;
The Rangers shot 42% from th&#13;
floor in the first half and 38% ii&#13;
the second for a game average&#13;
40%. From the free throw line the&#13;
Rangers had a game average o:&#13;
81%.&#13;
The win now gives Parkside the&#13;
opportunity to go to Iowa for the&#13;
regional championship.&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
Last weekend in Davis,&#13;
California Dan Winter was successful&#13;
in placing third in the&#13;
NCAA-II wrestling tournament.&#13;
Winter won his first three matches,&#13;
two of them by pins and&#13;
advanced to the semifinals. There&#13;
he met Nebraska's Bob Hoffman&#13;
who he tied 6-6 in regulation time&#13;
but then lost 2-3 in overtime.&#13;
It is hard not hard to think of&#13;
this match having a quite different&#13;
outcome had Winter not&#13;
been injured earlier in the season.&#13;
He then came back to win two&#13;
more matches which placed him&#13;
third.&#13;
Because of his performance in&#13;
this tournament Winter will&#13;
qualify to wrestle in the NCAA-I&#13;
tournament held March 12 -14 at&#13;
Princeton.&#13;
Winter, who now boasts a 33-2&#13;
season record, is the second&#13;
wrestler from Parkside ever to&#13;
qualify for the NCAA-I tournament.&#13;
&#13;
Bob Pekarske and Brian Irek,&#13;
who also went to Davis for this&#13;
tournament, both lost their first&#13;
matches which eliminated them&#13;
from further competition.&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Pasiino&#13;
WENDY BURMAN&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
UNION&#13;
DINING ROOM&#13;
V* LB. HAMBURGERS&#13;
Cooked To Order&#13;
On "Fresh " Hard Rolls&#13;
"OUR WIMPY IS&#13;
NOT SKIMPY" &#13;
Rangers play in championship game&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
and&#13;
., pave Cramer&#13;
t&#13;
J&#13;
me ** this writing, the&#13;
men s basketball team is a single&#13;
Kar^^r-H P a&#13;
^&#13;
3y from a triP t(&gt; 5? a £&#13;
lty and foe chance to&#13;
play in the NAIA national tournament&#13;
After disposing of&#13;
Lakeland College 91-69 and UW-La&#13;
65&#13;
3 *** Angers will face&#13;
H^.favi Claire, the third ranked&#13;
NAIA team in the country, for the&#13;
District 14 championship. If the&#13;
Rangers manage to beat the&#13;
Blugolds, it will be the fifth time&#13;
the Hangers have represented the&#13;
district in the last seven years.&#13;
Eau Claire has gone to the tournament&#13;
the last two years.&#13;
The game was held in Eau&#13;
Claire last night (Wednesday) and&#13;
time prohibits us from being able&#13;
to report the results in this week's&#13;
paper.&#13;
The Rangers drew a bye in the&#13;
first round of the Wisconsin Independant&#13;
College Association&#13;
playoffs and waited for their&#13;
chance to play the winner of the&#13;
Lakeland - Milton game. Lakeland&#13;
prevailed by 25 p oints and came&#13;
into town trying to snap an eight&#13;
game tournament losing streak to&#13;
the Rangers.&#13;
The game was for all practical&#13;
purposes over with 12 minutes left&#13;
in the game when freshman guard&#13;
Chuckie Perry scored on a layup&#13;
following a steal, that gave the&#13;
Rangers a 70-44 lead. They&#13;
coasted the rest of the way&#13;
enroute to a 22 point thrashing of&#13;
Lakeland.&#13;
Reggie Anderson paced the&#13;
Rangers with 27 points, 20 of&#13;
which he scored in the first half.&#13;
"Reggie played a very mature&#13;
game tonight," coach Steve&#13;
Stephens said after the game. "If&#13;
he wanted to score 40, he could&#13;
have had 40."&#13;
"We were flat tonight," added&#13;
Stephens. "I don't think we were&#13;
crisp. We'll have to play much&#13;
better against La Crosse." And&#13;
that they did.&#13;
La Crosse beat the Rangers&#13;
here by three points, 63-60, earlier&#13;
in the season and gave the&#13;
Rangers a good run for toe money&#13;
in this one also. That first game&#13;
with La Crosse was only toe&#13;
second game of the season for toe&#13;
Rangers, who at that time didn't&#13;
have a set starting lineup. The&#13;
most important difference is toe&#13;
emergence of guard Perry, who&#13;
wasn't starting at that point of the&#13;
season.&#13;
The game was close all the way&#13;
and very physical. La Crosse&#13;
guard Dick Iverson missed most&#13;
of the game due to an eye injury&#13;
he sustained in the first half.&#13;
La Crosse's strategy in this&#13;
game appeared to be to shut down&#13;
toe outside shooting of Reggie&#13;
Anderson, who scored 12 points&#13;
but only took eight shots from the&#13;
field compared to 18 in toe&#13;
Lakeland game.&#13;
La Crosse took the game right to&#13;
the Rangers by jumping off to a 6-&#13;
0 lead and went into the intermission&#13;
leading 31-29. Guard&#13;
Walter Greene and forward -&#13;
center Curtis Green kept the&#13;
Rangers in toe game in the first&#13;
half by combining for 18 points.&#13;
Parkside came out in toe second&#13;
half with the first six points and&#13;
ran away for a 54-45 lead on a two -&#13;
handed dunk by John Herndon&#13;
with nine minutes left in the game.&#13;
La Crosse made one more run at&#13;
toe Rangers before Chuckie Perry&#13;
scored toe last two decisive points&#13;
from the free throw line to put the&#13;
game away.&#13;
A balanced Ranger scoring&#13;
attack was led by Herndon's 14&#13;
points followed by Anderson,&#13;
Perry, and Walter Greene with 12&#13;
points each.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
PARKSIDE'S John Herndon excited crowd and teammates with&#13;
dunk.&#13;
Modest champions keep shining bright&#13;
by Steve Brunner&#13;
It is late afternoon on a cold&#13;
winter day as two runners are&#13;
seen silhouetted on toe western&#13;
horizon against a vivid sunset. As&#13;
the runners draw nearer to view&#13;
they can be identified as Kellie&#13;
Benzow and Wendy Burman of&#13;
UW-Parkside, both of whom have&#13;
captured national running titles.&#13;
By establishing themselves as&#13;
the premiere distance runners in&#13;
the women's division of the&#13;
National Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA),&#13;
Parkside's Wendy Burman and&#13;
Kellie Benzow have made their&#13;
names outlawed in the books of&#13;
frustrated competitors.&#13;
Burman, who is a sophomore&#13;
from Fond du Lac, won toe NAIA&#13;
women's national cross country&#13;
title last November; two&#13;
weekends ago she won the indoor&#13;
two mile run at the national meet&#13;
in Kansas City. Benzow, a freshman&#13;
from Racine, complimented,&#13;
Burman at the national cross&#13;
country meet by capturing third&#13;
place, and proceeded to excell by&#13;
winning the national indopr title in&#13;
toe mile run by surging past a&#13;
befuddled opponent in the last five&#13;
yards.&#13;
The blue-ribbon tandem of&#13;
runners modestly attest to their&#13;
recent individual success, as well&#13;
as their lead roles in capturing the&#13;
team championship in cross&#13;
country. Benzow said, "I was&#13;
happy to have won the ihdoor mile&#13;
but I was disappointed in my time&#13;
— I should have done better."&#13;
Burman said of her indoor accomplishments,&#13;
"It's not that big&#13;
of a thing because I didn't do as&#13;
well as I intended to do. I would&#13;
have been happier with a better&#13;
time." She added, "I was relieved&#13;
to have won the cross country title&#13;
because I was out of shape and&#13;
injured at the time."&#13;
The twosome didn't start&#13;
running until their sophomore&#13;
years in high school. "I didn't&#13;
start running year - round until&#13;
my senior year in high school,"&#13;
said Benzow. The tall slender&#13;
freshman first got her start in&#13;
running at Sheboygan North. In&#13;
the middle of her junior year she&#13;
moved to Racine where she attended&#13;
Case High School, a&#13;
perennial state powerhouse in&#13;
cross country.&#13;
Burman, who hails from Fond&#13;
du Lac Goodrich High School,&#13;
said, "Like Kellie, I didn't really&#13;
start training until my senior year&#13;
in high school."&#13;
Both runners consistently train&#13;
hard year - round and intend to&#13;
specialize in different events after&#13;
their collegiate careers are&#13;
finished. "I run about 90 miles a&#13;
week now," said Burman, who&#13;
eventually wants to be a&#13;
maratooner. She showed promise&#13;
in that event last July when she&#13;
trudged over a hilly course in&#13;
Hurley, Wisconsin at the "Paavo&#13;
Nurmi Marathon." She completed&#13;
the course in 3 hours and 13&#13;
minutes and placed first in her&#13;
age category.&#13;
Benzow logs about 60 miles a&#13;
For the&#13;
Bride and Groom&#13;
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Also Featuring Exotic Gifts&#13;
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&#13;
654-9662&#13;
week during the season, and close&#13;
to 75 miles in the summer. After&#13;
college she plans on training for&#13;
toe 10,000 meter (6.2 miles) run&#13;
which she believes she can excell&#13;
in the most. Cross country coach&#13;
Bob Lawson speaks highly of the&#13;
two young distance runners:&#13;
"Both girls have great potential,&#13;
and they can be two of toe top&#13;
runners in the country if they want&#13;
to work hard." "Wendy is one of&#13;
toe most dedicated women I've&#13;
ever coached. She has more&#13;
determination than a lot of men.&#13;
Kellie has the potential to be the&#13;
best 880 or miler we have ever had&#13;
at Parkside."&#13;
Before deciding to come to&#13;
Parkside both women were&#13;
recruited differently. Even after&#13;
taking second in the state cross&#13;
country meet as a senior, Burman&#13;
was not clouded as a top college&#13;
prospect. 'The rally schools who&#13;
really pursued me were Parkside&#13;
and Wisconsin," she said, "and&#13;
even Wisconsin doesn't seem too&#13;
enthusiastic about me." The fleet -&#13;
footed sophomore has proven&#13;
skeptics wrong and is quickly&#13;
making a name for herself around&#13;
the country.&#13;
The other half of toe duo,&#13;
Benzow, was highly recruited by&#13;
state schools. "The reason I chose&#13;
Parkside was because I knew they&#13;
had a good program," she said,&#13;
"plus it is close to my home and&#13;
my mother thought it would give&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
HIS FIRST YEAR OUT OF COLLEGE.&#13;
_,: K 9JJAC KEN B USH RENOVATED THREE&#13;
BUILDINGS, WORKED ON A DAM, RAVED A ROAD,&#13;
AND BUILT TWO CHOPPER FADS.&#13;
"Most of the engineers I graduated&#13;
with probably wound up as an&#13;
assistant engineer to somebody else.&#13;
Maybe doing the details for somebody&#13;
else's design or supervising some&#13;
small aspect of construction.&#13;
"But my first year as an&#13;
Engineer Lt., I've designed many of&#13;
my own projects and supervised the&#13;
construction on everything from&#13;
baseball dugouts to the concrete work&#13;
on a dam. Earthmoving, grading, filling,&#13;
paving, concrete work, masonry&#13;
—you name it, I've supervised it.&#13;
"Whether I stay in the&#13;
Army or go into civilian construction&#13;
work later, I've got experience that&#13;
some engineers won't have when&#13;
they're 30!"&#13;
Army ROTC got Frank&#13;
Quackenbush off to a good start in his&#13;
field. It can do the same for you&#13;
whether you're a civil engineer or an&#13;
English major. For more information&#13;
stop by the Army ROTC office on&#13;
campus.&#13;
And begin your future as&#13;
an officer.&#13;
2nd Lt. Frank Quackenbush majored in civil&#13;
engineering at the University ot Ari:ona and was&#13;
a member of Armv ROTC ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALLYOUCANBE. </text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 21, March 5, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>1981-03-05</text>
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        <element elementId="49">
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="69730">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="69731">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69734">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69737">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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