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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 9, issue 23</text>
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            <text>President, Vice-President - Kreuser, Bambrough win posts</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, March 26, 1981&#13;
President&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 23&#13;
Kreuser, Bambrough win posts&#13;
by Da[)Bn n GGfalbllhrarniith fh&#13;
Jim Kreuser was elected as the&#13;
new president during the PSGA&#13;
spring elections held March 11 and&#13;
12. He received 409 votes, while&#13;
Kay Mullikin received 128, Jan&#13;
Oechler 87 and Gary Strathman&#13;
29.&#13;
Kathy Bambrough won the vice&#13;
- presidential race with 373 votes.&#13;
She defeated Chuck Neu, 179&#13;
votes, and Kathie Seliga, 90 votes.&#13;
"I hope for the students' sake,&#13;
while in office we can live up to&#13;
our overwhelming victory," said&#13;
Kreuser. "I'm looking forward to&#13;
taking office."&#13;
"I feel that the students will&#13;
benefit by having elected such&#13;
compatable officers," said&#13;
Bambrough.&#13;
Jim and Kathy will be sworn in&#13;
at the Monday, March 30, PSGA&#13;
Senate meeting.&#13;
The eight senatorial candidates&#13;
were elected to the senate. The&#13;
vote total for each was: Kathy&#13;
Slama, 353; S teve Kaufman, 333;&#13;
Mike Loos, 326; Bill Morrone, 321;&#13;
Joe Ripp, 321; Louis Valldejuli,&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
JIM KREUSER AND KATHY BAMBROUGH&#13;
310; Phil Pogreba, 291; Bradley&#13;
Faust, 269.&#13;
Ken Meyer was elected as&#13;
member of SUFAC with 404 votes&#13;
a&#13;
Chuck Neu - 179&#13;
President&#13;
Jim Kreuser - 409 Jan Oechler - 87&#13;
Kay Mullikin - 128 Gary Strathman - 29&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Kathy Bambrough - 373&#13;
Kathy Seliga - 90&#13;
Senators&#13;
Kathy Slama - 353 Joe Ripp - 321&#13;
Steve Kaufman - 333 Louis Valldejuli - 310&#13;
Mike Loos • 326 Phil Pogreba - 291&#13;
Bill Morrone - 321 Bradley Faust - 269&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Ken Meyer • 404&#13;
Reagan submits budget proposal to Congress&#13;
by Susan J. Aluise&#13;
"On Tuesday morning, I submitted&#13;
my revised 1982 budg et to&#13;
Congress, then promptly crossed&#13;
the border."&#13;
This comment provided a&#13;
humorous note in President&#13;
Reagan's March 11 address to the&#13;
Canadian parliament, but in view&#13;
of the massive budget cuts&#13;
proposed by the President, the&#13;
Canadian trip could not have&#13;
come at a better time.&#13;
"The budget cuts proposed by&#13;
the President make my mind&#13;
boggle," said Senator Robert&#13;
Dole, (R-Kansas). "It is a welfare&#13;
program for the rich at the expense&#13;
of the needy," said House&#13;
Ways and Means Chairman Don&#13;
Rostenkowski (D-Ill).&#13;
Although the White House&#13;
maintains that the so-called&#13;
'safety net' programs will be&#13;
preserved and that the truly needy&#13;
will not suffer, there is growing&#13;
suspicion that this may not be the&#13;
case.&#13;
The President's proposal, which&#13;
would slash $48.6 billion from the&#13;
federal budget during fiscal 1982,&#13;
would affect over 200 social&#13;
programs including unemployment&#13;
compensation, welfare&#13;
and education.&#13;
Under the budget revisions,&#13;
restrictions would be placed on&#13;
the payment of extended unemployment&#13;
benefits and special&#13;
benefits for workers laid off due to&#13;
export competition. The&#13;
restrictions placed upon these&#13;
benefits are expected to save $3&#13;
billion.&#13;
Tighter eligibility for welfare&#13;
programs and an undefined&#13;
proposal requiring recipients to&#13;
work off their benefits would save&#13;
$1.2 billion. Food stamp spending&#13;
would be cut by $2.3 billion,&#13;
denying benefits to 400,000&#13;
households, with an additional&#13;
$200 million cut in food stamp aid&#13;
to Puerto Rico.&#13;
Federally subsidized housing&#13;
unit construction and&#13;
rehabilitation would be either&#13;
scrapped or delayed at a savings&#13;
of more than $500 million. The&#13;
Comprehensive Employment and&#13;
Training program (CETA) is&#13;
almost gutted by the Reagan cuts.&#13;
The program will face the&#13;
elimination of 310,000 public&#13;
service jobs at a savings of more&#13;
than $4.5 b illion.&#13;
Under the White House&#13;
program, Medicaid and Black&#13;
Lung benefits will be reduced by&#13;
$900 million and $378 million&#13;
respectively, and child nutrition&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Complaints bring films&#13;
to Parkside&#13;
• Review: "Raging Bull&#13;
• Women's track team&#13;
ready for state&#13;
99&#13;
programs like school lunch&#13;
programs, would be cut in half to&#13;
about $1.2 billion.&#13;
In the area of education,&#13;
categorical grants for 44&#13;
educational programs would be&#13;
lumped into two block grants for&#13;
states and municipalities, which&#13;
means a 25 pe r cent reduction in&#13;
the allocated $5.6 billion. Those&#13;
savings are expected to total&#13;
upward of $1.4 billion.&#13;
In addition, reform of student&#13;
financial aid programs are expected&#13;
to net a savings of $423&#13;
million. Among these reforms are&#13;
the following: 1.) A requirement&#13;
that parents pay market interest&#13;
rates rather than the government&#13;
subsidized 9 per cent they&#13;
currently pay. 2.) A requirement&#13;
that students pay 9 per cent interest&#13;
on their government subsidized&#13;
loans during their school&#13;
years. At present, the government&#13;
pays this interest while the&#13;
students are in school. 3.) The&#13;
total amount of credit that the&#13;
federal government makes&#13;
available to banks which offer&#13;
subsidized student loans will be&#13;
limited, reducing the number of&#13;
loans available. 4.) The&#13;
elimination of Social Security&#13;
student benefits. 5.) A "needs&#13;
analysis" will be imposed on&#13;
student loans.&#13;
These are not the only areas of&#13;
major cuts. Federal aid to the&#13;
states for the maintenance of 40&#13;
social service programs (including&#13;
community aid, fuel oil&#13;
programs, and child welfare)&#13;
would be cut 25 per cent for a&#13;
savings of $1.8 billion. Minimum&#13;
Social Security benefits would be&#13;
eliminated, disability insurance&#13;
eligibility tightened and burial&#13;
benefits reduced for a savings of&#13;
$2.8 billion.&#13;
Even veterans, a group which&#13;
Reagan courted during the&#13;
presidential campaign, will be&#13;
affected by the new budget cuts.&#13;
Cutbacks in planned Veterans'&#13;
Administration (VA) hospital&#13;
construction, reductions in personnel,&#13;
reduced federal subsidies&#13;
on VA loans, elimination of&#13;
Vietnam veteran counseling&#13;
centers, and assorted other cuts&#13;
would save $700 mil lion.&#13;
Many of the other cuts are&#13;
equally, if not more, painful,&#13;
particularly to low - income individuals&#13;
and families. Legal&#13;
assistance for the poor would be&#13;
eliminated for a savings of $321&#13;
million. At Congressional budget&#13;
hearings last week, Office of&#13;
Management and Budget Director&#13;
David Stockman announced this&#13;
shocking cut by stating "the right&#13;
to a lawyer is not a basic right of&#13;
citizens." Also cut will be funds&#13;
for the Equal Employment Opportunity&#13;
Commission (EEOC)&#13;
which promotes affirmitive action.&#13;
The EEOC cut of 5 per cent&#13;
will mean a savings of $20 million.&#13;
Even programs which are not&#13;
on the Budget Office hit list may&#13;
feel the cleaver. Many programs&#13;
which are now funded by&#13;
categorical grants (money&#13;
handed to the states but earU.S.-Mexico&#13;
&#13;
to be topic&#13;
Former Wisconsin Governor&#13;
Patrick Lucey, who served as U.S.&#13;
ambassador to Mexico during the&#13;
Carter administration, will be&#13;
among panelists at a UWParkside&#13;
public forum on&#13;
"Mexico - U.S. Relations: Immigration&#13;
and the Labor Market"&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March&#13;
31, in the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
Other panelists will be Everett&#13;
Ellis Briggs, Director of Mexican&#13;
Affairs for the U.S. Department of&#13;
State; Richard Perlman, a labor&#13;
economist and Latin American&#13;
specialist at UW-Milwaukee; and&#13;
Lionel Maldonado, moderator,&#13;
chairman of the Behavioral&#13;
Science Division at UW-Parkside&#13;
and co-author of an article,&#13;
"Chicanos in the U.S.: A H istory&#13;
of Exploitation and Resistance,"&#13;
in the current issue of Daedalus.&#13;
Briggs, a member of the U.S.&#13;
Foreign Service since 1956, has&#13;
served in a variety of overseas&#13;
posts including La Paz, Bolivia,&#13;
marked for specific programs)&#13;
would be subject to the discretion&#13;
of t he states in managing federal&#13;
funds allocated through block&#13;
grants. For example, funds which&#13;
were voted by Congress for Child&#13;
Adoption programs last August&#13;
will go to the states in block grants&#13;
with no instructions that these&#13;
funds be used toward the&#13;
children's behalf.&#13;
In view of these cuts and the&#13;
hundreds of others in the&#13;
voluminous Reagan Budget&#13;
Proposal and 1982 Budget&#13;
Revisions, it is no wonder that the&#13;
President was pleased to be in&#13;
Ottawa on the day his new budget&#13;
made its Congressional debut. But&#13;
the tax and budget cuts do not&#13;
represent the sum total of the new&#13;
White House program. In the&#13;
fourth part of this series we will&#13;
look at the obsequious component&#13;
of th e Reagan plan: the program&#13;
for regulatory reform.&#13;
relations&#13;
of forum&#13;
Berlin, Lisbon, Luanda, Asuncio&#13;
and Bogota. He also has served in&#13;
the Department of State's Bureau&#13;
of Inter - American Affairs,&#13;
Bureau of International&#13;
Organizations and European&#13;
Bureau.&#13;
Havana - born Briggs holds a&#13;
graduate degree in international&#13;
relations from George&#13;
Washington University and is&#13;
fluent in Spanish and Portuguese.&#13;
The forum, which is free and&#13;
open to the public, is co-sponsored&#13;
by the University Extension&#13;
Department of Governmental&#13;
Affairs, the UW System American&#13;
Ethics Studies Coordinating&#13;
Committee and the UW-Parkside&#13;
Center for Multicultural Studies.&#13;
The Parkside public forum is a&#13;
continuing series devoted to exploration&#13;
of timely and significant&#13;
issues as they occur and is&#13;
directed by Prof. Kenneth R.&#13;
Hoover of the political science&#13;
faculty. &#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Ranger covers club events poorly&#13;
Response to Editorial,&#13;
For the last 2-1/2'years, the&#13;
Ranger has given poor coverage&#13;
of club events. In my two years as&#13;
president of MSU, I have been told&#13;
by the Ranger staff that I must&#13;
write my own articles on the MSU&#13;
or I would not get coverage. The&#13;
staff has kept their word on this,&#13;
for they will not cover events. Yet,&#13;
each week there is a paper&#13;
printed. In the paper there are 7&#13;
editors and at least 10 staff people&#13;
listed. So, why can't someone&#13;
cover club events?&#13;
The editors complained about&#13;
not enough people to write. Well I&#13;
wrote for the Ranger in 1978/79 as&#13;
a sports writer for MSU. At grade&#13;
time, Prof. Rubin did not want to&#13;
give me one credit for writing 25&#13;
articles. I had to go through every&#13;
paper for that entire semester to&#13;
prove I had written those articles.&#13;
I wonder if he even read my articles.&#13;
Why would anyone want to&#13;
go through this?&#13;
The organizations on this&#13;
campus address issues of news.&#13;
The Ranger is a school newspaper&#13;
which should cover these events.&#13;
Even though the staff are not&#13;
journalists or anticipating in the&#13;
future, they do have a responsibility&#13;
to this University.&#13;
There seems to always be&#13;
someone to cover negative events.&#13;
If a student began breaking&#13;
windows, I would be willing to bet&#13;
someone would cover that, maybe&#13;
even front page. Or as in the last&#13;
paper the negative information on&#13;
athletes, specifically basketball&#13;
players, which made the front&#13;
page. One thing that article did&#13;
not talk about is how could this go&#13;
on for so long and who made this&#13;
situation possible. The players of&#13;
any sport could not do this by&#13;
themselves.&#13;
The MSU sponsors over 50&#13;
events each year. The Ranger&#13;
may cover two or three of those&#13;
events. If the MSU did not write&#13;
articles on the other events, you&#13;
would not know minorities attended&#13;
this university unless you&#13;
turned to the sports page. The&#13;
MSU academic programs are&#13;
never covered.&#13;
The issue of Black children&#13;
killed in Atlanta has not made the&#13;
front page. In fact, if I did not&#13;
have a big discussion with Susan&#13;
Michelli (sic), it would not have&#13;
made the paper at all. This is&#13;
national news.&#13;
Negative articles get priority&#13;
coverage while the constructive&#13;
and supportive articles which&#13;
need and should be written are&#13;
ignored. If the Ranger is going to&#13;
be a school newspaper, it must&#13;
serve the student organizations.&#13;
These organizations make&#13;
reportable news. Most should be&#13;
reported by Ranger staff.&#13;
Chavez Epps&#13;
Editor's response&#13;
No basis for criticism of coverage&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
When I received the above letter&#13;
written by MSU President Chavez&#13;
Epps, my initial reaction was to&#13;
reply to the letter sentence by&#13;
sentence.&#13;
But then I thought better of it, so&#13;
I will clarify only the major&#13;
errors.&#13;
The letter states that Ranger&#13;
has "seven editors and at least 10&#13;
staff people listed. So, why can't&#13;
someone cover club events?" As I&#13;
told an MSU member who, unlike&#13;
Epps, came to talk to me about the&#13;
matter, those seven editors include&#13;
three non - writers and the&#13;
II staffers consist of one sportswriter,&#13;
one album reviewer,&#13;
three photographers, three&#13;
business people, and only three&#13;
news writers.&#13;
That doesn't sound like an extensive&#13;
staff to me. It's adequate,&#13;
though, because our staff includes&#13;
many people who care about&#13;
Ranger enough to sacrifice their&#13;
valuable and limited time without&#13;
receiving their just reward.&#13;
Another clarification is needed&#13;
for Epps' statement that for two&#13;
years he has been told that he&#13;
must write articles on MSU events&#13;
or they wouldn't be covered. Epps&#13;
was told that submitting short&#13;
stories about MSU activities&#13;
would be more beneficial to the&#13;
coverage and greatly increase the&#13;
possibility of the topic being&#13;
covered. But saying that we make&#13;
it mandatory for organizations to&#13;
write their own stories is pure&#13;
nonsense.&#13;
Another point: MSU events&#13;
weren't covered? MSU events&#13;
were covered in 14 of this year's&#13;
first 22 issues, sometimes in&#13;
Coming Events, but also over a&#13;
half dozen times with stories,&#13;
including three on the front page.&#13;
So what's all the complaining&#13;
about? I really wonder, especially&#13;
after my last editorial in which I&#13;
explained what Ranger should&#13;
and is able to do. (I invite all&#13;
members of organizations to read&#13;
it if they haven't.)&#13;
Read Epps' letter in response to&#13;
my editorial. If you can't see the&#13;
incompleteness and irrelevancy&#13;
of mo st of the comments, come to&#13;
me and I'll be happy to tell you the&#13;
whole, real stories.&#13;
I don't want to take any more&#13;
space rebutting the letter because&#13;
I want to stop this fighting between&#13;
student organizations when&#13;
there is no basis for the criticism.&#13;
Black History Month a big success&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
U.W. Parkside's Minority&#13;
Student Union sponsored the&#13;
greatest celebration of Black&#13;
History Month in the State of Wis.&#13;
The MSU hosted 20 events, with 25&#13;
different speakers and five films.&#13;
We sponsored major events such&#13;
as Black Women's Recognition&#13;
Day with key speaker Vel Phillips,&#13;
Sec. of State. The other major&#13;
event featured national&#13;
moderator Tony Brown, host of&#13;
nationally televised "Black&#13;
Journal." There is a video tape&#13;
interview with Prof. Boker and&#13;
Mr. Brown available in the&#13;
library. There were also displays&#13;
of Black businesses from Racine&#13;
and Milwaukee.&#13;
Within the month of Feb. there&#13;
were student participation events&#13;
such as poetry reading,&#13;
recreation night and student&#13;
recital.&#13;
There were several informative&#13;
panel discussions held. Some of&#13;
the topics addressed were The&#13;
Future of B lacks in America with&#13;
speaker Ray Mathews - Exec.&#13;
Director Urban League and Atty.&#13;
Charles Swanson: A Look at&#13;
Africa with Atty. Swanson and&#13;
Prof. L. Trager; The Black&#13;
Business: The Black Woman in&#13;
Today's society and a Tribute to&#13;
Martin Luther King Jr. with Paul&#13;
Blackmon.&#13;
The MSU also sponsored other&#13;
events such as a Gospel Program&#13;
with choirs from Racine and&#13;
Kenosha with speaker Rev.&#13;
George Thomas.&#13;
The months ended with a&#13;
semiformal celebration at the&#13;
Clayton House in Racine. The&#13;
Black History month King and&#13;
Queen were crowned. The 1981&#13;
Black History Queen is Miss&#13;
Tracy Lane and King Mr. Chavez&#13;
Epps. Runner up were Queen&#13;
Felica Krikwood and King&#13;
Michael Johnson. This was a&#13;
fantastic way to end a celebration.&#13;
As President, I am very pleased&#13;
with the success of Black History&#13;
Month events. I would like to say&#13;
thanks to the many people that&#13;
helped set up the events. I hope&#13;
that those who attended the&#13;
programs enjoyed and learned&#13;
from them. February was a very&#13;
informative month. The MSU is&#13;
looking forward to bigger and&#13;
better events for next year.&#13;
Chavez Epps&#13;
Good luck to PSGA President Jim Kreuser&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Well one more Parkside election&#13;
is history, and once again that&#13;
vast wasteland known as the silent&#13;
majority has made its decision by&#13;
not voting. The students have&#13;
chosen to let about 15% of the&#13;
student body dictate what affects&#13;
their lives in the daily business of&#13;
college. I hope you are ready to&#13;
accept the consequence.&#13;
In the past years I have seen&#13;
P.S.G.A. slip from the control of&#13;
the students to a form of puppet&#13;
government. You students have&#13;
let this happen, by creating your&#13;
own worlds light years away from&#13;
any known planet. Wake up, you&#13;
are here and these people spend&#13;
your money and have a great&#13;
influence on your college life. This&#13;
government has become a tool for&#13;
state bureaucrats to dictate, what&#13;
they believe, student life should&#13;
be. How do we gain control? We&#13;
are indeed lucky. We now have&#13;
Jim Kreuser. Our own American&#13;
Hero to battle bureaucrat control.&#13;
Good luck Jim.&#13;
I have had a few short&#13;
Proposed United Council&#13;
plan would favor Madison&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
The proposed UC Council proportional representation plan is based on&#13;
the assumption that a proportional distribution of council seats among&#13;
the university branches will result in a proportional distribution of power&#13;
in the council. In fact, the proposed plan will result in a slight distortion&#13;
of power that favors Madison at the expense of m ost of t he other twelve&#13;
branches.&#13;
The power of a given actor in a coaltion situation depends upon two&#13;
things: first, the number of s eats or resources that a given actor controls,&#13;
and; second, the distribution of seats among the other actors. The&#13;
distribution of po wer, in other words, is not strictly proportional to the&#13;
distribution of seats. A simple example will demonstrate this principle&#13;
Consider a coalition situation in which there are three actors and io&#13;
seats. The seats are distributed among the actors in the following&#13;
manner:&#13;
Actor A: 4 seats&#13;
Actor B: 3 seats&#13;
Actor C: 3 seats&#13;
In this situation, three minimum winning coalitions, AB (7 seats), AC&#13;
(7 seats), and BC (6seats), can be formed. A minimum winning coalition&#13;
is one that can be rendered non - winning if one member withdraws.&#13;
Power, in a coaltion situation, is defined in terms of participation in&#13;
minimum winning coalitions. A critical or pivotal member can render a&#13;
coaltion non - winning by his withdrawal.&#13;
In the example above, each actor is a pivotal member of two coalitions&#13;
(A is a pivotal member of AB and AC, B is a pivotal member of AB and&#13;
BC and, C is a pivotal member of BC and AC), so there are a total of six&#13;
power pivots. By dividing the number of pivots that a given actor controls&#13;
by the total number of pivots, we get a measure, called the Banzhaf&#13;
power index, of the relative distribution of power among the three&#13;
actors, A, B, and C.&#13;
As Table I, below, shows, the distribution of power is not always&#13;
proportional to the distribution of seats.&#13;
Table I. The Distribution of Seats and Power.&#13;
Pet. Pet.&#13;
Actor Seats Seats Pivots Pivots Distortion&#13;
A 4 .400 2 .333 minus .066&#13;
B 3 .300 2 .333 plus .033&#13;
C 3 .300 2 .333 plus .033&#13;
In this situation, actor A is penalized by the distribution of seats among&#13;
the other actors while B and C gain. Actor A, in other words, doesn't have&#13;
as much power as one would expect if the proportion of s eats were the&#13;
sole criterion of an actor's power. The total distortion (i.e., the sum of&#13;
the absolute value of the difference between an actor's proportion of&#13;
seats and its proportion of power pivots) in this case is equal to .133.&#13;
The proposed UC Council plan results in similar distortion. Madison&#13;
gains from the distortion while most of t he other twelve branches lose.&#13;
Table II, below, shows the relevant figures.&#13;
Table II. The Proposed UC Council Plan.&#13;
Actor(s)&#13;
Madison&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Eau, Lac, Osh,&#13;
StP, Whw (total)&#13;
Prk, Pla, GrB,&#13;
RuF, Sto (total)&#13;
Superior&#13;
Pet. of Pet. of&#13;
Seats Seats Pivots Pivots Distortion&#13;
13 .276 2956 .344 plus .068&#13;
8 .170 1112 .129 minus .041&#13;
15 .320 2660 .309 minus .011&#13;
10 .210 1660 .192 minus .018&#13;
1 .021 212 .024 plus .003&#13;
The total distortion under this plan will be .142, a nd the gains will&#13;
accrue almost exclusively to Madison.&#13;
A trivial adjustment in the proposed plan would minimize distortion&#13;
and remove most of Madison's advantage. It would also result in the&#13;
improvement of t he fit between the proportion of students that a particular&#13;
branch has and its proportion of p ower in the UC Council. Table&#13;
III, below, shows the amended alternative.&#13;
Table III. Amended UC Council Plan.&#13;
Actor (s)&#13;
Madison&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Eau, LaC, Osh,&#13;
StP, Whw (tot)&#13;
Prk, Pla, GrB,&#13;
RuF, Sto (tot)&#13;
Superior&#13;
Seats&#13;
12&#13;
9&#13;
15&#13;
10&#13;
1&#13;
Pet. of Pet. of Pet. of&#13;
Seats Pivots Pivots Students&#13;
.255 2604 .284 .276&#13;
.191 1464 160 .170&#13;
.320 2920 ,320 .320&#13;
.210 2000 .220 .210&#13;
.021 160 .017 .021&#13;
Thus, by switching one council seat from Madison to Milwaukee, the&#13;
total distortion between proportion of students and proportion of power&#13;
~"°PS f&#13;
rom -141 to .036, the five schools with 3 seats each break even, and&#13;
the five schools with 2 v otes each gain slightly. Clearly, the amended&#13;
plan provides a more appropriate alternative for achieving the Council's&#13;
aim of proportional representation.&#13;
Who said political science can't solve trivial problems?&#13;
Jack Moran&#13;
discussions with Mr. Kreuser and&#13;
was relieved to hear that he also is&#13;
aware of major changes that need&#13;
to be made.&#13;
I for one will be very interested&#13;
in his efforts to reaffirm student&#13;
values and help students regain&#13;
control of student government.&#13;
But what can we do now? Let&#13;
him know your ideas, fire up when&#13;
he blows it and support him if he is&#13;
right, but let him hear you.&#13;
Remember, we are responsible&#13;
for ourselves.&#13;
GaryStrathman&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer EdMor&#13;
?&#13;
ria&#13;
" .&#13;
F®"f"d Business Manager&#13;
SueM,chett,.. News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Ed|tor&#13;
BnanPass.no Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Edi,pr&#13;
STAFF&#13;
?arol KleeTn '"m*/"&#13;
1&#13;
'&#13;
6&#13;
",: Dan Galb™'&#13;
h&#13;
- Mike Holmdohl, Carol Klees, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer, Bruce Preston, Kim&#13;
Schlater, Janet Wells, Jeff Wicks&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside and thev are soieiv&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content. orKsiae ana rney are solely&#13;
RANGER MUr&#13;
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irL9^&#13;
he acadamic Vear exceP&#13;
t during breaks and holidays,&#13;
wr tti n. Printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
ParSTenS^MU,"&#13;
6 addr6SSed ^ ParkSide Ra&#13;
"^ '^LLC Dl». UWpaepe&#13;
e&#13;
r&#13;
Sw!?h&#13;
,one&#13;
Ed&#13;
inch marnL^u^t " ,ype&#13;
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rit,en&#13;
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9&#13;
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Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday The RANGFR&#13;
defamatory ccm'tenf8&#13;
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'&#13;
ett*rs which contain false or &#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 26, 1981&#13;
Philippe Enfremnnt&#13;
AOE brings famous Orchestre&#13;
du Capitole de Toulouse here&#13;
Internationally - acclaimed&#13;
Pianist Philippe Entremont will&#13;
^ soloist with the 100-&#13;
memher Orchestre du Capitole de&#13;
Toulouse under the baton of&#13;
Michel Plasson at the Parkside&#13;
Communications Arts Theater at 8&#13;
p.m. on March 26.&#13;
The orchestra has been ranked&#13;
as among the ten best in the world&#13;
rising rapidly into the first ranks&#13;
since Plasson assumed its musical&#13;
directorship in 1968.&#13;
The program is a part of UWParkside's&#13;
Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series. Individual tickets are $9&#13;
for the public, $5 for Parkside&#13;
students, and are available&#13;
through the Union Information&#13;
Center. Telephone reservations&#13;
can be made by calling 553-2345.&#13;
The concert program includes&#13;
Berlioz' Overture to "Le Corsaire,"&#13;
Ravel's Concerto in G&#13;
Major for Piano, Schumann's&#13;
Symphony No. 4 in d minor, Op.&#13;
120, and Serge Nigg's Million&#13;
d'Oiseux d'or (Millions of Golden&#13;
Birds), a new work written&#13;
especially for Plasson and the&#13;
Toulouse orchestra.&#13;
Entremont, who has won&#13;
recognition as both a concert&#13;
pianist and conductor, was born in&#13;
Polish culture&#13;
to be discussed&#13;
PIANIST PHILIPPE&#13;
ENTREMONT&#13;
Rheims, France in 1934, studied at&#13;
the Paris Conservatory, won the&#13;
Marguerite Long - Jacques&#13;
Thibaud Competition in 1953 and&#13;
made his U.S. debut in the same&#13;
year.&#13;
Entremont has been a leading&#13;
international pianist ever since,&#13;
performing with the major orchestras&#13;
and as a recitalist or&#13;
chamber musician on five continents.&#13;
He began conducting in&#13;
the mid-60s, has led major&#13;
European and U.S. orchestras and&#13;
last fall accepted an appointment&#13;
as principal conductor of the New&#13;
Orleans Philharmonic Symphony.&#13;
Entremont will be performing&#13;
on a $65,000 B osendorfer concert&#13;
grand piano, which is being&#13;
specially shipped to Parkside for&#13;
the concert by the U.S.&#13;
representatives of the German&#13;
piano firm.&#13;
The Toulouse orchestra&#13;
currently is on its third North&#13;
American tour after garnering&#13;
critical bouquets in Canada,&#13;
Mexico and the U.S. during tours&#13;
in 1978 and 1979. According to the&#13;
New York Post, "The Orchestra&#13;
de Toulouse is one of the most&#13;
eminent orchestras of Europe."&#13;
Last year, the orchestra made a&#13;
20-concert tour of Federal Germany&#13;
with Entremont as soloist.&#13;
Under Plasson, who is considered&#13;
one of the leading operatic&#13;
and symphonic conductors, the&#13;
orchestra performs in France&#13;
both in its "home" 3500-seat&#13;
theater in Toulouse and at the&#13;
Theatre des Champs Elysees in&#13;
Paris. Since 1975, it has been&#13;
orchestra-in-residence at the Aixen-Provence&#13;
Festival and has also&#13;
been the official orchestra of the&#13;
Academie Maurice Ravel.&#13;
Brachel to appear in dinner concert here&#13;
"The Mighty Wurlitzer Musical&#13;
Revue," a dinner concert&#13;
featuring Polish pianist Jolanta&#13;
Brachel on her U.S. debut tour and&#13;
three guest organists playing&#13;
music ranging from classical to&#13;
country, will be presented at the&#13;
Parkside Union on Saturday,&#13;
March 28.&#13;
The organists, Craig Knudsen&#13;
and Chris Yochens, have won a&#13;
local following because of&#13;
previous appearances in the area,&#13;
and Sheila Flanagan, who toured&#13;
for six years with the Fred Waring&#13;
Show and has been a featured&#13;
performer on radio and television.&#13;
They will be joined by singerdancer&#13;
Terri Mason.&#13;
The event is being sponsored by&#13;
The Music Mall of Racine in&#13;
cooperation with the Parkside&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
PSGA thanked&#13;
for effort&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
During the past several weeks,&#13;
members of SUFAC and the&#13;
Student Senate have allocated&#13;
$524.00 to the Child Care Center.&#13;
The members of the 1980-81&#13;
student government have donated&#13;
a lot of time and effort to serve&#13;
Parkside students. We would like&#13;
to express our appreciation to&#13;
them. Thank you very much:&#13;
Kathy Bambrough, Greg Davies,&#13;
Renee Gillmore, Tracy Gruber,&#13;
Chris Hammelev, Tim Hovey,&#13;
Steve Kaufman, Randy Klees,&#13;
Eric Klinkhammer, Jim Kreuser,&#13;
Todd Laxzewski, Mike Loos, Bill&#13;
Morrone, Kay Mullikin, Chuck&#13;
Neu, Dan Rasch, Kathy Slama,&#13;
Louis Valldejuli.&#13;
Maureen Budowle&#13;
Director&#13;
Parkside Child&#13;
Care Center&#13;
Union. Admission is $15 per&#13;
person. Admission includes dinner&#13;
at 6 p.m. in the union cafeteria and&#13;
the show at 7:30 p.m. in the union&#13;
theater. Admission for the concert&#13;
only is $7.50. Reservations are&#13;
required and can be made by&#13;
calling The Music Mall (637-5744)&#13;
or the Union Information Center&#13;
(553-2345).&#13;
Chuck Rogers of The Music Mall&#13;
said that the show, which uses&#13;
three organs and a vertical grand&#13;
piano, originally was developed&#13;
for Wurlitzer dealers and is being&#13;
presented at Parkside for the first&#13;
time for a general audience.&#13;
Brachel, winner of several&#13;
international piano competitions,&#13;
is currently performing in the&#13;
area as part of a tour arranged by&#13;
the Wisconsin Institute for International&#13;
Education. A veteran&#13;
of the European concert stage, she&#13;
holds a virtuoso diploma from the&#13;
Moscow Musical Conservatory.&#13;
Yochens, both a keyboard artist&#13;
and vocalist, has developed a&#13;
reputation for his versatility on&#13;
the three powerful organ&#13;
keyboards, which he uses to&#13;
produce sounds ranging from an&#13;
orchestra to a country or disco&#13;
group.&#13;
Knudsen provides a repertory&#13;
including pop, classical, standard,&#13;
jazz and blues. Flanagan won the&#13;
Kansas State Music Championship&#13;
at age 12 and, after&#13;
competing in the U.S. Championships,&#13;
turned professional. In&#13;
addition to touring with Waring&#13;
and serving as artist-in-residence&#13;
at his workshop, Flanagan is&#13;
organist for the Kansas City&#13;
Royals baseball team.&#13;
Congressman Clement J.&#13;
Zabl ocki (D- Mil wau kee ),&#13;
Chairman of the House Foreign&#13;
Relations Committee, and the&#13;
Rev. Leonard F. Chrobot, an&#13;
exponent of "the new ethnicity" in&#13;
America, will be the featured&#13;
speakers at a Polish Culture Day&#13;
sponsored by Parkside's Center&#13;
for Multicultural Studies on&#13;
Saturday, April 4, at St. Stanislaus&#13;
Parish, 1754 Grand Ave., Racine.&#13;
Zablocki, who has represented&#13;
Milwaukee's heavily Polish south&#13;
side for 32 years, is viewed as the&#13;
highest - ranking Democratic&#13;
spokesman on foreign affairs now&#13;
that Republicans control the U.S.&#13;
Senate. He will speak on "The&#13;
Role of Poles in Politics — U.S.A."&#13;
Father Chrobot is president of&#13;
St. Mary's College of Liberal Arts,&#13;
Orchard Lake, Mich., a part of a&#13;
complex of schools and centers&#13;
whose purpose is "to enrich&#13;
American culture with the best of&#13;
the heritage of people of Polish&#13;
background in the United States."&#13;
Chrobot received his PfcD from&#13;
Wayne State University where his&#13;
research centered on the expansion&#13;
of folk culture to urban&#13;
culture in society and the impact&#13;
on education. He has lectured&#13;
widely on "the new ethnicity, a&#13;
growing awareness that we are a&#13;
nation of groups, culturally&#13;
distinct but mutually interdependent,&#13;
each striving to&#13;
preserve the best of its heritage."&#13;
His talk is titled "Proxemics: An&#13;
Approach to the Study of&#13;
Cultures."&#13;
Other speakers are: Dr. Alfred&#13;
Sokolnicki, Dean of the College of&#13;
Speech at Marquette University,&#13;
on "Preserving Polish Culture in&#13;
the Fine Arts"; Mrs. Helen&#13;
Chrzymanowicz, vice president of&#13;
the Polish National Alliance of&#13;
Chicago, on "The Role of&#13;
Fraternal Organizations in&#13;
Cultural Preservation"; the Rev.&#13;
Donald S. Bilinski, curator of the&#13;
Polish Museum of America in&#13;
Chicago, on "Preserving Polish&#13;
Culture: The Role of Museums";&#13;
Alfons Hering, editor of -Gwiazda&#13;
Polarna, a Polish - language&#13;
newspaper published in Stevens&#13;
Point, on "The Role of the Polish&#13;
Press in Cultural Preservation";&#13;
and Msgr. Stanley Witkowiak,&#13;
pastor of St. Stanislaus parish, on&#13;
"The Polish Community in&#13;
Racine."&#13;
The program scheduled for 8:45&#13;
a.m. to 4:30 p.m., will also include&#13;
a performance by the Mazur&#13;
Dancers, a Milwaukee troupe of&#13;
eight costumed dancers, and a&#13;
Polish buffet luncheon.&#13;
Advance registration is&#13;
required for the day's program,&#13;
which carries one UW-Parkside&#13;
undergraduate credit. The fee is&#13;
$52.50 for the program and $6 for&#13;
the luncheon. Registration information&#13;
is available from the&#13;
Social Science Division at 553-&#13;
2316. Deadline for luncheon&#13;
reservations is March 27.&#13;
As a prelude to Polish Culture&#13;
Day, Polish pianist Jolanta&#13;
Brachel will present a free public&#13;
concert at 8 p.m. on April 3 in&#13;
Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. *&#13;
In conjunction with the event, a&#13;
pictorial display of "One&#13;
Thousand Years of P olish History&#13;
and Culture" prepared by the&#13;
American Institute of Polish&#13;
Culture will be on display in the&#13;
Library - Learning Center through&#13;
April 10.&#13;
Member P arkside 200&#13;
Mention this ad! ^ oJseph.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
4433 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
HIS FIRST YEAR OUT OF COLLEGE,&#13;
FRANK QUACKENBUSH RENOVATED THREE&#13;
BUILDINGS, WORKED ON A DAM, PAVED A ROAD,&#13;
AND BUILT TWO CHOPPER PADS.&#13;
"Most of the engineers 1 graduated&#13;
with probably wound upasan&#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;
AT UW-P CALL:&#13;
Capt. Fred Herron&#13;
Marquette U. ROTC&#13;
Call Collect:&#13;
1-224-7229/7195&#13;
2nd Lt. Frank Quackenbush majored in civil&#13;
engineering at the L'niversitv of Arizona and was&#13;
a member of Armv ROTC ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALLYOUCANBE. &#13;
FELLOWSHIPS&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
The Department of Linguistics at the University of Iaa™ Ch&#13;
leago Circle offers work leading to the&#13;
^ MA in°Trc^ a&#13;
"^&#13;
applled&#13;
"&#13;
n9&#13;
u&#13;
lstlcs, including&#13;
Other Languages^ En9&#13;
"&#13;
Sh 10 Speakers&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
A generous number of Fellowships are available to&#13;
qualifying graduate students. The Fellowships indude&#13;
a stipend of $1,000 for the academic year, plus a&#13;
InllTJZ Wa,Ven&#13;
'&#13;
n addlt,on&#13;
' other ki^ds of&#13;
Thp Hmhi f&#13;
e ava,lable to Prospective students.&#13;
x&#13;
d ?&#13;
r aPP''cations Is April 30, 1981. For&#13;
application and information, write to:&#13;
Andrew Schiller, Head&#13;
Department of Linguistics&#13;
University of Illinois at Chicago Circle&#13;
Box 4348, Chicago, IL 60680&#13;
Thursday, March 26, 1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
iqu - f ,!&lt;,&#13;
2i&#13;
TS in&#13;
/&#13;
h« Ve&#13;
[y Spedal Arts Festival held during spring break gather for a sing&#13;
long In Main Place (above). (Left) wandering clowns paint designs on the childrens' faces.&#13;
* RA NGER Photos by Dan McCormack&#13;
Limerick writers: Forgive u&#13;
TThhic uroolr Don^AM .... is week, Ranger was&#13;
supposed to print the results of&#13;
the Second Annual Parking&#13;
Lot St. Patrick's Day&#13;
Limerick Contest. We didn't.&#13;
To those of you who submitted&#13;
the wonderfully entertaining&#13;
limericks we have received,&#13;
we're sorry, but the winners&#13;
haven't been chosen yet.&#13;
Last week, we met to choose&#13;
the winners. We tried, but the&#13;
competition was so keen&#13;
(Parkside students are really&#13;
very clever, you know) that&#13;
we judges just could not agree&#13;
on the winners. It's a long&#13;
story; there were some fist&#13;
fights, and name - calling&#13;
episodes, not to mention the&#13;
coercion used by contestants&#13;
— but don't worry, we'll&#13;
decide by next week's issue of&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
Make plans for 'Theatre '81"&#13;
ciucung periormances, workshops&#13;
and demonstrations.&#13;
Theatre artists from around the&#13;
country will conduct specialized&#13;
workshops in acting, directing,&#13;
performance production,&#13;
costuming, movement ami theatre&#13;
education. Highlighting the&#13;
workshop series are such leaders&#13;
as Lee Baygan, one of NBC's top&#13;
makeup artists, Jared Oswegan, a&#13;
Guthrie Theatre costume designer&#13;
and James McKenzie, producer of&#13;
the American Conservatory&#13;
Theatre in San Francisco.&#13;
A wide variety of stage performances&#13;
will also be available&#13;
to participants. The Independent&#13;
Eye theatre will travel from&#13;
Lancaster, PA to perform their&#13;
production of FAMILIES and&#13;
Shorewood High School will bring&#13;
their performance of THE&#13;
MIRACLE WORKER. This&#13;
production will be interpreted in&#13;
sign language ior tne hearing&#13;
impaired.&#13;
Mime, dance, stage combat and&#13;
improvisational theatre will be&#13;
presented to complete the ll&#13;
scheduled performances. Friends&#13;
Mime Theatre and Ring of Steel&#13;
Ltd. have been invited as feature&#13;
companies.&#13;
The general public may participate&#13;
in the entire convention or&#13;
purchase single - event&#13;
registrations for $1.50 each.&#13;
Convention rates and housing are&#13;
available at a reduced cost to&#13;
students. Pre - registration ends&#13;
March 27. On-site registration will&#13;
begin Friday, April 3 at the Music&#13;
- Drama Center on the Lawrence&#13;
University campus.&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
Sheila Hilke, Wisconsin Theatre&#13;
Association, 610 Langdon Street,&#13;
723 Lowell Hall, Madison, WI53706&#13;
(608 / 263-6945).&#13;
Kinship meeting tonight&#13;
"My name is Mike. I'm eight&#13;
years old. I've got two little sisters&#13;
and I guess I lose my temper&#13;
sometimes and hit them. My mom&#13;
and dad are separated and I don't&#13;
get to do very much. I can't stand&#13;
it when there's nothing to do. So I&#13;
guess maybe that's why I'm a&#13;
bully sometimes to the smaller&#13;
kids. I would rather be a friend to&#13;
somebody — anybody! I'll do just&#13;
about anything. Biking and soccer&#13;
are two things I enjoy. I really like&#13;
trains. I don't want to be in reform&#13;
school like my dad says I probably&#13;
will be. I'd rather be like everyone&#13;
else. I just want to be liked by&#13;
everyone."&#13;
Mike's story is not much different&#13;
from a lot of other kids,&#13;
except that he has a chance to&#13;
make it. He's part of the Kinship&#13;
Program, and he hopes to find his&#13;
friend soon. His chance will only&#13;
work if someone takes a chance on&#13;
him.&#13;
Kinship is a child service&#13;
agency that matches children&#13;
from single parent homes to&#13;
adults in the community. For&#13;
more information, please come to&#13;
the next Kinship Orientation&#13;
meeting, Thurs., March 26th at&#13;
7:00 P.M. at St. Mary's Lutheran&#13;
Church, 200I-80th S t. or call the&#13;
Kinship office at 658-0151.&#13;
This could be the start of&#13;
something very exciting in your&#13;
life.&#13;
Lawrence University in Appleton&#13;
will host "Theatre '81:&#13;
Wisconsin On Stage," April 3-5,&#13;
the ninth annual Statewide&#13;
Theatre Convention. Theatre&#13;
students and professionals from&#13;
throughout the state will participate&#13;
in the three day theatre&#13;
event.&#13;
"Theatre '81" offers unique&#13;
opportunities to students and&#13;
teachers who have a casual interest&#13;
in theatre or for those who&#13;
have professional interests. Over&#13;
60 activities are scheduled in-&#13;
Lakeside opens&#13;
with third show&#13;
Review&#13;
fkH?l&#13;
SitteP&#13;
c&#13;
laJ&#13;
ers wil1 open their third show of the season, "Cat on a&#13;
Hot Tin Roof," Friday, March 27&#13;
at 8 p .m. in the Kemper Center&#13;
gymnasium, located at 124-66 St&#13;
Kenosha. "&#13;
«r^&#13;
pical&#13;
,&#13;
of most Tennessee&#13;
Williams plays, "Cat on a Hot Tin&#13;
Roof" is set in the South and&#13;
reveals the struggle of family&#13;
members seeking power, wealth&#13;
and love. In the play, Big Daddy's&#13;
birthday has brought the family&#13;
together, but the festive occasion&#13;
is tainted by conflict.&#13;
Terry Lawler, an English&#13;
teacher at Tremper High School,&#13;
directs the play, which marks the&#13;
eleventh production he has&#13;
directed for Lakeside. Earlier this&#13;
year, he directed "The Man Who&#13;
Came to Dinner."&#13;
Millie Clark, a member of&#13;
Racine Theater Guild, portrays&#13;
Maggie, the part made famous by&#13;
Elizabeth Taylor.&#13;
Like Lawler and Clark, Michael&#13;
Skewes, who plays Brick, divides&#13;
his time between the Racine&#13;
Theater Guild and Lakeside&#13;
Players. Although involved in the&#13;
office cleaning business during&#13;
the day, he spares evening hours&#13;
to participate in numerous shows.&#13;
A part time employee in the&#13;
Kenosha News composing room,&#13;
Carol Oatsvall portrays the role of&#13;
Mae.&#13;
Wally Christofferson, a social&#13;
studies teacher at Lance Junior&#13;
High, has acquired a long list of&#13;
credits in the past two years at&#13;
Lakeside. Prior to his current role&#13;
as Gooper, he performed in "Wait&#13;
Until Dark," "Dracula," "John&#13;
Loves Mary" and "Come Blow&#13;
Your Horn." Joining him in this&#13;
production are his two daughters,&#13;
Holly and Sarah, who play Dixie&#13;
and Polly. Both attend Southport&#13;
Elementary School and both have&#13;
appeared in Lakeside's "Pale&#13;
Pink Dragon."&#13;
A busy housewife and mother,&#13;
Kay Batassa still finds time for&#13;
her role as Big Mama in "Cat on a&#13;
Hot Tin Roof." Kay has appeared&#13;
in Lakeside's last two productions,&#13;
"The Man Who Came to&#13;
Dinner" and "Come Blow Your&#13;
Horn," as well as o thers.&#13;
Ron Kelly, an active member of&#13;
Bullen Junior High's drama Club,&#13;
portrays Buster. He has been&#13;
involved in summer recreation&#13;
department plays. Sonny will be&#13;
played by Steve DeAngelis,&#13;
another Bullen student.&#13;
Kris Hansen, who plays Trixie,&#13;
participated in Lakeside's&#13;
summer production, "Pale Pink&#13;
Dragon," and several school&#13;
productions.&#13;
The Chief of Racine's Fire&#13;
Prevention Bureau, Frank&#13;
Reisenauer, will play Big Daddy.&#13;
He has had many roles with the&#13;
Racine Theater Guild, including&#13;
parts in "Bullshot Crummond,"&#13;
"Walsh," "Play It Again, Sam"&#13;
and "Ah, Wilderness."&#13;
Reverend Tooker will be portrayed&#13;
by Jay Woodbury, teacher&#13;
of the emotionally disturbed in&#13;
Kenosha Unified Schools.&#13;
Woodbury often works behind the&#13;
scenes an d has appeared in two&#13;
productions, "Sweet Charity" and&#13;
"The Man Who Came to Dinner."&#13;
Robert Erickson assumes his&#13;
second doctor role in his portrayal&#13;
of Doctor Baugh. He earlier&#13;
played the doctor in "Dracula."&#13;
Erickson has appeared in "John&#13;
Loves Mary" and "My Three&#13;
Angels." He is also Lakeside's&#13;
perennial prop master.&#13;
Performance dates for "Cat on&#13;
a Hot Tin Roof" are March 27, 28,&#13;
29 an d April 3, 4, 5, 10, 11. All&#13;
performances are given in the&#13;
Kemper Center gymnasium at&#13;
8:00 p.m., except the Sunday&#13;
productions which are at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
on March 29 and 3:00 p.m. on April&#13;
5.&#13;
Tickets are available at&#13;
Bidingers and Scandinavian&#13;
Design or may be purchased at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Auditions held for Faire&#13;
Auditions for five parts in&#13;
"Diabenzaiten: Misplaced&#13;
Goddess," a Japanese Kyogen&#13;
play which will be performed at&#13;
King Richard's Faire this summer,&#13;
will be held in Milwaukee,&#13;
according to director Katherine&#13;
Amato-von Hemert.&#13;
The roles to be cast include a&#13;
priest, acolyte, two merchants&#13;
and a goddess. Auditions will be&#13;
held from 10 a. m. to 5 p.m. and&#13;
from 7 p.m. to 10 p .m. Sunday,&#13;
March 29 i n 4th floor rehearsal&#13;
hall "A" at the Performing Arts&#13;
Center, 123 State Street.&#13;
Amato-von Hemert says that&#13;
Kyogen is a Japanese form of&#13;
theatre which was refined between&#13;
1380 and 1466. Kyogen is&#13;
farce which deals with simple,&#13;
spontaneous, human problems.&#13;
Rendered into English, Kyogen&#13;
means "crazy words" or "to be&#13;
completely absorbed&#13;
speaking."&#13;
in&#13;
"Diabenzaiten: Misplaced&#13;
Goddess," which deals with&#13;
themes of lust and greed, was&#13;
written by playwright Donald&#13;
Richee and was first performed in&#13;
1969 at Theatre Scorpio in Tokyo.&#13;
The play will open July 3 and&#13;
run consecutive weekends&#13;
through August 15-16, the duration&#13;
of the Ninth Annual King&#13;
Richard's Faire, in Bristol&#13;
Township near the Wisconsin /&#13;
Illinois border. The Faire is a recreation&#13;
of life in England more&#13;
than 400 years ago, and&#13;
Renaissance theatre is one of the&#13;
highlights.&#13;
Shakespedre's "A Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream" will also be cast&#13;
at the auditions. While appointments&#13;
for auditions are not&#13;
necessary, they can be made by&#13;
contacting John T. Mills at King&#13;
Richard's Faire, 12420 - 128th St.,&#13;
Kenosha, Wise. 63412. Mills can be&#13;
reached by phone at 414 / 396-4385&#13;
or 312 / 689-2800.&#13;
k&#13;
0&#13;
jsSMjg&gt;&#13;
Dock&#13;
'KENOSHA'S LARGEST LOUNGE'&#13;
CHUBBY CHECKER!!&#13;
8:00 pm til 12:00 am&#13;
TONIGHT ONLY! $10.00 Cover Charge&#13;
GET A GRIP Sunday-Thursday! I 7pm&lt;losing&#13;
Highballs 50« Pitchers $1.50&#13;
(bar booze only)&#13;
Cover Charge $1.00 Proof of age Required&#13;
8625 14th Ave. Kenosha Behind Market Square Theatres&#13;
"Raging Bull": a work of art&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
"Raging Bull" effectively&#13;
paints a portrait of a man's life. It&#13;
opens with brutal realism and&#13;
reveals the life story of welterweight&#13;
boxing champion Jake La&#13;
Motta (played by Robert De&#13;
Niro). From his rough climb to&#13;
victory, to his arrest and conviction,&#13;
to his weak career as&#13;
night club entertainer, the film is&#13;
packed with real human emotions.&#13;
De Niro is a definite shoe-in for&#13;
Best Actor honors for his extraordinary&#13;
performance. Constantly&#13;
striving for realism in his&#13;
films, De Niro went so f ar as to&#13;
learn La Motta's style from the&#13;
boxer himself (La Motta&#13;
remarked that De Niro became&#13;
good enough to make a career out&#13;
of boxing); he even took a two&#13;
month haitus to gain 50 pounds to&#13;
play La Motta in his later years.&#13;
De Niro deserves these honors not&#13;
merely because of the extents he&#13;
went through to look like La Motta&#13;
but because of his acute ability to&#13;
create a character which the&#13;
audience can hate, love, pity and,&#13;
most importantly, understand.&#13;
La Motta was an obsessed&#13;
person. He was obsessed with&#13;
winning and he was obsessed with&#13;
jealousy. He incessantly accused&#13;
his wife of sleeping with other men&#13;
to the point that he destroys their&#13;
marriage and eventually himself.&#13;
Some interesting scenes are&#13;
filmed between De Miro and&#13;
Cathy Moriarty (as Vickie La&#13;
Motta) exploring these obsessions,&#13;
especially the one before&#13;
a fight where she is kissing his&#13;
bruises.&#13;
This marks the fourth work&#13;
which De Niro and director&#13;
Martin Scorsese have&#13;
collaborated on and Scorsese is&#13;
sure to obtain Best Director&#13;
honors for artistic ability expressed&#13;
throughout this film. He&#13;
mixes brutal scenes with light&#13;
hearted ones to achieve the&#13;
realism of life. It's interesting the&#13;
way he has slow, beautiful music&#13;
playing while we see the boxing&#13;
matches; it's another way of&#13;
showing the contrasting ways of a&#13;
man's life. One of the most unique&#13;
scenes is the passing of time. It is&#13;
the only time in the movie in&#13;
which color film is used and the&#13;
music gives one a melancholy&#13;
feeling.&#13;
Joe Pesci should carry away the&#13;
Best Supporting Actor award for&#13;
his portrayal of La Motta's&#13;
younger brother and manager&#13;
Joey. Pesci has a fun character&#13;
and is used to help us gain insight&#13;
to Jake through their conversations.&#13;
Pesci never fails to&#13;
make us believe that he is Joey La&#13;
Motta.&#13;
The camera work in this film is&#13;
innovative; we see things from the&#13;
most unusual and interesting&#13;
angles. One of the more interesting&#13;
examples is after La&#13;
Motta loses the title to Sugar Ray&#13;
Robinson and the camera follows&#13;
the rope of the boxing ring to the&#13;
point where La Motta had been&#13;
hanging on. The spot was drenched&#13;
in and dripping blood and&#13;
sweat. Who else but Scorsese&#13;
would have thought of something&#13;
like that?&#13;
Although "Raging Bull" will&#13;
capture Best Actor, Best Director,&#13;
and Best Supporting Actor honors&#13;
at the Academy Awards&#13;
presentation, whether Moriarty&#13;
will receive Best Supporting&#13;
Actress is anybody's guess. It&#13;
probably won't be named Best&#13;
Picture because of its brutality,&#13;
extreme graphic language, and&#13;
explicit content. "Ordinary&#13;
People" will probably win Best&#13;
Picture, but "Raging Bull" should&#13;
not be missed. It is a work of art, a&#13;
film maker's film.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
Meeting&#13;
Tuesday March 31&#13;
3:30 pm in Union 207&#13;
Nominations for Accounting Club&#13;
officers for J 981 -82 will be accepted&#13;
only at this meeting.&#13;
Paul Fischer, Ph.D., LPA, Professor&#13;
of Accounting at UW-M will be&#13;
representing The CPA Review of&#13;
Wisconsin and talking to our club&#13;
about the CPA exam.&#13;
Everyone is welcome!&#13;
Refreshments will be served &#13;
Thursday, March 26, 1981&#13;
Flynn discusses courts&#13;
V Jeff Wicks&#13;
Tnvo'&#13;
1&#13;
! Options For&#13;
Juveniles and Adults" was the&#13;
lnPM pr&#13;
^&#13;
ented by "Houndtable"&#13;
frnm a&#13;
fh 2* Judge Dennis Flynn&#13;
(W?® RaC1&#13;
j&#13;
le Count&#13;
y Felony&#13;
£r fhASCUSSed t he court ^tem tor the Racine and Kenosha area&#13;
and offered some insight to the&#13;
procedures and reasoning behind&#13;
his verdicts on court cases.&#13;
Judge Flynn stated that there&#13;
are 'two overviews of sentencing"&#13;
should the defendant be&#13;
found guilty - rehabilitation and&#13;
punishment.&#13;
There are many "dispositional&#13;
alternatives" used in the&#13;
rehabilitation process, ranging&#13;
from a simple apology to&#13;
probation or prison, according to&#13;
Flynn.&#13;
"Last year there were 648 cases&#13;
that were in the Racine court and&#13;
124 pe rsons who went to prison.&#13;
Obviously the majority of the&#13;
people do not go to prison. The&#13;
majority are placed on&#13;
probation," Flynn said.&#13;
Flynn said that since prison is&#13;
used as an alternative, under the&#13;
law, 13 factors must be dealt with&#13;
as well as a statement made on&#13;
record as to why confinement is&#13;
necessary.&#13;
The considerations in adult&#13;
sentencing are crime, maximum&#13;
penalties, age, prior record,&#13;
education, marital status and&#13;
children, employment record,&#13;
defendant's demeanor, drug or&#13;
alcohol dependency, recommendation&#13;
of probation agent,&#13;
nature of the crime (against&#13;
person or property, aggravated,&#13;
degree of culpability), protection&#13;
of the public, rehabilitation needs&#13;
of defendant, and gravity of the&#13;
offense. Imprisonment is called&#13;
for when: confinement is&#13;
necessary to protect the public&#13;
from further criminal activity, the&#13;
offender is in need of correctional&#13;
and rehabilitative treatment&#13;
which can most effectively be&#13;
provided if the offender is confined,&#13;
or it would unduly&#13;
depreciate the seriousness of the&#13;
offense if a sentence of probation&#13;
were imposed.&#13;
Films now here&#13;
Complaints move showings&#13;
Martin to discuss Hamlet&#13;
Professor Peter Martin of the&#13;
English Discipline will present a&#13;
videotape / lecture on Hamlet by&#13;
William Shakespeare on Monday,&#13;
March 30, from 1-2 p.m. in Union&#13;
104.&#13;
Martin will focus on identification&#13;
of a central theme in&#13;
Hamlet. By showing excerpts&#13;
from the BBC production, which&#13;
aired on PBS last November, he&#13;
will be able to show how the BBC&#13;
production builds toward the&#13;
stating of that theme. If time&#13;
permits, there will be discussion&#13;
of one or two scenes that have&#13;
been variously interpreted over&#13;
the years.&#13;
The lecture is sponsored by the&#13;
Library / Learning Center and is&#13;
free and open to students, faculty&#13;
and staff.&#13;
by Janet Wells&#13;
Jacques Brel is Alive and Well&#13;
and Living in Paris, Luther, and&#13;
Rhinoceros — famed American&#13;
Film Theatre productions — will&#13;
be shown in Parkside's Union&#13;
Cinema instead of at the Golden&#13;
Rondelle as o riginally scheduled.&#13;
A part of Professor Rhoda - Gale&#13;
Pollack's course on contemporary&#13;
drama, the films are free and&#13;
open to the public on Wednesday&#13;
evenings at 7 p.m. Brel was shown&#13;
on March 25; Luther will be shown&#13;
on April 1; and Rhinoceros on&#13;
April 15. Reservations may be&#13;
made by calling 553-2042.&#13;
The six-film series, which is cosponsored&#13;
by Parkside and the&#13;
Golden Rondelle, began on&#13;
February 25 at the Rondelle"with&#13;
Edward Albee's In Delicate&#13;
Balance. Harold Pinter's filmed&#13;
play, The Homecoming, was the&#13;
second in the series, and the last to&#13;
be shown at the Rondelle.&#13;
The showings at the Rondelle&#13;
had received considerable advance&#13;
publicity through theatre&#13;
ads, in interviews broadcast on&#13;
local radio station WGTD and in&#13;
local newspaper articles about&#13;
Pollack's California interviews&#13;
with Ely and Edythe Landau, the&#13;
husband and wife producing team.&#13;
Because the films feature stars&#13;
like Katherine Hepburn, Paul&#13;
Scofield, and the Royal&#13;
Shakespeare Company, and&#13;
directors like Tony Richardson&#13;
and Peter Hall, the AFT series is&#13;
considered something of a feast&#13;
for film and theatre buffs.&#13;
Pollack said that the Rondelle&#13;
management cancelled the&#13;
showing of the four remaining&#13;
films because of some telephoned&#13;
objections to The Homecoming.&#13;
Pollack said that she was contacted&#13;
by the Rondelle's&#13;
management on March 5, the day&#13;
after Pinter's avant - garde&#13;
drama was shown.&#13;
On March 6, she was told that,&#13;
because of the calls, the Rondelle&#13;
had taken a limited, impromptu&#13;
survey of audience opinion. "I&#13;
think they called people who have&#13;
had reservations (for films) in the&#13;
past and that they knew were at&#13;
the film," Pollack said.&#13;
Pollack explained that the&#13;
Rondelle's phone survey elicited&#13;
such comments as "I didn't like it&#13;
one bit," as well as positive&#13;
comment. "One person commented&#13;
on how lovely the&#13;
photography was," Pollack said,&#13;
but 'I didn't understand it' was the&#13;
most common comment."&#13;
"I think the response was really&#13;
out of fright . . . people took it&#13;
realistically," Pollack observed.&#13;
"I never thought it was anything&#13;
that would ever cause any kind of&#13;
reaction. The language is PGrated,&#13;
not R, and there is no&#13;
nudity."&#13;
Racine's Journal Times was in&#13;
error when it reported on March&#13;
11, "The film, starring Jane&#13;
Fonda, had a love scene involving&#13;
nudity." Jane Fonda does not&#13;
even appear in the film.&#13;
Pollack had not planned to&#13;
deliver any explanatory comments&#13;
before or after the&#13;
showings because of the film's&#13;
complexities. However, she said,&#13;
"I felt the program notes would&#13;
prepare the audience and enhance&#13;
understanding of the drama.'&#13;
These notes were made available&#13;
to all audience members. Those&#13;
that accompanied The&#13;
Homecoming stated, "The game&#13;
that progresses through familial&#13;
love / hate ... is harsh, uncompromising,&#13;
funny, and&#13;
shocking." Absurdist plays, said&#13;
Pollack, "are thought - provoking&#13;
and provocative. They say, 'We're&#13;
showing you what you really are&#13;
underneath.' "&#13;
Absurdist plays were once&#13;
considered controversial, but,&#13;
Pollack said, "With so much&#13;
violence and sex on TV and film, I&#13;
expected no outcry sixteen years&#13;
after Pinter's play was first&#13;
produced. I don't say he's a&#13;
household word, but he's certainly&#13;
better known now." The strength&#13;
of the film continues to amaze her.&#13;
"You know," she said, "It's&#13;
almost exciting to think that&#13;
Pinter still causes such strong&#13;
reactions."&#13;
Pollack said that one of her&#13;
primary concerns now is ensuring&#13;
public access to these filmed&#13;
plays, which were initially&#13;
distributed as part of a unique,&#13;
nation - wide subscription series in&#13;
which 600 theaters participated.&#13;
UW-Parkside and S.C. Johnson's&#13;
Golden Rondelle have&#13;
cooperated in several past ventures.&#13;
Last summer's Agatha&#13;
Christie films at the Rondelle&#13;
were selected by Pollack in&#13;
conjunction with a course she was&#13;
then teaching. Next summer,&#13;
Pollack and the Rondelle will&#13;
again work together on a series of&#13;
w D I r VHUMUVV mUIJysOVter W y J (4anUU d suspense lfil Allmlll s.&#13;
Flash talk to be given | Ontario peace workshop offered this fall&#13;
"Electroronniir. c Fla Flassh* h: Do Fin VYou nn nf tho 11CO r \f flnoVi nn«l ««&gt;«!! nln« mi . . « - .&#13;
Realize the Potential?" is the title&#13;
of a talk to be given by Jim&#13;
Maguire, head of the Media&#13;
Services Division of Parkside's&#13;
Library/Learning Center on&#13;
Wednesday, April 1, from 1:00 -&#13;
2:00 p.m. in Television Studio,&#13;
D157A, Comm Arts.&#13;
Maguire will discuss the basics&#13;
of the use of flash and will also&#13;
cover synchronization, different&#13;
kinds of flash units, exposure and&#13;
choosing the correct lighting&#13;
situation.&#13;
The workshop is sponsored by&#13;
the Library/Learning Center and&#13;
is free and open to students,&#13;
faculty and staff.&#13;
The tenth annual Grindstone&#13;
Island School for Peace will offer&#13;
a five - day overview between&#13;
August 23-28, to analyze and&#13;
discuss the current crises in&#13;
Central America, Southeast Asia,&#13;
the Middle East and Southern&#13;
Africa, with attention given to the&#13;
implications of the U.S. / Soviet&#13;
arms race.&#13;
The program, designed for&#13;
students, teachers and activists,&#13;
will feature 10 noted speakers:&#13;
Don Luce of Clergy and Laity&#13;
Concerned (New York City);&#13;
Ernie Regehr of Project&#13;
Ploughshares (Waterloo, Ontario);&#13;
Jennifer Davis of the&#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;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
c&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
C.C., who Is your psyco-orfhodontlst? Chain&#13;
Gang&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS Parkside Baseball&#13;
team on your fine showing at I.S.U.&#13;
INTRAMURAL basketball rets should be&#13;
erased from the census — Animals&#13;
FINAL SCORE: Refs and Scorekeepers 50,&#13;
Animals 34.&#13;
C.C.: Backstabber extraordlnairel&#13;
Reasonable rates Inquire M118. Chain Gang&#13;
SAL, you ole bitch, you're a terrible&#13;
basketball ref. — Animals&#13;
THE ANIMALS say the marketing Club sucks&#13;
— so d o lOP's.&#13;
R.S., You suck, get off the earth — The&#13;
Animals&#13;
IT IS A CONSPIRACY — the Animals.&#13;
ROOE 'O the future Is ours I&#13;
WANTED&#13;
WANTED: Woman to share small house close&#13;
to campus. Reasonable rent. Call 551-9116&#13;
days.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
T9 GRAND PRIX V6 excellent condition.&#13;
Dark metallic blue. 694-1799&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
TWO BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha. 6417 12th&#13;
Ave. Call 654-6810 after 2 p. m.&#13;
GIRLS: Rooms. Racine, near bus route. 634-&#13;
8562 weekdays, 862-2883 w eekends.&#13;
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE. Kenosha&#13;
country setting. 634-8562 weekdays, 862-2883&#13;
weekends.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
PARKSIDE'S JOB SERVICE is now interviewing&#13;
students for part or full - time&#13;
employment. Contact Mike Plate, ext. 2656&#13;
or in WLLC D173.&#13;
LOST — opal ring, March 7th In 2nd floor&#13;
Union. Reward. 554-2151 or 632-9060.&#13;
BEWILDER YOUR OPPONENTS. Impress&#13;
your friends. Learn expert BACKGAMMON&#13;
from top - ranking Milwaukee&#13;
professional. All levels taught. Call Jim at&#13;
551-7404 for reasonable rates.&#13;
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. Assist retired&#13;
college teacher with correspondence&#13;
reading and organisation of his library,&#13;
Hours can be arranged to suit your&#13;
schedule. Call 694-2251 for appointment.&#13;
American Committee on Africa&#13;
(New York); Nancy Pocock of&#13;
Canadian Friends Service&#13;
Commission (Toronto); Howard&#13;
Adelman of York University&#13;
(Downsview, Ontario); and Ed&#13;
Azar of the University of North&#13;
Carolina.&#13;
Since 1963, the Grindstone&#13;
Island Centre has been sponsoring&#13;
programs on peace and justice in&#13;
the relaxed setting of the 12 acre&#13;
island.&#13;
Registration for the overview is&#13;
limited. The total cost for tuition,&#13;
room and board for the five days&#13;
is $100. A limited number of&#13;
partial scholarships are available.&#13;
All interested persons may apply.&#13;
For more information on the&#13;
Grindstone Island School for&#13;
Peace and/or registration, write&#13;
to the: Grindstone Co-op, P.O. Box&#13;
564, Station P, Toronto, Ontario&#13;
M5S 2T1 or call (416) 923-4215.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ 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 AM!&#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;
I&#13;
! Classification:&#13;
i Name&#13;
SS No.. Ranger&#13;
_WLLC D139 &#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 26, 1981&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
VIDEO TAPE "Son of FootbaUpSSS^'iUintr i c&#13;
free for Parkside students, faculty and staff SiSninrl^H AdmiMl&#13;
°n is&#13;
CONCERT "L'Orchestre Toulouse" with SSh-fS ^ by PAB"&#13;
Philippe Entremont as solo pianist. TicketsJm to «v?n iS*1&#13;
"? I™1 featurln«&#13;
mission is $5 for Parkside student"and « for oLrs rSUlL "i?* d&#13;
°°&#13;
r&#13;
-&#13;
Ad&#13;
"&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series. The program Jurtfat Il mT!. ^&#13;
part ot 1116&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
8 m starts at 8 p. m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
M O V I E " f f i ^ i ^ R a t a S i g h t " 1 u V * ' r i t a U n i °&#13;
n S q u a r e -&#13;
at*e door is „for*&#13;
DINNER/CONCERT "Wurlitze^M^cal RJvue^Admi,.ion u&#13;
the dinner, at 6 p. m. in the Union Dining Room and the shSi ?• 5 ^ per8&#13;
?&#13;
n&#13;
?&#13;
8&#13;
-&#13;
*•&lt;*--&#13;
at the Union Information Center. Admissionto |1 W "* available&#13;
"S&#13;
Sunday, March 29&#13;
tote" jSE* """ EdC° Va&#13;
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8&#13;
"« vtolto. The&#13;
MOVIE "Hide in Plain Sight" will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, March 30&#13;
R®J&#13;
J?&#13;
D TABI1&#13;
E at u*°°&#13;
a Union 106. Colin Hargrave, Labour Council Member&#13;
of London, Borough of Bexley, will talk on "The End of the Broad ChtSS?&#13;
F^mentaiism in the British Labor Party." program&#13;
L^.^Jv,&#13;
U!&#13;
t«&#13;
/^&#13;
IDE&#13;
? TAPE at 1 P- "»• in Union 104. Prof. Peter Martin will talk on&#13;
stS&#13;
a&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
fSy Hamlet." Admission is free tor Parkside students,&#13;
Tuesday, March 31&#13;
s®!&#13;
dIIUAR "Mentally Retarded Offender" at 9 a. m. and again at 7 p. m in MOLN&#13;
105. The program is free and open to professionals in the field. Please call ext.&#13;
2312 for reservations. Sponsored by UW - Extenation&#13;
P^?»h&#13;
ICp&#13;
F&#13;
I!fVMT "&#13;
Mexic&#13;
° •&#13;
u&#13;
-&#13;
s&#13;
- Relations: Immigration it The Labor Market"&#13;
!f^*hn&#13;
Cey&#13;
' f&#13;
v&#13;
^&#13;
ett BriM». Richard Periman and Prof. Lionel&#13;
public*1 P- m. in the Union Cinema. The program is free and open to the&#13;
Z2Tld 5L2ftCat2&#13;
:8&#13;
° P- m- !*&gt; Tallent HaU. Call ext. 2312 for more details. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
Wednesday, April 1&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 12 noon in Union 104-106, with folk music by "Huns and Dr.&#13;
®®®*&#13;
er '• Admission is free for Parkside students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
WORKSHIP "Electronic Flash: Do You Realize the Potential?" with Jim Maguire&#13;
at 1 p. m. in CA D157 A. Admission is free tor Parkside students, faculty and staff.&#13;
FILM "Luther" will be shown at 7 p. m. in the Union Cinema. Reservations atext.&#13;
2042. Admission is free. The American Film Series is sponsored by UW - Extension&#13;
and UW - Parkside.&#13;
RANGER photo by Brian Passino&#13;
A two session Career Skills&#13;
Identification Workshop will be&#13;
offered by Community Student&#13;
Services and Student Development&#13;
on Monday, March 30 and&#13;
Monday, April 6 in UW-Parkside's&#13;
Molinaro 113 from 1 p.m. to 1:50&#13;
p.m.&#13;
During the first session, participants&#13;
will learn how to identify&#13;
their skills, and will discuss what&#13;
is meant by "career skills." In the&#13;
second session, each participant&#13;
will develop a list of his/her skills,&#13;
using information written since&#13;
the first session. Relating this&#13;
information to choosing a career&#13;
will be the final topic.&#13;
It is not necessary to sign up in&#13;
advance, but those wishing more&#13;
information can call Barbara&#13;
Larson at 553-2122 or Wendi&#13;
Schneider at 553-24%.&#13;
RANGER photo by Dan McCormack&#13;
™Parkskte6&#13;
/toch&#13;
k19&#13;
a2&#13;
S&#13;
l&#13;
tab 3t Winn&#13;
'&#13;
n9 the NCAA FenC'&#13;
n9 ChamP&#13;
|0&#13;
"ships which were held here&#13;
Women's track ready for state&#13;
The UW - Parkside women's&#13;
track team concludes its indoor&#13;
season this weekend at the&#13;
WWIAC S tate Championships at&#13;
UW - LaCrosse. The meet will&#13;
involve 14 universities and&#13;
colleges from the state and&#13;
competition will be fierce in all&#13;
events.&#13;
Coming off a fine third - place&#13;
finish at the UW - M Invitational&#13;
on March 7, the Rangers show a&#13;
lot of promise in many events.&#13;
According to the lastest Conference&#13;
listings, freshman Cindy&#13;
Spaciel (Oak Creek) is the&#13;
favorite in the 60 and 300; she'll&#13;
also run a leg on the Mile Relay&#13;
and could place in the top three in&#13;
the Long Jump. Running a close&#13;
second in the 300 will be Dona&#13;
Driscoll (Muskego) who will also&#13;
attempt the 600 (in 1980 she placed&#13;
DeVinney awarded&#13;
Parkside's professor of Art,&#13;
Douglas DeVinny, received the&#13;
Burpee Art Museum Purchase&#13;
Award in the 57th Annual Rockford&#13;
(111.) and Vicinity Jury Show,&#13;
on display at the museum through&#13;
March 29.&#13;
DeVinny will also be&#13;
represented in the Boston Printmakers&#13;
33rd National Exhibition&#13;
April 5 through 26 a t the Boston&#13;
Center for the Arts and May 10&#13;
through June 21 at the Fitchburg&#13;
(Mass.) Art Museum.&#13;
DeVinny, who joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty in 1979, earned&#13;
his graduate degree in printmaking&#13;
from Indiana University.&#13;
Last fall, he won an award for&#13;
excellence in the Wisconsin&#13;
Watercolor '80 show and exhibited&#13;
a group of his prints and drawings&#13;
at Colorado State University, Fort&#13;
Collins.&#13;
Job Service interviewing&#13;
WITH THE ADVENT OF SPRING comes the increase of&#13;
students spending time outdoors between classes pursuing&#13;
recreation such as these frisbee enthusiasts.&#13;
Career Workshop offered&#13;
Wisconsin Job Service's&#13;
Parkside outreach worker Mike&#13;
Plate is now interviewing&#13;
Parkside students in WLLC D-173.&#13;
Plate said he is looking for part or&#13;
full - time students interested in&#13;
part time and/or summer employment.&#13;
&#13;
"We're primarily looking for*"&#13;
students for casual or seasonal&#13;
employment," Plate said, adding&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
"In the past, we've placed&#13;
students as file clerks, clerk&#13;
typists, restaurant workers and&#13;
sales clerks, to name a few of the&#13;
positions that have been available&#13;
to students."&#13;
For more information about Job&#13;
Service employment, students can&#13;
call Plate at ext. 2656 b etween 8&#13;
a.m. and 3 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Friday.&#13;
second in this event) as well as the&#13;
Mile Relay. The top contender for&#13;
UW-P in the Long Jump will be&#13;
JoAnne Carey (Racine Case) who&#13;
is jumping near her best for the&#13;
indoor season.&#13;
Other team points are expected&#13;
from KeUie Benzow in the Mile&#13;
and 1000, an event well suited to&#13;
her talents and from Wendy&#13;
Burman who will have to put out a&#13;
short burst 2 Mile effort. Also&#13;
competing will be Nicola Haylor&#13;
the Hurdles, Denise Schreiber in&#13;
the Shot Put, Sandy Venne in the&#13;
600 and Pam Carey in the 880&#13;
Relay with JoAnne Carey, Haylor,&#13;
Venne, or Spaciel.&#13;
"As a team," said Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson, "we can expect to be at&#13;
least in the top five teams.&#13;
LaCrosse has won the meet in the&#13;
past, but this year too many teams&#13;
have top point - getters including&#13;
us as well as Marquette,&#13;
Milwaukee and a few surprises&#13;
from Eau Claire. If things go as&#13;
planned we could end up with&#13;
about 60 points which could give&#13;
us second place. We're ready."&#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 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#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;
i!6204-22nd Avenue, Kenosha 658-2498&#13;
"A zany comedy of brilliant wit."&#13;
— Boston Globe&#13;
LA C AGE&#13;
AUX FOLLES&#13;
(Birds of a Feather)&#13;
A FILM BY EDOUARDMOLINARO&#13;
SUNDAY, MARCH 29, 1981&#13;
5 pm, MARKET SQUARE THEATERS, $3.50&#13;
8600 Sheridan Road, Kenosha&#13;
Sponsored by Friends of the Kenosha Public Library &#13;
8 Thursday, March 26, 1981 RANGER&#13;
Financial aid deadline April 15&#13;
An important message to students&#13;
from Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 9, issue 23, March 26, 1981</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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