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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 10, issue 18</text>
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            <text>Teaching Excellence procedure unchanged</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>~If University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Thursday .. February 11, 1982 ·Vol. 10 - No. 18&#13;
SGA submits new budget&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
fter rejecting the total&#13;
regaled fees budget as too low&#13;
Jan 22 the Parkside Student&#13;
ernme~t AsSociation (PSGA)&#13;
bmitted their budget to the&#13;
regaled University Fees&#13;
tioo Committee (SUFAC)&#13;
fnday. The new budget&#13;
ed an increase of 133.8% over&#13;
originally submitted budget,&#13;
a total PSGA request of&#13;
~. mie new PSGA budget request&#13;
es increases· in all areas&#13;
1gnated "Operating Ex."&#13;
including salaries and&#13;
es, supplies, servi~E:S! travel,&#13;
1pment repairs, utilities, and&#13;
r capital equipment. The&#13;
titutionality of the re-&#13;
1tted budget is being studied.&#13;
jor increases appear in the&#13;
· of salaries, services and&#13;
~el The president of PSGA's&#13;
~ request jumped from $500&#13;
$1500, while the vice president's&#13;
ry moved up from $200 to $500.&#13;
secretary's salary request&#13;
bled with an increase of $400.&#13;
·ident Jim Kreuser justified&#13;
salary increases by stating&#13;
t "the President's salary&#13;
Id cover tuition, books and&#13;
1&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanden&#13;
SUFAC CHAiRMAN Luis Valldetull (left) opens SUFAC&#13;
meeting.&#13;
parking fees for the year. It is&#13;
traditional that the v.p.'s salary is&#13;
half of the president's. And, I'd&#13;
rather have the secretary around&#13;
instead of having work wait for&#13;
clays. It all has to with running an&#13;
efficient organization."&#13;
Services were partially increased&#13;
to cover a proposed on •&#13;
campus legal aid office. "We've&#13;
been kicking around the idea for a&#13;
long time," Kreuser said. "Now it&#13;
seems like if we put it off, no one&#13;
will ever do it. But the students&#13;
(on SUFAC) can do as they wish.&#13;
You got to remember, though,&#13;
that times are rough ; costs are&#13;
getting pushed onto students more&#13;
and more. A legal service would&#13;
belp a lot of people." The proposed&#13;
budget for the legal service is set&#13;
at $6700, up from the original&#13;
$1500.&#13;
eaching Excellence&#13;
rocedure unchanged&#13;
Other services increases&#13;
proposed by the $5200 increase&#13;
reflect increases in standing&#13;
committee operations budgets&#13;
and a proposal to install phones in&#13;
the Parkside parking lots,&#13;
Kreuser said.&#13;
In the area or travel, a proposed&#13;
·increase of $2000 (for a $3000 total&#13;
budget) will cover PSGA travel&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
ter the recent issues and&#13;
ments brought up over the&#13;
dler Excellence Awards, it&#13;
been suggested that the&#13;
ure this year be run under&#13;
current policy.&#13;
ring the December 1981&#13;
rsily Committee meeting,&#13;
e Norwood introduced a&#13;
I to approve the resolution&#13;
I v.ould replace the current&#13;
on leaching awards. The&#13;
ilied changes would have&#13;
adened the eligibility&#13;
irernents and cut down the&#13;
ial number of nominees&#13;
60 to 30. Carl Lindner moved&#13;
I lhe matter be ref erred back&#13;
the University Committee for&#13;
study and for PSGA to&#13;
de a draft policy to the&#13;
tnillee&#13;
~ reb. 3, a memorandum was&#13;
rom Kreuser to Norwood&#13;
~ '1! is felt by most that&#13;
ng With guidelines for the&#13;
cher Exc~llence at this point&#13;
not be Ill the best interest of&#13;
I carnn,a-,. ... "&#13;
1 was the general consensus&#13;
Id the rewriting of these&#13;
ehnes should be handled&#13;
gh PSGA, but that rushing&#13;
gh these steps would not give&#13;
~erned a chance to offer&#13;
ter ~acuJty Senate and the&#13;
sity Committee suggested&#13;
exisa~Ratner to go ahead with&#13;
icy ~ng policy. The current&#13;
s tes that no fewer than&#13;
~ no more than five&#13;
.°.". angte edx c· ellence awards shall&#13;
rnore IhaI ll an acad~mic year.&#13;
1tuti~J none member of the&#13;
!Cl! staff of an academic&#13;
the sha~ ~eceive the award&#13;
lgibJe ~C1p1ents will remain&#13;
rs aft or ~ ~ward for five&#13;
er rece1v1ng it.&#13;
ig~n ~f Faculty, or his/her&#13;
Will coordinate the&#13;
nomination and selection&#13;
procedure and serve as a non ·&#13;
voting advisor to both the&#13;
nomina6on and selection committees.&#13;
The nominations of candidates&#13;
shall be accomplished by an all ·&#13;
unit committee composed of one&#13;
student selected by each program&#13;
faculty. The committee shall&#13;
begin the nomination process at&#13;
the beginning of the second&#13;
semester and shall publicize the&#13;
nature ~f the award, solicit&#13;
nominees, and evaluate the&#13;
nomination forms received from&#13;
students. The members of the&#13;
committee may attend.the classes&#13;
of individuals nominated by&#13;
students to evaluate them. Based&#13;
entirely oo the nomination forms&#13;
received from students and other&#13;
materials relevant to teaching,&#13;
and specific criteria de~eloped by&#13;
the selections committee, the&#13;
committee shall nominate a slate&#13;
of candidates, and forwar~ the&#13;
slate to the selections comrruttee.&#13;
The selection of the recipients of&#13;
the teaching awards shall be&#13;
made from the slate of candidates&#13;
by a committee compos~ of _four&#13;
members of the nominations&#13;
committee, sele~ted by the&#13;
nominations committee and four&#13;
faculty members. The faculty&#13;
members shall be sel~ted from&#13;
the nominations committee _fr?m&#13;
among the facu_Jty rece1vmg&#13;
awards .in the prior two years.&#13;
Should fewer than four faculty&#13;
members be available_ to serve,&#13;
the nominations committee shall&#13;
select additional faculty me~bers&#13;
The committee shall begin&#13;
the ~ lection process no later than&#13;
tour weeks before the ~~d of ~e&#13;
second semester. _Add1bonal mforma&#13;
tion oo cand1datE:5 may be&#13;
solicited by the committee from&#13;
the academic divisions.&#13;
This policy was approved by the&#13;
Faculty Senate in December 1979.&#13;
Petitions available for&#13;
PSGA spring elections&#13;
The preparation for the&#13;
spring PSGA elections is now&#13;
underway Petitions for the&#13;
positions \1.111 become &amp;\'allable&#13;
on Feb 15 and mw.t be turned&#13;
m to the PSGA Elections&#13;
Committee by Feb. 26. The&#13;
ballot position draw111g .... m&#13;
take place on March 1, and an&#13;
absentee ballot will be read,• on&#13;
March 2. Write in candidates&#13;
will be accepted on March 5&#13;
and the elections will take&#13;
place on March 10 and 11.&#13;
costs to and from Umted Council&#13;
meetings at UW schools around&#13;
the s tate. "In the past, \\e·ve had&#13;
maybe one person attending UC&#13;
meetings," Kreuser said. "~ow&#13;
we have four vote; on the Council,&#13;
with maybe seven people attending&#13;
the meellngs."&#13;
Other smaller increases \\ ere&#13;
a lso proposed to cover and&#13;
maintain an effic ient student&#13;
government operauon. Kreuser&#13;
said&#13;
Luis Valldejuli. chal!' o( the&#13;
SUFAC committee, sa id that&#13;
PSGA justices ar(' current!)&#13;
studying the const11uuooality ol&#13;
the re-submitted PSGA budget. A&#13;
request to the Justices to rule on&#13;
the constitutionality of the matter&#13;
and to make suggestions to&#13;
SlIFAC regard~ action to be&#13;
taken was made by SUFAC in a&#13;
motion which passed the com•&#13;
mittee unanimously on Friday&#13;
Valldejuli commented ''This&#13;
the first time anything like this&#13;
has happened at Parkside to my&#13;
knowledge "&#13;
Another motion, lostay,nth the&#13;
&lt;riginal PSGA budget until the&#13;
constitutionality or the new&#13;
request has been tested, passed 3-&#13;
1--0, with Ken Meyer, Greg Da,i&#13;
and Valldejuli voting m favor, and&#13;
Phil Pogreba voting again:.t&#13;
Although PSGA has the power to&#13;
accept or veto a total segregated&#13;
fees alloca uon each J ear, Kreuser&#13;
said that there is no more conflict&#13;
ol interest involved this year than&#13;
in any other year.&#13;
"U we"d wanted to do this&#13;
(increase lhe PSGA l&gt;udgeU the&#13;
first time, there "'ould ha\-e been&#13;
The consUtution or PSGA,&#13;
Inc gh cert n minimum&#13;
rcqulremen\5 lo bccom&#13;
Prt'Sident, \ ic Pr dcnl&#13;
Senator, or a 'AC m m&#13;
I You are a tudenl al W •&#13;
Parkside&#13;
2 \' ou are CXUT)'hlg l st&#13;
six ( G) crcchls&#13;
3 You tin, a GP.A or t&#13;
lmst 1.0&#13;
4 Yoo re not on final&#13;
academic probation&#13;
conflict ol tntcrest Bl1)"' 11Y When&#13;
lSUl-'AC) "'as t up. it wa x&#13;
senators an:i hoo others lbcJ&#13;
"'ere usually ex • en ton.&#13;
~metuncs ~ts ha~ n lclt&#13;
open I'm \\orlting ~ the con&#13;
sutution. It's nc-.er been deter&#13;
mined that a budget couldn l be&#13;
brought m late •&#13;
Sena tor t ikc P!a!O&#13;
rte1o\ budget "' a "hard&#13;
to go through "',th " But he d&#13;
" the budget is needed to n 1Jo,.\;&#13;
Parksi~ lo become more out&#13;
~ken 1n the 80'11 It p.-irt the&#13;
plan to make PSGA more , bl&#13;
But ..., c11 also be look t other&#13;
budgclS - th re are others that&#13;
should be U1Creascd too, but ...,c&#13;
can only ugg l whcr lhe&#13;
a-ca should be "&#13;
RESULTS&#13;
OF MARUUA A&#13;
DECRIM ALIZA TK)&#13;
SURVEY&#13;
93 Yes&#13;
92 No&#13;
2 Thursday, February 11, 1982 RANGER&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Headline was misleading&#13;
ment at Parkside and not an insinuation&#13;
that Peter Seybold is, at&#13;
the moment, being forced out of&#13;
Parkside. The article's title used&#13;
was very misleading in this&#13;
respect.&#13;
~~~t&#13;
~~NA TIONAL RIFLE&#13;
ASSOCIATION&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
In regards to my Feb~ry ~th&#13;
letter to the editor dealing with&#13;
Peter Seybold's teaching abilities,&#13;
I would like to say that the title&#13;
used for the article was not&#13;
v. ritten by me. and does not&#13;
reflect the intended iXJ rpose or&#13;
content or the letter The title I&#13;
had chosen was "Peter Seybold's&#13;
Teaching Excellence." The final&#13;
statement in my article read,&#13;
"The students have the most to&#13;
Jose if Peter is forced to leave&#13;
Parkside." was intended as a&#13;
comment on the tenure system in&#13;
the Behavioral Science Depart-&#13;
I{Tl\' SALf.-APPROVED&#13;
The purpose of my letter was to SIJPER BIJI,1,l~T&#13;
merely share with you my own&#13;
personal assessment of Peter&#13;
Seybold's teaching qualities. I&#13;
believe that the content of my&#13;
letter bears this out. For those&#13;
who have conscientiously read my&#13;
at&amp;,ti,~:&#13;
· AHY Jlfll.l. IN&#13;
.IIIY BIIILP/Htil&#13;
letter. I thank you!&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Joseph L. Ripp&#13;
· JS N.IJ/Y .IS 4&#13;
.BULLET-P,f()()~ JIE_SlJl&#13;
Students cheated by loss&#13;
To the Editor: than we had th'ought possible.&#13;
As a recent Parkside graduate Students in Mary Beth's class&#13;
m the Sociology / Anthropology were consistently treated as&#13;
discipline, I am dismayed to learn valuable human beings. No&#13;
the department will suffer the question or comment was brushed&#13;
tremendous Joss or two fine junior aside or labeled insignificant.&#13;
faculty members - Mary Beth During her time at Parkside,&#13;
Gallagher and Jim Bearden. Mary Beth has worked at&#13;
These outstanding teachers developing trust and respect in the&#13;
represent the very heart, the professor / student relationship.&#13;
meaning, of a university These few thoughts do not ateducation.&#13;
Each has provided tempt to speak to the sound&#13;
students with the tools to learn academic qualifications each of&#13;
more about themselves as in- these fine teachers possesses. The&#13;
~tvl•=~~l?&#13;
~LJJ",:C -"i:fii=~ P"-~-$z:. ====::3&#13;
Is Sun Myung Moon right or wrong?&#13;
dividuals, while expanding quality of text selection and class To the Editor:&#13;
students' understanding of preparation was irreproachable. Just look at all the evil and&#13;
diverse peoples and social orders. Students were encouraged to wrong in this world! There's got to&#13;
This awakening of students minds learn and retain in an atmosphere be an answer for all this lying and&#13;
and widening of comprehension is of mutual respect and hating and warring - and there&#13;
a vital component ci university coopera ti.on. is! If you encountered a Moonie&#13;
education. In the Jong view, the students at here at Parkside during the last&#13;
Jim Bearden's ability to teach Parkside have been cheated by couple days of January, you've&#13;
the "thankless" Behavioral the Joss of these exemplary possibly already heard a similar&#13;
Science Statistics class with wit teachers. Mary Beth and Jim will line. However, if you've never&#13;
and untiring patience made that move and take with them their thought about the answer to this&#13;
required course bearable and enthusiasm, knowledge, and question, please take time to&#13;
even enjoyable. He was always teaching talent. And the Parkside consider two possibilities now.&#13;
available to answer questions and Sociology Department will A Moonie would tell you that the&#13;
provide assistance for students. struggle to fill the void when they evil of this world is evidence that&#13;
Mary Beth Gallagher's concern leave, trying to maintain some Jesus Christ failed to entirely&#13;
that students realize their full student confidence and interest in fulfill his purpose. According to&#13;
potential enabled many of us to the Soc/ Anthro discipline. the Moonies I spoke with and some&#13;
r •mpt and to achieve far more From th;f ii~ researeh I've done concerning&#13;
- 10 years ago&#13;
"HEAR Favors Centralization of&#13;
financial Aids" by Jim Koloen&#13;
Wlule Parkside is making 30&#13;
percent more financial aid&#13;
available to students than it did&#13;
one year ago, an effort is underway&#13;
which would affect the&#13;
d1spos1tion of state grants so that&#13;
they would primarily benefit&#13;
underclassmen. A few months&#13;
ago, Jan Ocker, Director of&#13;
Financial Aids and Placement&#13;
informed Newscope that $550,000&#13;
from federal, state and private&#13;
sources is available to Parkside&#13;
students this school year. Of this&#13;
sum, federal funding accounts for&#13;
$210,000, private sources make&#13;
available $38,000. and state grants&#13;
and loans total a _&gt;Yhopping&#13;
$212,000. $73,500 in state grants&#13;
and scholarships is the amount&#13;
which is most directly effected by&#13;
the changes in disposition.&#13;
In recent weeks Newscope has&#13;
learned that the Higher&#13;
Educalional Aids Board &lt;HEAB)&#13;
has taken it upon itself to change&#13;
the rules that affect the&#13;
disposilion of financial aids. Such&#13;
rules will probably not go into&#13;
effect until the fall of 1972.&#13;
The proposed change in&#13;
financial aids rules represents one&#13;
effect of the recent merger. The&#13;
• UW System Executive Council of&#13;
Chancellors discussed the&#13;
financial aids question first in its&#13;
Jan. 6 meeting. The Council has&#13;
informed that an HEAB comm&#13;
I tlee was considering rule&#13;
changes that would: (1) make&#13;
ne~ t_he s_ole rather than primary&#13;
&lt;:nt~non m awarding grants, (2)&#13;
hmJt all state aid to freshmen and&#13;
sop~ornores, cutting juniors and&#13;
seniors off from such assistance&#13;
13) require the campuses t~&#13;
allocate non-state aid (federal and&#13;
private sources) on the same&#13;
basis ~ they had before, thereby&#13;
.' .l.'O. ntmm.n. g their past ''level of ' , ...&#13;
effort" with non - state funds.&#13;
-Newscope, February 7, 1972&#13;
- 5 years ago&#13;
"Assistant Chancellor resigns" by&#13;
Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Erwin F. Zuehlke, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Administration at&#13;
Parkside announced his&#13;
resignation last Friday. Zuehlke&#13;
also announced his appointment&#13;
effective April 1, as vice president&#13;
for administration at Beloit&#13;
College in Beloit, Wisconsin.&#13;
Zuehlke's resignation announcement&#13;
came just 12 days&#13;
after Chancellor Alan Guskin's&#13;
administration reorganization&#13;
was made public. In Chancellor&#13;
Guskin's memo of Jan. 24, Guskin&#13;
outli~ed that. after "lengthy&#13;
meetings with senior administrators,"&#13;
including Assistant&#13;
Chancellor Zuehlke, he was able&#13;
to fire eight administrators and&#13;
reallocate three clerical&#13;
secretaries in his administrative&#13;
reorganization.&#13;
Zuehlke was asked Sunday by&#13;
Ranger News Editor John&#13;
McKloskey if the recent administrative&#13;
reorganization had&#13;
anything to do with his&#13;
resignation.&#13;
"Emphatically no. It does not&#13;
h~ve a~ythin~ to do with it. My&#13;
discussions wtth Beloit began two&#13;
to three months ago. I feel bad my&#13;
announcement had to come at the&#13;
same time as Chancellor&#13;
G~kin's," Zuehlke replied.&#13;
My feelings are very mixed&#13;
to"._Vard Parkside. I think it is&#13;
going to be one of the better uw&#13;
campuses. I am moving for&#13;
professiona I reasons only "&#13;
Zuehlke added. '&#13;
. Ranger learned from two undisclosed&#13;
sources in the administration&#13;
that although&#13;
Zuehl_ke and officials at Beloit had&#13;
been m contact for more than two&#13;
months, the final decision was&#13;
made by Zuehlke last Wednesday&#13;
or Thursday.&#13;
-February 9, 1977&#13;
- I year ago&#13;
"SOC change started" by Susan&#13;
Michetti&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association held an&#13;
emergency Senate meeting on&#13;
Feb. 6 to discuss a possible&#13;
solution to the SOC budget&#13;
alloca lions controversy.&#13;
Kathy Slama, PSGA Assistant&#13;
President Pro Tempore&#13;
presented a motion for discussio~&#13;
only. She explained, "In the PSGA&#13;
Constitution, SOC is defined as a&#13;
subcommittee of the Senate. As&#13;
such, there's been very limited&#13;
communication between SOC and&#13;
the Senate. Our proposal would&#13;
hopefully rectify that situation."&#13;
Slama said, "SOC as a committee&#13;
would still be intact.&#13;
However, there would be a six&#13;
member group which would be an&#13;
al!~atin~ and reviewing group.&#13;
The six member group would&#13;
be made up of four club presidents&#13;
or their designees of SUF AC. One&#13;
Sena.tor and these four club&#13;
prestden~s ~ould be voting,"&#13;
Slama said. The chairperson of&#13;
this committee would be the&#13;
, ~sis~ant chairperson of SOC. SOC&#13;
is going to be broken up into two&#13;
pa~ts: a main group which is&#13;
going to be called the General SOC&#13;
and ~ budgeting and review&#13;
committee."&#13;
She said that each club will&#13;
pr1:5e~t its budget at SOC. Any&#13;
obJechons to a budget would be&#13;
pres~nted . t? the chairperson of&#13;
SOC m writing and, she said, the&#13;
Senate would vote on the final&#13;
approval of the budget.&#13;
".S~C finally approves the&#13;
rev1s1ons that the group has made&#13;
on these budgets. Then the&#13;
~dgets get sent to the Senate for&#13;
fmal approval," she said.&#13;
- February 12, 1981&#13;
them, Christ's purpose was to&#13;
bring spiritual and physical&#13;
salvation to all men by Him finding&#13;
the perfect mate with whom&#13;
to establish God's perfect loving&#13;
family. Had Christ not been killed&#13;
on the cross, he would have accomplished&#13;
this complete&#13;
salvation. However, the Moonies&#13;
do not accept Jesus as Savior in&#13;
the sense that his death did bring&#13;
spiritual salvation. But all the&#13;
same Christ's death is a&#13;
"secondary way" to obtain&#13;
salvation according to Barbara,&#13;
one of the Moonies. Their belief is&#13;
that God is leading man to&#13;
physical salvation through Sun&#13;
Myung Moon. In 1936 Moon claims&#13;
to have had a revelation in which&#13;
Jesus told him that he was chosen&#13;
of God to finish the work Jesus&#13;
failed to complete. During the&#13;
next several years Moon says that&#13;
God inspired his writing of the&#13;
Divine Principle which is&#13;
regarded as complimentary to&#13;
and equally as much the Word of&#13;
God as the Bible. It was during&#13;
this time that Moon established&#13;
the "perfect family" thus blazing&#13;
the way by which one must come&#13;
to get physical salvation. Persons&#13;
of this "perf~t family" are all&#13;
members of Moon's Unifi&#13;
Church, and when everyoo&#13;
joined their movement, the&#13;
of this world will be done&#13;
with, they claim.&#13;
But is this really the a&#13;
Let's find out by challengin&#13;
Moonies belief that the&#13;
Principle and the Bible&#13;
coequal compliments wi&#13;
conflicts. The Divine Pr'&#13;
says that Christ's crucifi&#13;
prevented Him from m&#13;
complete salvation availa&#13;
·man. (Salvation is the comin&#13;
a right rel&lt;!tionship with&#13;
Here's what the Bible says:&#13;
even the Son of Man came&#13;
be served, but to serve and to 1&#13;
His life a ransom for m&#13;
(Mark 10:45), "In Him we&#13;
redemption through His bl&#13;
forgiveness of our tresp&#13;
according to the riches cl&#13;
grace." (Ephesians 1:7),&#13;
"For God so loved the worl&#13;
He gave His only begotten 1~&#13;
that whoever believes in&#13;
should not perish but&#13;
everlasting life." (John 3:16&#13;
short, these verses say&#13;
Christ's blood was the ra&#13;
Continued On Page Th&#13;
Write a · letter&#13;
to Ranger!&#13;
Ken Meyer G'.&gt;a nger Edi&#13;
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Steve Myers co-Photo Ed!&#13;
Mark Sanders co-Photo Ed•f&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manag&#13;
Andy Petersen Advertising Mana9&#13;
Linda Andersen Asst. Business Manag&#13;
Juli Janovicz STAFF Distribution Mana&#13;
Linda. Adams, Greg Bonofiglio, Carol Burns, Pai&#13;
~Luisa, Mary Kaddatz, Joe Kimm, Karla Kobal, L&#13;
Lmstroth, Rick Luehr, Paul Neil, Chuck Ostrows&#13;
Masood Shafiq, Kim Schlater, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students ot uw.Parkslde and mey are sol&#13;
resp~ns,ble for its editorial policy and content 1kfl&#13;
:~b~•~~~ ~very ThurSday during the academic Year except during break~ an\~.&#13;
Written ,s Pn~ted_by the·Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wiscon&#13;
All cor:"'rml~sic,n ,s requ,red tor reprint ot any portion of RANGER. ot3'/, U&#13;
Parksid esrn ~ce Should be addressed lo: Parkside Ranger, WlLC&#13;
e, eno,.,a, WI 53141 d s • ;!;!,":'':..,'fhth" Editor will be ·acceQled if t ypewritten, doublespaced on Slan::b"'&#13;
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defamatory con'r:::;;~1 prov,leges in refusing lo print letters Which con a&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February n . lffl 3&#13;
Myung Moon&#13;
_ continued from page 2 -&#13;
Grade alterations reported&#13;
us from our bondage&#13;
p1 to f~ch would otherwise&#13;
1 siD r condemnation. These&#13;
l in :ict a very complete&#13;
along with many others.&#13;
u~ interesting to note that&#13;
its aks nothing of what&#13;
Bib~: to as " physical&#13;
1100&#13;
~~ of the evil of today's&#13;
Bat~ ask. God's viewpoint as&#13;
~th rough the Bible is that&#13;
1&gt;eeause all persons are&#13;
~~I) sinfuJ (disobed_ient)&#13;
ura Hun. "For all have smned&#13;
faDen short of the glory of&#13;
.. {Romans 3:23) 'J'.herefore&#13;
.,u do wrongs rangmg from&#13;
byJeHWicks&#13;
As all continuing students know.&#13;
a grade report was issued last&#13;
semester which was different&#13;
from previous reports. This&#13;
transcript - type document contained&#13;
not only Fall grades but a&#13;
complete record taken of all work&#13;
accomplished at Parkside, including&#13;
transfer courses and&#13;
collegiate skills requirements.&#13;
Although the document is not an&#13;
official transcript, it does show a&#13;
student his / her performaoce on&#13;
all course work achieved.&#13;
"In a sense, what it's doing is&#13;
showing the students something&#13;
that we've always had on them,&#13;
but they would have to come and&#13;
see us specially," said Susan&#13;
Johnson, Director Institutional&#13;
Analysis and Registration.&#13;
Under the old system, the&#13;
Student Reoords office did not&#13;
have fiJes 11,hich v.we "on-line"&#13;
v.1th the computer S) em.&#13;
after the grade report \\815&#13;
produced and sent to the student,&#13;
a large amount of la ere&#13;
made oC e\en· 'ltudents' coirse&#13;
and grade. Then, each la " s&#13;
tndi\'tdually put on the students"&#13;
permanent file, and after ~cey&#13;
semester a card was added ~&#13;
the Student Records Office&#13;
alwai:. accesiiible to the cunput.er&#13;
system&#13;
Grades are wntteu on In•&#13;
dividual pnnt - out sheets \\1licb&#13;
go through a saoner. This in tum&#13;
pi clts up the grade and lnl mf ers it&#13;
to the computer ystem which&#13;
trints out a full tramcnpt that !S&#13;
sent lo the student&#13;
Under the old sy em, it used to&#13;
take a long time to ~e a&#13;
, to warring. God's cure for&#13;
situation is that you "confess&#13;
,our mouth Jesus as Lord&#13;
t,e!Jeve in your heart that God&#13;
Him from the dead, (for&#13;
1 vou shall be saved." 0 ii; 10:9) It is onJy throu~&#13;
a personal relationship&#13;
Christ that He can show _us&#13;
to overcome sin through Him&#13;
li\·e harmoniously with God&#13;
man. "I can do all things&#13;
sp irits, and the doctrines of&#13;
devils (I Timothy 4:1) having a&#13;
form of godliness, but denying&#13;
the power thereof." (2 Timothy&#13;
4:1) and they shall" . . . secretly&#13;
introduce destructive heresies,&#13;
even denying the Master (Christ)&#13;
who bought them." (2 Peter 2: 1)&#13;
ChristHimselfsaid "Uanyonesays&#13;
to you, 'Behold the Christ' &lt;r&#13;
'Behold, He is there,' do not&#13;
believe him for false Christs and&#13;
false prophets will arise and show&#13;
signs and wonders." (Mark 13 :21·&#13;
22) Moon has risen up claiming&#13;
that God has chosen him to lead&#13;
man to complete salvation just as&#13;
Christ did "what He could to lead&#13;
man to spiritual salvation." Moon&#13;
thus makes himself out to be&#13;
another Christ. (Christ in Greek,&#13;
the language most of the New&#13;
Testament was written in, means&#13;
"Annointed One") Jesus Christ is&#13;
God's only Annointed One·through&#13;
which salvation and a better way&#13;
of life is offered. The Bible as is, is&#13;
complete in itself. God's plan of&#13;
salvation for you and me and&#13;
through this, a better plan for the&#13;
world, is completely described in&#13;
the Bible.&#13;
Annual Capsule College scheduled&#13;
Hirn who strengthens&#13;
" , philJipians 4: 13) So then,&#13;
0 me becomes a Christian&#13;
saved) he receives the gift of&#13;
I life and when that person&#13;
depend on Christ for strength&#13;
IPJidance in his life, then he&#13;
1-ork to make this world truly&#13;
be(ter place.&#13;
a.. what about Sun Myung aoo his Divine Principle?&#13;
tells us that "in the latter&#13;
some shall depart 1rom the&#13;
. giving heed to seducin~&#13;
I leave the final conclusion up to&#13;
you - is Moon one of truth or&#13;
error? Research it yourself if&#13;
you're interested. If you have any&#13;
questions or desire more in·&#13;
formation, stop by at the Inter ·&#13;
Varsity Christian Fellowship book&#13;
table by the bookstore on Thursdays.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Dan Suiter&#13;
Capsule College, the annual&#13;
program of non • credit courses&#13;
during spring break, is scheduled&#13;
this year for Tuesday evening,&#13;
March 16, and all day Wednesday&#13;
and Thursday , March 17 and 18.&#13;
Registration deadline is March S.&#13;
More than 100 different courses&#13;
will be offered during the three&#13;
sessions. Participants can&#13;
register for the evening session&#13;
only, one day, both days or&#13;
evening and day sessions.&#13;
A survey last fall of previous&#13;
participants in Capsule College&#13;
indicated high interest in topics&#13;
related to the economy and coping&#13;
with tough times. Those areas are&#13;
***********Club Events***********&#13;
01 Wednesday, Feb. 17, Inter •&#13;
·1y &lt;llristian Fellowship will&#13;
If their series of talks on the&#13;
ol James at the 1 p.m. large&#13;
meeting in Union W7.&#13;
· on James I will be&#13;
Gail Zimmerman of the&#13;
de Baptist church. Thf'&#13;
t ol James is the practiea,&#13;
lioo cl Christianity in our&#13;
Everyone is invited.&#13;
The Industrial and En·&#13;
mental Hygiene Club will&#13;
a pro-nuclear speaker on&#13;
ay, Feb. 24. More inbon&#13;
Will be available in next&#13;
's Ra~er.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
What is happening with Women&#13;
in Business? New events are&#13;
constantly being added to the list&#13;
of things to do:&#13;
Feb. 10: Display table for SOC&#13;
fair - Business Women World&#13;
Magazine will be sold.&#13;
Feb. 15: Phi Gamma Nu in·&#13;
formation meeting.&#13;
Feb. 16: General business&#13;
meeting for all members, with&#13;
evening students in mind. The&#13;
time is from 5:15 p.m. to6:15 p.m.&#13;
Please check the club boards for&#13;
the place.&#13;
Feb. 17: Seminar, Elizabeth&#13;
J anicek investment executive for&#13;
Shearso~ / American Express&#13;
Inc., from 5:15 p.m. to 6:~5 p._m.&#13;
Please keep these dates m nund&#13;
and we hope to see you at these&#13;
events.&#13;
Geology Colloquium Accounting Club&#13;
ogy Colloquium this week On Feb~ 15 at 7 p.m . . in ui:uon&#13;
.,. be Synthetic Fuels 104, Education Alternative N1~ht&#13;
uupment. Speaking will be will be the theme of an Accounting&#13;
James A. White of Standard .Club Roundtable. Featured&#13;
looiana. The talk will be speakers will include: Robert&#13;
11,re&lt;f on Friday, Feb. 12, at 1 Yahr of Marquette Univer~i!)' ·&#13;
111 Greenquist 113. Masters of Accountancy; William&#13;
Raabe of UW-Milwaukee ·&#13;
Masters of Taxation; William&#13;
Murin of Parkside • Masters of&#13;
Public Administration; and Ar·&#13;
thur Dudycha of Parkside •&#13;
Masters of Business Ad·&#13;
ministratim. Attend this event&#13;
and discover your possibilities&#13;
after graduation.&#13;
Computer Oub&#13;
The Parkside Computer Club&#13;
will hold a special meeting m&#13;
Monday, Feb. 15 at 1 p.m. in Moln&#13;
0137. The topic concerns the&#13;
upcoming Comput_er ~a~ . .. The&#13;
theme of this years fair is The&#13;
Recreational Use of Computers."&#13;
AIJ students willing to participate&#13;
in the running or the fair are en·&#13;
couraged to attend this meeting.&#13;
Political Science Club&#13;
On Feb. 17, a representabve cl&#13;
the Socialis t Party will be&#13;
speaking on alt~atives lo the&#13;
1982 elections. It -,-.ill be m M~ln&#13;
109 at 1 p.m. This event 1s being&#13;
sponsored by the Political Science&#13;
Club. Remember the club~s&#13;
meeting on Feb. 15 al 1 p.m. U1&#13;
Moln. u2. New members are&#13;
always welcome.&#13;
orkshops address alc~~o~!!~ ...~ ':~~"' 0 '""&#13;
~ aspects of alcoholism graduate students. Ti:: m at Coordinator, MentaJ Health&#13;
~ SCrutiniz~d thi~ serl_lester will be froi:n 8 a.m. to · p. · Association of Racine County.&#13;
r noncredit Uruvers1ty of UW-Parkside. 25 . Class will meet on 4 Wednesdays •&#13;
.&#13;
10&#13;
• Extension seminars at Beginning FebruartY_ and 7.9 pm. in Tallent Hall oC UW·&#13;
de "Families II - lnterven 10n ks.. d '&#13;
Pebruar . " . Skills." An explora~on Par I e. .&#13;
t Y 18· 19. Human Coun.selmg . nd intervention April 15-16: "Children of Alcoh~l ~ J ,Alco_hol~nd Other D~g of. counseling a to deal with and Drug Impaired Parents." 'Yill&#13;
· ObJectives of this skill~. necessaohry r Instructor: er behavior and lea_rni~g&#13;
r are to familiarize par· families of ale O ics. r - ~ov cl children who reside m&#13;
nts With the range of ex- Lynda Flower~Blac~ u~fed ifu:01 / drug abusing home;&#13;
~ of human sexuality and dinator of a new enos . ed t a co . h" between alcohol&#13;
P them feel comfortable in School District p~ogr~:1~ch~l r~l:;~ons i~~est, and family&#13;
OWn the aPPropriateness of junior an~ seruo~ oho! or other !iolen'ce; intervention mo~d&#13;
10 lhi professional develop· students with ~ a cwill meet on 8 For counselors, clergy, and&#13;
• ~ s area. The dynamics drug problem. ass. m in elf re clinicians. I~tructors are&#13;
tov ola~se and sexuality will Thursdays, 7:~_J\~·id~.' ~a~ Wene (abo,•el , and eai:oI&#13;
enrered, and levels of in• Tallent Hall at ach 24: Holston MSW of the same u111t.&#13;
be 10n ~cribed. Instructors Begin~ing Ma~f Society's Meetings will be held frofr! 8 a.m.&#13;
lad Fra~fie-i sexual therapists, "Alcohohsm_ - O~ Alcoholism's to 4:so p.m. at UW-Parkside.&#13;
'- At Wene from the Center Greatest Erugmas: . 1 family . •ty Extension at&#13;
~c~I and Other Drug effect O? the l inditi:::;lications; con;ic~ ~~:ero•r further in·&#13;
~Ith ·Extension, Madison. and society; f 'la nt's needs and UW· :r s&lt;1pbone 553.2312).&#13;
~~ aoo human service assessment o ~ e I tructor: forma on&#13;
- ' clergy, coumelors, and treatment available. ns&#13;
reflected in the l % program&#13;
Other classes deal 1th health,&#13;
fitness, personal development,&#13;
music, lita-ature, the arts, craft&#13;
and hobby interests, history,&#13;
science, travel, commumcation,&#13;
interpersonal relatlon~b1p ,&#13;
contemporary political, liOClal and&#13;
en\'ironmental issues and career -&#13;
related topics&#13;
Everung sessioo offenngs include&#13;
basic skills for wnt.cn.&#13;
coping \\ith stress, bracket c:req,&#13;
mvesli~, resume treparation.&#13;
microwave coo~. st.a.rung )'OUr&#13;
own small bust~, rhyUmuc&#13;
aerobics, 0\-ercorn~ sh~ and&#13;
becoming more asserllve.,&#13;
biofeedback techniques, stained&#13;
glass craft, a psychologital explanation&#13;
of violence and i~e&#13;
building ror the working woman.&#13;
Complete course listint?s and&#13;
registration forms are available&#13;
from UniverSJty Extension m&#13;
Tallent Hall at UW•P !Phone 553-&#13;
23121.&#13;
Registration fee 1s $4 for the&#13;
evening session and SlO for each&#13;
day. The day fee includes luncheon.&#13;
____________ ..., __&#13;
Write RANGER&#13;
____A__ L__e_t ter! __, ______ .._.&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS&#13;
Financial Aid funds for 198'2.:83 re llmltod.&#13;
Early appllcatlons ore encour cd&#13;
Apply by March 15 for prlort cxmsfderotfon&#13;
3532MEACHEMID&#13;
RAONE. WI ~ 05&#13;
PHONE (4\4) 554-&amp;iOO&#13;
Fl A CIAL AIDS OFFICE&#13;
784 T ALLE T HALL&#13;
. nw-s. lbun. f ri l.&#13;
~loo. \\td.W.30 ----...,-------~-&#13;
,... ____________ _&#13;
THI~ rouro~ "-onn1&#13;
$1 OFT \~V ER\ let:&#13;
E1.-pires F~b Ulh l&#13;
4&#13;
Thursday, February 11, 1982&#13;
RANGER&#13;
\'Q"~ \\\\~&#13;
What Is lnte&#13;
Carnival ~\\~~ 'Q\\~&#13;
~\\~~~\ \\ Winter Carnival is in its third year on uw.&#13;
Parkside campus. It is a week long event&#13;
designed to develop friendship and cararaderie&#13;
through a variety of Club and Individual&#13;
Competitions. The festivities traditionally begin&#13;
with the Parade on Monday and conclude with&#13;
the Dance on Friday. Everyone is welcome to&#13;
join in the fun! ,&#13;
WINTER CARNIVAL '8&#13;
PRIZES&#13;
Winter Carnival events are divided into two&#13;
general areas: Club or Organization Events and&#13;
Individual Events.&#13;
To qualify for club events your organization&#13;
must be registered in the Student Life Office&#13;
(Union 209). The Winter Carnival Committee&#13;
will award $150.00 and the Winter Carnival&#13;
Traveling Trophey to the organization that&#13;
scores the most points dorlng the carnival&#13;
through Club Events. Second and Third places&#13;
will also receive Sl00.00 and SS0.00 respectively,&#13;
and the second and third place traveling&#13;
tropheys. Cash prizes will be deposited in that&#13;
organization's private university account.&#13;
The point value system which will be used for&#13;
determining the winner ls:&#13;
1st Place - 150 Points&#13;
2nd Place - 100 Points&#13;
3rd Place . SO Points&#13;
• Particl pat ion . 25 Points&#13;
Sponsoring an Event . 125 Points&#13;
•only applies to organizations who did not place.&#13;
Contest results and Grand Prize winners will be&#13;
announced at the dance on Friday night,&#13;
February 5, 1982.&#13;
Individual events are open to all students,&#13;
faculty and staff. The Winter Carnival Committee&#13;
will award individual Events cash prizes&#13;
as follows:&#13;
1st place . $20.00&#13;
2nd place - Sl5.00&#13;
3rd place . Sl0.00&#13;
Forms for these contests are available at the&#13;
Union Information Desk. To register, return&#13;
entry form to the Union Information Desk.&#13;
.. Organizations sponsoring events may not&#13;
participate In that event.&#13;
M*A*S*H PARTY (Dance) Featuring "SPEED&#13;
KINGS"&#13;
N.onday, February 22, 8:00 p. m. Union Square&#13;
WINTER CARNIVAL PARADE&#13;
Nionday, February 22, l: 00 p. m.&#13;
through Main Concourse&#13;
CLUB EVENTS&#13;
1. WINDOW PAINTING&#13;
Sponsored by Winter Carnival Committee&#13;
Wednesday, February 17 - Monday, February 22&#13;
2. BANNER CONTEST&#13;
Sponsored by Cheerleaders&#13;
Banners should be completed by noon on&#13;
Monday, February 22&#13;
3. PARADE FLOAT CONTEST&#13;
Sponsored by Winter Carnival Committee&#13;
Monday, February 22&#13;
4. OUTDOOR VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT&#13;
Sponsored by Bowling Club&#13;
Tuesday, February 22 - Friday, February 26&#13;
S. SNOW SCULPTURE CONTEST&#13;
Sponsored by Winter Carnival Committee&#13;
Sculpture should be completed by noon on&#13;
Friday, February 26.&#13;
6. BLOOD DRIVE&#13;
Sponsored by Peer Support&#13;
Held February 3&#13;
This event was won by I.V.C.F.&#13;
INDIVIDUAL&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
l. BEER DRINKING RELAYS&#13;
Sponsored by PSGA&#13;
Monday, February 22, during M*A*S*H&#13;
2. M*A*S*H T~IVIA CONTEST&#13;
Sponsored by \ /inter Carnival Committee&#13;
IVlonday, February 22, during the M•A&#13;
Party&#13;
3. JELLO SLURPING CONTEST&#13;
Sponsored by PSGA&#13;
Monday, February 22, during the&#13;
Party&#13;
4. FASHION SHOW&#13;
Sponsored by Pi Sigma&#13;
Club)&#13;
Tuesday, February 23, 7:30 p. m. Union&#13;
S. RUBIK'S CUBE CONTEST&#13;
Sponsored by Pi Mu Epsilon (Math Club)&#13;
Tuesday, February 23, 12: 30 p. m. Union&#13;
6. EGG DROP CONTEST&#13;
Sponsored by Physics Club&#13;
Wednesday, February 2.4, 1: 00 p. m.&#13;
Bizaare&#13;
7. COLLEGE FAMILY FEUD&#13;
Sponsored by Winter Carnival Committee&#13;
Thursday, February 25, 5: oo p. m. Union&#13;
8. DIRTY JOKE CONTEST&#13;
Sponsored by Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
Club)&#13;
Friday, February 26, 12:00 p. m. Union&#13;
1&#13;
OTHER WINTER CARNIVAL EVENTS-____; ______ -::t'i&#13;
FRANK ABAGNALE Sponsored by PAB&#13;
Wednesday, February 24, 8:00 p. m.&#13;
Com. Arts Theatre&#13;
"THE BEST OF THE WORSE FILM FEST"&#13;
Tuesday, February 23, 8: oo p. m.&#13;
Union Sqaure&#13;
BASKETBALL PLAY-OFFS&#13;
UW-Parkside vs. Eau Claire&#13;
Thursday, February 25, 7: 30 p. m. PhY·&#13;
DANCE Featuring "OVERKILL"&#13;
Sponsored by PAB&#13;
Friday, February 26, 9:00 p. m. Union Sq&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION, pick up a Winter Carnival bookl t&#13;
.-:~~B~oo-ke-ts ore available at the Union Information Desk a n d ,.n th e St u d ent Life Office, Uen io• n Room 209.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Tyme may be running out at Parkside&#13;
Kirton K1.1ddatz up automatic teller. The user&#13;
~J ,ta~ one of the best inserts a plastic card (similar to a&#13;
~ ·stems in the country. credit card) and punches in a four&#13;
~d S) and legislators come digit P.I.N. (personal idenumers,&#13;
to map their Tyme tification number). The automatic v.~:;r ours," said Mich~el machine performs banking&#13;
elll~ afFirSt National Manne transactions in place of human&#13;
f Racine. tellers with your bank from&#13;
..,. I-' has been around anywhere in the state. The auto _&#13;
ffl!le bout four to five years. teller makes cash withdrawals&#13;
~•~National Marine Bank deposits money, and can transre;&#13;
~ fU'S ·ts ryme contract until money from savings to checking&#13;
~ed /March, 1982 in hopes of accounts. The Parkside machine&#13;
~ 0&#13;
its transactions to the can give yru cash in $20 bills up to&#13;
r,:¢Slng the machine could at $200 per day and up to $500 per&#13;
nf1 wtierf~r itself. The Parkside week. Visa and Mastercard may&#13;
paY ch'ine has had an in- also be tired into Tyme.&#13;
.-...- ..-, m. a activity si.n ce ·I t was ''The mai. n reason for removing&#13;
~ ;:1 Parkside. The goal was Tyme at Parkside is it's costing us&#13;
~ nsactions per month and money to keep the service," said&#13;
,') ~e averages 400 to 500 Falbo. The machine isn't paying&#13;
'.')1lSI ctiOOS per month. for itself because "there are no&#13;
!53,re not as interested in Kenosha banks issuing Tyme&#13;
"i\'t revenue as we a~e in cards. Parkside's Tyme machine&#13;
~ '"" a servic~ that _will be cannot work without a customer&#13;
~".;' said Bill Niebuhr, base," he said.&#13;
,g, rJ the Union. Ranger called Kenosha area&#13;
;tttore has been at Parkside banks for their reasons why they bank officials said, "It's on our counties in Wisconsin that not ~05 three years and is do not issue Tyme cards. Two future expansion plans, but the issue Tyme card.$ "People ho&#13;
in's largest, single most bank officials said, "It's too usage factor is cause for concern bank. at Kenosha banks do nm&#13;
__ ..,,_~&#13;
THE TYME MACHINE outside of Union Square.&#13;
~cated b~nki_ng service costly, equipment is around It would require a joint effort by baveaccessforapplyu~ forfyme&#13;
~statewide tie - m syste~ to $35,000 plus security for the Kenosha banks in order to pay for cards since b:inks are the on)) i' t,anks," said a Parkside machine. Locating the machine is the equipmenL" source for t-"suing cards," said&#13;
1U' a problem. Tyme machines need There are approximately 260 Falbo.&#13;
ll de's Tyme banking to be in high traffic areas such as Tyme installations in Wisconsin. " It's unlon1matc "-e're I&#13;
;:&#13;
1&#13;
works similar to a walk malls." Three of the Kenosha Kenosha County is one ex the fev. the Tyme equipment," id a r Scholarships available I Rotary Foundation&#13;
The Scholarship Bank h~s sociology: FieldResearch_project o"ers scholarsh·1ps ed ten new scholarship grants $300 to $600 per applicant to 111&#13;
...,wx:ms that are now accepting assist in a number of research&#13;
,~lions from college projects. Rotary Foimdation educational Scholarshi~. Apphcants may not&#13;
;dents. According to Steve Poynter_ Fund: Annual scholarships for young people for be marned and must be 18&#13;
l :a:. Director of the res~arch scholarships to $2,~00 for study abroad for academic year through 24-year- ,,d ~am. funds are now ava1la~le n~w.spap~r, broadcastmg,_ ad- 1983-84 have been announced ~Y Vocational Sc· larsh1ps are&#13;
• students in the following m1rustrabve or art. ~elated r1e~ds. Henry Vredeveld, Rotary District available to l)t."&lt; I"'· who have the&#13;
: Center_ for P_ohtic:-1 Stu~es: Governor 627. The aw_ards cover equivalent 01 a secondacy&#13;
Celltge teaching: The Danforth Offers internships 1~ poh~cal the cost of language instruction. education and ha\·e 11\orked lor&#13;
;i::xlation offers up to $3,500 J&gt;t:r sc1~ce, ec~nomics,_ Journ~hsm, transportation, food, lodging and two years in a technka1 field In&#13;
• to students interested m pubhc relat_ions, business, hiStory tuition. the past, student-" have studied&#13;
~ as a profession, with and education. .&#13;
1&#13;
k" f vocations from beekeeping to&#13;
roximately twenty - five The Scholarship ~ank w_ill send Rotarians are ' oo_ mg or h,·dro£oil construction \' tional&#13;
Jfffi1lofthe3,000 annual awards students. a pe~sona_hzed prmt - out !~~~~:s;~ufgr~ingy;eJ~~:n~ a\\·ardee. mu.t be 21 through&#13;
to m·,nority candidates. of the fmanc1al aid sources that . • et the. h el ds as ~·ears old r ·bl f st d nt can mterpr 1r om an ~ ·&#13;
[1teptio n a l Student !hey are ~igi _e 0&#13;
~· u e s wellasabsorbthecuJturesoftheir Teachers applvmg for Th&#13;
ifio11ships: Available for t~e u~tere&#13;
st~t us~ng ~s ne~ s:f country of study. Candidates must Teacher of the. Handicapped&#13;
er of 1982, these funds will vice sho sen f s amf ;h apply for the awards before scholarship must ha,e the&#13;
.;eel to offer summer em- addresse~ enve ope OS t! March 1 1982 through local equivalent of a ~econdary school&#13;
merit to students in busin_ess, Scho_larstup Bank, lOlOO an Rotary cl~bs where they reside or degree, ha,·e \\ orked \\Ith I.he&#13;
computer programmmg, Momca #750, L.A., CA 90067- t d handicapped for two )ears and&#13;
ffl1:1111~ and related fields. s u y. . • . 25 through 50-)ears old&#13;
M . lime year round em- Peer Support meets The Foundations scholarships . r of ........&#13;
~t and permanent em- are PI a ce d ·m t o ri·v e categon·es• the Apphcauons obre oabnt~a ined ur. .:::x:&#13;
tfment with one of the nation's All interested students are in- largest ?f which is the graduate ~~~~~~1: ~:b in your = tgest insurance companies is vited to the "How Are You Doing" fellowships. Ehach graduatfd m~J munity or l&gt;\ contactll)8 Llo.)'d E&#13;
available. meeting sponsored by Peer be 18 throug 28-ye~rs O ~ a Larson Rotar.) Foundation&#13;
.\Jt~ropology, biology, con- Support. Geoffrey Gajews_ki, have ear;ned the equivalent ° Chairm~n&#13;
2323&#13;
v.atburg Rood.&#13;
talion, marine science, writing specialist, w~! proVIde bachelors deghreeh.&#13;
1&#13;
ted Burhn"t~ WI 531(15 Phone 414)&#13;
· tma essay Students w o ave comp e . .,, •&#13;
$10 application&#13;
fee initiated&#13;
important tips on wn ~-c only two years or study on the 723-~.&#13;
pmaepeetrins g awnildl bee shsealyd Fteebst.s 1. 1 aTth 7e university level may apply f or t he •- ;~----~--------------,&#13;
p.m. in WLLC D150c. Foundation's Undergraduate&#13;
.: Selig is scheduled to adthe&#13;
Business Alumni&#13;
~tion meeting on Thursday,&#13;
18. All Business graduates&#13;
llllited to attend their first&#13;
~ . There will be cash bar at&#13;
Pm in the Parkside Union&#13;
~i At 7 p.m. a dinner will be&#13;
'&lt;it"il 11-ilh a choice of Roast&#13;
~ &lt;i Beer au jus or Boneless&#13;
en Breast Almondine. The&#13;
... ~ill be $5 and reservations&#13;
-be made.&#13;
~ keynote speaker will be&#13;
t!ia President and owner of the&#13;
't!t ~ee. Brewers. The topic&#13;
II! 11• 'The Baseball Business in&#13;
s" and will cover things&#13;
~ ~ how it will change, the&#13;
: the players strike, the&#13;
~ nds in cable TV and the&#13;
~k on the field this season.&#13;
~ . ~usiness Alumni&#13;
~ iabon 1s organized as a part&#13;
l:d uw.p Alumni Association&#13;
~~ _offer its members an&#13;
~unity to grow&#13;
lhelil llally, renew their ties&#13;
B . r Alma Mater and assist 1&#13;
~ ~~- ~nd Administrative&#13;
;anu !V1Ston and most im~&#13;
hf ts. students. General&#13;
ilab~ P 1s $10 per year and is Niate e _to any Parkside&#13;
ness Wtth a major in the&#13;
Di ~nd Administrative&#13;
vtsion.&#13;
The In Place To&#13;
·wash Your Car&#13;
is the&#13;
ALL NEW&#13;
KENOSHA CAR WASH&#13;
Kenosha's Only Fully Enclosed&#13;
And Heated Self Service Car Wash&#13;
\\ f/ /;/&#13;
/&#13;
l===;=~~s/&#13;
8 Big Stalls&#13;
Protect your car against&#13;
rust. Remove salt and&#13;
dirt fast and easy!&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
CAR WASH&#13;
formerly th• Fo,.•t P•rl&lt; C•r Wall!&#13;
6700 39th Ave.&#13;
11£LEADERJG&#13;
Downtown/ Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood Pima/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for m n s wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women wear&#13;
OPEN YOUR&#13;
N.O.W. ACCOUNT&#13;
TODA)'&#13;
The Brown&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha ..•. .....&#13;
6&#13;
Thursday, February 11, 1982&#13;
RANGER&#13;
"Whose Life" examines&#13;
one's right to.~~'''""''" o, Em•=·&#13;
by ruck Lu~hr ., ~ieves that it is his ?uty ~ a&#13;
"WhoSC Life u; ,t Anyway physician to keep J:Ibalrns;o. e.! \:!~ge&#13;
takt!I the potenually depressing by any means poss1 • .. -&#13;
to ic of a quadrapJegic _wh~ wants having him committed as ~entop&#13;
die, and tums ,t in:. : tally unable to make_ a _rational&#13;
frequently funny , often_ tou m • decision concerning his life&#13;
Jy;a,s absorbing him T~ Uniformly excelle!lt perescreenplay&#13;
by Brian Clark a ' formances are tumed m by th&#13;
Reginald Rose, based m Clarks t· g cast Most notable are&#13;
hit broadwa) play, exa1TUn es the sKuepnpnoert h1 0 McMi•l lan as the J• Ud. ge&#13;
ue;tion o( y;hat is mo~ im- who is to ultimately dec~de&#13;
~ant. the_ quality of hfe or Harrison's fate, Christine Lahti ~s&#13;
mere I) existing. Cl . Scott a you~ doctor who 15 au-e . dedi ti n to&#13;
Richard Oreyfu:, is s~perb in tom between her ca 0&#13;
the role of Ken Hams~, a preserve life and her_ respect for&#13;
sculptor who is involved m a Harrison's wish to die, and Bob&#13;
r,ous auto accident that leaves Balaban as the lawyer wh~m&#13;
him paralyzed from ~ neck Harrison hires to represent him.&#13;
down Because sculpting was As a student nurse and an ord~ly&#13;
Harrison's whole life. and all of who become lnvolvedh_ w•!:&#13;
his ,dcas will now never be Har r ison and throw . 1m&#13;
realiicd, he asks t_hat . his una uthor ized party m th~&#13;
medication and kidney dialysis be basement of the hospital, K~kt&#13;
discOntinuoo and he be all~wed to Hunter and Thomas Carter give&#13;
die Harrison feels that he is being fine perfonnaoces. .&#13;
treited as a machine to be k~pt "Whose Life is it Anyway" tS a&#13;
working and not a human_ being sensitive film that sh~ws both&#13;
v.ith the right to control his own sides O an important tSSU~, the&#13;
right to die, and allows the v~ewer&#13;
In a Boston hospital&#13;
a love affair ends,&#13;
a new one begins,&#13;
a Doctor battles&#13;
his patient,&#13;
and a man learns&#13;
the true mean•b lg&#13;
f courage.&#13;
life. mak up his or her own mind. I&#13;
Opposing Harrison is his docl toedr, :ghly ~commend this film.&#13;
hchael Emerson. well - P ay .&#13;
Parkside, Tremper to perf o~&#13;
HAbsence'' investigates reporting&#13;
b.-J wind .--rcussion developing into a ma~chlm~ hymn&#13;
The com u~ , r- nd cli a,cmg with the ~~~~~ ~~~: ~ct ~i:: s~ ~d~J~ d a 23s"'voice combined&#13;
by Karla Koba!&#13;
Newspaper re porting is an&#13;
exciting but serious job. "Absence&#13;
of Malice" takes one behind the&#13;
scenes of the news room of The&#13;
Miama Standard. Micha~l&#13;
Gallagher (P aul Newman~ 1s&#13;
being investigated for the s1~ -&#13;
month disappearance of Joe D1zz,&#13;
a unionist. The F.B.I. feels that&#13;
Michael is connected due to the&#13;
fact that his father , Tom, dispised&#13;
Diaz and was a mob member who&#13;
dealt in bootlegging and swindling.&#13;
When Michael's fa ther&#13;
passed away he left him a liquor&#13;
warehouse. This gave the F .B.I.&#13;
reason to believe that Michael was&#13;
following in his fathers footsteps.&#13;
twisting turns. When G&#13;
has finally had enough d the&#13;
cident he pays the district&#13;
torney, J ames Quinn, $9,(XXI&#13;
terminate the investigation.&#13;
department will join to present the chOll'. .&#13;
finale cl a concert at 8 p.m. on James Firchow dtrects the&#13;
1b.lnday, Feb. 11, in_the_Reuth~r Tremper wind grou~ and ~tt&#13;
High School Aud1tor1um m Mather the P a rkside wmds.&#13;
Kenosha Admission is $2 for the Frank Mueller directs the UWgeoeral&#13;
public: $1.50 for students Pa rkside chorale and ~urt&#13;
and senior citizens Chalgren directs the combined&#13;
Meanwhile, Magen Carter&#13;
(Sally Field), an excellent and&#13;
dedicated r eporter, has stumbled&#13;
ac ross Gallagher 's government&#13;
file. She writes an article on the&#13;
information which is not yet&#13;
proven to be accurate. However ,&#13;
she feels that the public has a&#13;
right to know what is goi~ on. A_s&#13;
the investigation continues, ,t&#13;
leads the movie through many&#13;
"Absence of Malice" is a&#13;
interesting story which allows&#13;
to see what may be goi~&#13;
news rooms today. The a ·&#13;
very well done in both Field's&#13;
Newman's role.&#13;
The featured work will be Tremper High choruses.&#13;
''Apotheo:;e," the third movement . . "Absence of Malice" is&#13;
cl Berlioz' Symphonie Funebre et This 1s the second year that UW- excellent film and I would ·&#13;
Triomphale, op 15, begiruung P a~ _Tremper have cooperated&#13;
with a dramatic fanfare, in a Jotnt performance.&#13;
There Is Something Happening&#13;
in Milwaukee. ..&#13;
recommend it.&#13;
Northwestern National&#13;
Insurance Company!&#13;
That is exactly why Northwestern National Insurance Company is coming to campus on Monday,&#13;
February 15, 1982. Northwestern National is a member of Armco lnsurance Group, a Fortune 100&#13;
Company with over 60,0CXl employees. We have a reputation tor excellence and progressiveness&#13;
that is renowned all over the world. Northwestern National is Milwauke&amp;based and currently, we&#13;
have exceptional opportunities available for entry level MIS Professionals. We offer the ideal setting&#13;
for complete career development and enhancement. The training programs we provide allow for&#13;
definitive growth and advancement potential.&#13;
In addition to the extensive hands-on experience you will receive at Northwestern National, our&#13;
start\ng sal~_ries a~e highly competiti~e. Ou_r comprehensive benefits package includes profit&#13;
sharing, tu1t1on reimbursement, a thrift savings plan, a company subsidized cafeteria and free&#13;
parking at our downtown Milwaukee headquarters. '&#13;
Take advantage of this opportunity to speak with Laverne Backes when she visits your campus:&#13;
Monday, Febnaary 15, 1982&#13;
or for more inform~ti~n regarding the career opportunities at Northwestern National Insurance&#13;
Company, please v1s1t your Placement Center.&#13;
NORTHWESTERN NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY&#13;
731 N. Jackson Street • Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201&#13;
Member Armco lnsuran_ce Group&#13;
An Equal Opportunity Employer&#13;
RANGER Thursday. February 11. 1 7&#13;
~t&#13;
~~,n&#13;
~~.~.!~~~ic~~~~!~~! their beliefs at Parkside&#13;
f4itO' part ~eries ~~ammmg being made _a better place. It&#13;
~ ht , arious rehg1ons that would be hke trying to g&#13;
,J ~ campus. som~whe~e without a clear sens~&#13;
bl p3 t Hensiak end sun Myung Moon.&#13;
are tho0sands of people who&#13;
tins man. There are&#13;
ids oi people who feel the&#13;
thi' man has to offer. This&#13;
the rounder of the&#13;
'&#13;
110n Church. Recently&#13;
were members of the&#13;
bCIII Church at Parkside,&#13;
rpose being t~ show a&#13;
:listic perspective on God&#13;
tr before _.,,,_. nair.;day, Jan. 28 at 2 p.m.,&#13;
~began to draw a number&#13;
~e There were about 20&#13;
present. and for the next&#13;
irtwo an attempt was made&#13;
Moonies to give these&#13;
an10. depth understanding&#13;
as He relates to our world&#13;
The speaker's name was&#13;
of d!rectJon. It's similar to a&#13;
phys1can or a doctor. lf you want&#13;
to ~eally help someone that might&#13;
be 111, first you have to study what&#13;
a healthy body looks like. Then&#13;
)'.ou can look at your patient and&#13;
find out what the problem is. That&#13;
makes it possible to prescribe a&#13;
solution. So, we have to understa~&#13;
what direction we are&#13;
h~aded in. Not from man's point of&#13;
view, but from God's. First we&#13;
have _to ask ourselves some basic&#13;
questions, the first being 'Who is&#13;
God?' We believe there is only one&#13;
God, and He had one idea. He&#13;
wanted to see his family the&#13;
enti_re world, united. We can try to&#13;
begin to answer the question 'Who&#13;
is God?' First we have to realize&#13;
that it is difficult for anyone to&#13;
prove the existence of God,&#13;
because God is invisible. When we&#13;
talk about something being invisible,&#13;
that doesn't mean that it&#13;
doesn't exist. It simply means that&#13;
we can't see it.&#13;
~~MBERS of the Unification Church perform durlnn a recfflt&#13;
v1s1t to Parkside. ...,,&#13;
and the first thing he&#13;
about was Unification&#13;
?!es&#13;
(OOles in three parts," said&#13;
'1'he first part deals with&#13;
ils or Principle of Creation.&#13;
isrhat we feel God's original&#13;
li5l:OO for creation was. This&#13;
1 model of the world as it&#13;
beoperating, similar to the&#13;
~ture operates, in harmony.&#13;
reel that this idea has never&#13;
"3ched," he said. "So, the&#13;
part of the Unifi ca lion&#13;
pie deals with the Fall of&#13;
We believe that God had&#13;
~lly created the entire aoo man with an ideal of&#13;
llXI His motive being that of&#13;
This idea I has never been&#13;
because if we look at the&#13;
tixlay, we see all sorts of&#13;
v,e see war, we see inle&#13;
atrocities committed&#13;
me another.&#13;
ite la)t part of the Uni fie.a tion&#13;
pie 1s God's Struggle," he&#13;
Actually, God arid man&#13;
fed throughout history,&#13;
the History of Restoration.&#13;
ei·e then that this is God's&#13;
!law He has been trying to&#13;
man to His c · iginal idea.&#13;
ieve that God has been&#13;
,-ery diligently and very&#13;
~~ut human history."&#13;
s next step was to talk&#13;
the beginning of the Prine{&#13;
Creation. "Many people&#13;
dm't have an accurate&#13;
"When we look at our world, in&#13;
the order and beauty that is here&#13;
we know that actually, a God must&#13;
exist. Order does not come from&#13;
chao.s without some will, without&#13;
some clear purpo.se of intelligence&#13;
and heart behind it. Other things&#13;
to remember are, that an important&#13;
thing to each of us is, does&#13;
someone really know me, does&#13;
someone really know my heart?&#13;
"God Himself must be a God of&#13;
personality, a God of character.&#13;
His inner - most essence is one of&#13;
heart and love. That is also the&#13;
innermost essence of us, the&#13;
highest form of creation. God&#13;
cannot be less than we are.&#13;
" Dual characteristics have&#13;
existed throughout creation.&#13;
Masculinity, femininity, positive.&#13;
negative, men and women. What&#13;
this is saying is that one is not&#13;
complete without the other. This&#13;
duality exists throughout&#13;
creation. It had to come from&#13;
somewhere. It must have existed&#13;
in the very beginning in our&#13;
creator. God Himself must be a&#13;
being with dual characteristics of&#13;
both masculinity and femininity.&#13;
God being both of these and also&#13;
our creator, is actually our father&#13;
and our mother.&#13;
"Who is God?" is then simply&#13;
answered with, 'God is our loving&#13;
D art displayed&#13;
e · dimensional con- Paris Honors Program, received&#13;
incorporating natural an MS in art from UW-Madison&#13;
!s including fiber, wood and the MFA from UWb~&#13;
r by Green Bay artist Milwaukee.&#13;
parent.' Our relationship with God&#13;
is to his children. 11\at has incredible&#13;
implications. It means&#13;
that we are all brothers and&#13;
sisters.·•&#13;
Toward the end ol the session&#13;
during the question and answe;&#13;
period, some people expressed&#13;
their feelings and questioos. " I&#13;
have heard many, manv different&#13;
interpretations of words used&#13;
today, like 'fruitful and multiply.'&#13;
I think that when you talk about&#13;
truth, if we went around to every&#13;
person in this room and got their&#13;
interpretation, we would end up&#13;
with that many different interpretations.&#13;
I'd like to know whv&#13;
yours is right." •&#13;
Kenny answered, "I'm speaking&#13;
here or absolute truth, absolute&#13;
love, absolute beauty Meaning&#13;
that God is the source Truth is&#13;
eternal and unchanging. If it's not&#13;
always true, then it isn't true. In&#13;
our world, we have conditional&#13;
love. that is, I have five apples.&#13;
you may have one because I have&#13;
so many. It depends on time and&#13;
place. Absolute things exist&#13;
beyond the realm of time and&#13;
place."&#13;
The women had another&#13;
question, or simply wasn't&#13;
satisfied with Kenny's answer. "I&#13;
guess what I don't understand is,&#13;
what is so different about the&#13;
Unification Church? It all sounds&#13;
very similar to our way, e.xcept&#13;
that it's set in a different way."&#13;
Kenny responded again. " \\'hen&#13;
I first heard the lectures, l said,&#13;
'yes, that's true, I've heard this&#13;
before.' Upon first glance, we&#13;
normally pick up things that are&#13;
familiar to us. Unification&#13;
Principles use many ~fCerent&#13;
things, but the source 1t w:as&#13;
received from was a Revelation&#13;
Bagemeister -Winzenz will Hagemeister -Winzenz says her from God to Reverend Moon.''&#13;
display at the Parkside work reflects her respect for the&#13;
~ Gallery Feb. 15 art of primitive, archaic or tribal The woman had yet another&#13;
larch 4. cultures, which embodies a search question. "There has been a lot in&#13;
e1ster • Winzenz is an for essential meaning and pur- the newspapers about your&#13;
• le professor in visual arts pose. church, about giving your&#13;
..rator &lt;i art at UW-Green Regular gallery hours are pos.sessions up to the church,&#13;
~Ladid her undergraduate Mondays through Thursdays from about cutting off ties. Where does&#13;
wrence University and 1 to 6 p.m. and Tuesdays and that relate to being united with the&#13;
....l.i.t. u_te _o{ _Eu_ro_pe_an_ S_tu_die_s __W_ed_ne_sd_ay_s _fro_m_ 7_ to_ 9_ p_.m_. ___u_ni_ve_rs_e?_" ________ ,&#13;
LEE'S DELI&#13;
HOME OF THE SUBMARINE&#13;
Bring in this Ad and GET 7 54 OFF&#13;
On the Purchace of Any Reg. Size Sub&#13;
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6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
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BEER ,.... _____ ...J '~~~--------------------------------&#13;
.. , 'AOUJd 5.ly," ~•d Kem,&#13;
"that 1t has nothing to do "1th it&#13;
The things you are brm;g1 up re&#13;
nothing that "~ ha~e put forth,&#13;
they are what someone put in a&#13;
ne'Aspaper to sell papers Th:Jfs&#13;
my 0pllUOO"&#13;
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• e NOTRE DAME O IOWA STATE O ORA 'E •&#13;
• eWESTERN ILLINOISOCENTRALMICHIGA :&#13;
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• CONTACT: •&#13;
• PARKSIDE UNION, ROOM20f-55J no0 • :• .•••••.•..................• ... ,&#13;
Thursday, February 11,1982 RANGER 8Parkside Players fairly successful in performance ~e intermission arriVed .&#13;
time.&#13;
To end the night of su&#13;
the company presented&#13;
one act "Impromptu." At .&#13;
audience didn't pick&#13;
melodramatic mood of th&#13;
laughing at Sour COlDei&#13;
About halfway into the ~&#13;
audience began to urxlerPI&#13;
seriousness of the themesta&#13;
Neustifer and Mary Beth'&#13;
gave refreshingly stim&#13;
performances. These two&#13;
deeply touched the aUdience&#13;
portrayed their charaet&#13;
while simultaneously aU&#13;
audlen~e to see a part of&#13;
selves in that same portra&#13;
The last section was&#13;
point of the show. Even&#13;
entire evening was, for&#13;
part, entertaining, the a&#13;
the final production Would&#13;
definitely put a thorn in the&#13;
the performance.&#13;
actors at random: one placed&#13;
himself in a position on stage, the&#13;
other then re"ounded his position&#13;
around the first actor. From this a&#13;
scene arose. It was fascinating to&#13;
see the imagina tion displayed in&#13;
the actor's ability to improvise&#13;
such original and entertaining&#13;
scenes.&#13;
The next was a hate symphony ..&#13;
Audience members offered objects&#13;
tha t they disliked to the&#13;
actors. Each actor was assigned&#13;
an item, and on cue from the&#13;
director they began to tell a story&#13;
of why they ha ted their particular&#13;
item. The disappointment lay in&#13;
the sudden cut-offs made by the&#13;
director. The ordeal lost audience&#13;
'enjoyment because the actors&#13;
weren't given the time to fully&#13;
express aspects of their thoughts.&#13;
Next in the improvisations was&#13;
an audience suggested activity&#13;
given to one actor. The others had&#13;
to try and realize what the actor&#13;
by Lis. Llnstroth&#13;
The Parkside Players presented&#13;
a series of skits and improvisations&#13;
before their audience&#13;
this past Friday night. The show&#13;
consisted of two one - act plays,&#13;
including "A Quiet Game,"&#13;
"Impromptu," and a variety of&#13;
improvisations.&#13;
"A Quiet Game" was a comedy&#13;
skit revolving around an attempted&#13;
kidnapping. Dave&#13;
Schroeder worked his part&#13;
proficiently, pushing all possible&#13;
laugh lines to the limit. The&#13;
audience respooded positively to&#13;
his performance. However,&#13;
Robert Cash was not able to&#13;
cmvince the audience that he was&#13;
feeling his predicament. He&#13;
consistently feU in and out of&#13;
character.&#13;
The Players then presented&#13;
their first improvisation, "Space&#13;
and Rebourxl." This involved two&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
PARKSIDE PLAYERS ina scene from "A Quiet Game."&#13;
was trying to portray and join the portion of the performance&#13;
scene. One member was chosen to seemed to drag immensely.&#13;
appropriately end the scene. This Vitality and energy dissipating,&#13;
Wegner appointed to music panel&#13;
facultyin 1972,is a com&#13;
pianist and teaches music&#13;
and composition. He is&#13;
of the New Music at P&#13;
series, devoted to the&#13;
formance of cont&#13;
compositions, and is a m&#13;
the Parkside Piano Duo.He&#13;
a PhD degree from the Uni&#13;
of Iowa.&#13;
A member of the Parks ide&#13;
music faculty, Prof. August&#13;
Wegner, has been appointed to a&#13;
two year appointment on the&#13;
Wisconsin Art Board's Music&#13;
Review Panel. The panel is&#13;
responsible for reviewing grant&#13;
applications andmaking advisory&#13;
recommendations for funding.&#13;
Wegner, who joined the UW-P&#13;
"King and I" a royal disappointment&#13;
know she can sing, but her acting&#13;
ability sure wasn't seeping out of&#13;
her pores last Saturday night.&#13;
John Miskulin (the King) made&#13;
the audience aware of his talents,&#13;
contrary to Martin. A reality was&#13;
revealed in his character rather&#13;
than a narrow minded stereotypic&#13;
view portrayed in most of the cast.&#13;
Re was able to give the audience&#13;
an initiative for remaining for the&#13;
.second act.&#13;
If this was a high school&#13;
production} the review would have&#13;
been adequate. But we have some&#13;
big, talented names here that did&#13;
not boost their reputa tion with last&#13;
Saturday night's performance.&#13;
on the expertise of the vocal&#13;
aspect, which was stifled by poor&#13;
acoustics and overplayed music,&#13;
than on presenting a believable&#13;
performance. For example, in one&#13;
love scene between Tuptim (Kelly&#13;
Owens) and Lun Tha (William&#13;
Althaus) the atmosphere had as&#13;
much vitality as a mortuary. For&#13;
two lovers who may never see&#13;
each other again, they sure didn't&#13;
seem too shook up over the idea.&#13;
by Lis. Unstroth&#13;
"The King and I" was presented&#13;
. by the Miss Kenosha Scholarship,&#13;
Inc. aod The Lioness of Greater&#13;
Kenosha at the Reuther Civic&#13;
Auditorium in Kenosha. The&#13;
members of the cast all had very&#13;
impressive write - ups in the&#13;
program, but unfortunately, tbe&#13;
performa ree did not measure up&#13;
to the sta tely cast description. The&#13;
entertainment resided in the&#13;
Royal Princes and Princesses&#13;
who, in their innocence.&#13;
enlightened the stage with their&#13;
occasional appearances.&#13;
Much more emphasis was put&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 11&#13;
BLOOD PRESSURE from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Alcove 103 (just north of&#13;
store) for Parkside students, staff and faculty. Sponsored by the Parkslde&#13;
Office.&#13;
SEMINAR "How Are You Doing?" at 7 p.m. in the Library Learning Lab&#13;
re-entry and 000 - traditional students. Sponsored bythe Peer Support&#13;
Friday, Feb. 12&#13;
MOVIE "The Godfather" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Union C&#13;
mission at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. S&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Gail Ann Martin, who played&#13;
Anna, with her 12 years experience,&#13;
somehow must have&#13;
managed to carefully let her&#13;
talent go by unnoticed. We all&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 13&#13;
FASCHINGFEST starts at 6 p.m. in the Union Building. Tickets are avaD&#13;
the Union Information Center.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 14&#13;
MOVIE "The Godfather" willbe repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the UnionCinema.&#13;
_Monday, Feb. 15&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 p.m. in Union 106. Atty Mary Sfasciottl will&#13;
"Marital Property Reform: Your, Mine end Ours Revisited". The&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. IS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE at the Peer Support Office (WLLC Dl7S) for non· tradi&#13;
students starting at 12 noon.&#13;
LECTURE at 1p.m.Jn Union 104with Dr. Eugene Gasiorkiewicz. The pro&#13;
free for Parkside students, staff and faculty. It &lt;Olbt&#13;
~Wttt ~~1tPP£,&#13;
IN THE PARKSJDEU~ION&#13;
announces&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
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4235- 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
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414-248-9·141&#13;
24726. 75th Street. Rt 50&#13;
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414- 843.2388&#13;
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414- 657-1340&#13;
FRUITS &amp; NUTS&#13;
• Carribbean oelica&#13;
• California MiX&#13;
• Student Food&#13;
• Sesame Seeds&#13;
• Cashews&#13;
• Blanched Peanuts&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Pistachio Nuts&#13;
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CARIBBEAN DELICACY MIX'&#13;
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WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU IROWI&#13;
10a.m.-4p_m.&#13;
Dally&#13;
eely performs Poe perfectly&#13;
uek Ostrowski&#13;
by Cb Poe was one of the&#13;
t)lPf AllanI and purposeful&#13;
t orlglnaerica has ever AlD .&#13;
.. rs 1\iS works today remain&#13;
. bOfrorand humanity,&#13;
ofd SOit is a wonder more&#13;
lete . ot interested in Scott&#13;
"ere ~man show detailing&#13;
5 onesof Poe. Held in Union&#13;
JaSlda,fuesdaY, Feb. 2 to a&#13;
a otaling less than forty&#13;
t performance was a&#13;
, :'position of Mr. Keely's&#13;
·shOW takes place in a&#13;
coop on the night of&#13;
9 six days before Poe's&#13;
I,~cOOPwas where corrupt&#13;
· kept alcoho\\cs and&#13;
enIs inactive wh. ile trotting t to vote ill as many&#13;
&lt;aI as possible." (Voting&#13;
lbeD was done by a show of&#13;
J&#13;
Comprised of two wooden chairs&#13;
around a table topped with a bottle&#13;
of wine and chalice, the set was&#13;
markedly simple. The&#13;
background contained a stool and&#13;
coat rack, the latter doubling for&#13;
various characters inhabiting&#13;
Poe's life.&#13;
The show begins with Mr. Keely&#13;
silently walking toward a&#13;
darkened center stage amidst&#13;
very bizarre music. It effectively&#13;
translated the moodiness Poe is&#13;
associated with - a moodiness not&#13;
overly - present throughout the&#13;
play, though. Mr. Keely was not&#13;
inhibited by the size of the&#13;
audience, by the way. In fact, he&#13;
commented afterwards that it&#13;
would have been better if those&#13;
present would have been seated&#13;
next to each other up front, which&#13;
would have grea tly magnified the&#13;
low turn-out.&#13;
Mr. Keely's performance dealt&#13;
with all of Poe's troubles since&#13;
, adolescence, including his&#13;
dropping out of college and his&#13;
alcoholism. Combined with this&#13;
history of Poe were ample excerpts&#13;
of his literature, including&#13;
a charged reading of "the&#13;
Raven", which closed the show&#13;
and was its overwhelming&#13;
higWight. All in all, as the cliche&#13;
goes, a very informative and&#13;
interesting evening.&#13;
Responsible for bringing this&#13;
outstanding production to&#13;
Parkside was the Performing Arts&#13;
and Lecture committee. For more&#13;
information about the committee,&#13;
upcoming events, or Mr. Keely's&#13;
production, contact Robin Harris&#13;
at ext. 2650. If there is enough&#13;
interest, it would be possible for&#13;
Mr. Keely to return and present&#13;
an encore.&#13;
annual Arts Review accepting submissions&#13;
Parkside Arts Review, a&#13;
y antbology of Parkside&#13;
I poetry, short Iict.ion,&#13;
and !Dotos,ISnow taking&#13;
'OIIS for the May 19B2&#13;
. Students are encouraged&#13;
_it tbeir original work&#13;
10 editor Ginger Helgeson&#13;
to the box in the humanities&#13;
on the second floor of&#13;
CclI1ffiunicatioAnrts building.&#13;
'llis year's Review offers four&#13;
of $15each for the highest&#13;
work in each of the&#13;
'es of submission: short&#13;
, poetry, art and&#13;
aphy.&#13;
written materials must be&#13;
ittedto tbe Review by March&#13;
he series of "Great Costume&#13;
"will be shown at Parkside&#13;
bi February and March&#13;
·sponsorshipof the Fine Arts&#13;
, The series, part of a&#13;
tic arts course on the&#13;
Ywood costume, is being&#13;
availableto the public. All&#13;
lIeareatBp.m. on Wednesdays&#13;
~ UniortCinema Theater.&#13;
• !Cbedulefollows:&#13;
Fell.24-Jane Austen's "Pride&#13;
26to be considered. Art and photos&#13;
may also be submitted between&#13;
March 29 and April 2 to the Arts&#13;
Review staff in the art hallway of&#13;
the Com. Arts building.&#13;
All materials submitted will be&#13;
critiqued by individual student&#13;
staff members and decisions&#13;
about inclusion in the Review will&#13;
be made by the student staff. This&#13;
year's staff includes: Jeff Frank,&#13;
Juli Janovicz (associate editor)&#13;
and Heidi Makris. Other staff&#13;
positions are open. Students can&#13;
join the staff as contributing&#13;
editors by submitting work to the&#13;
Review and participating in the&#13;
critiquing, planning, design,&#13;
layout and / or distributi.on of the&#13;
and Prejudice," adapted in 1940as&#13;
a screen comedy of manners&#13;
starring Greer Garson, ~aw~enc:&#13;
Olivier and Maureen 0 Sulhvan,&#13;
...March 10 - George Cukor's&#13;
"Camille," a classic version ?f&#13;
Dumas' novel featuring Garbo m&#13;
a portrayal of the ill-fated,&#13;
desperate woman in love;&#13;
...March 24 - "Gigi," a Lerner&#13;
and Lowe musical with a cast&#13;
Review.&#13;
This year's Review will include&#13;
64 pages of original work. Short&#13;
fiction should not exceed 10typed,&#13;
double spaced pages and poetry is&#13;
limited to 6 poems. Art work&#13;
(including photos) will be accepted&#13;
in black and white only,&#13;
with a limit of 6 pieces, no larger&#13;
than 16 x 20 each, Three dimensional&#13;
art work must be&#13;
photographed for submission. All&#13;
work must be clearly labelled with&#13;
the contributor's name, telephone&#13;
number and Parkside ID number&#13;
to be considered. Please include a&#13;
SASE for return of originals. For&#13;
more information about the&#13;
Parks ide Arts Review, contact&#13;
Ginger Helgeson at 652-3699.&#13;
The Parks ide Activities Board&#13;
presents this week's mov',,·e.....&#13;
... ",. ~- tlI_ ... · IMlliflill \;ftJ&#13;
F.t., Feb 12 Sun.,Feb. 14 Rate~"R"&#13;
7:30pm· Admission 1.00&#13;
UnionCinema Theatre&#13;
NEXT WEEK'S MOVIE:&#13;
-....GODFATHER PART II&#13;
RANGER Thund.y, FebrUllry 11.1912 ,&#13;
Burned up&#13;
Bricking beats boredom&#13;
by Carol Bum&#13;
Just when you think it's all been&#13;
done, someone comes up with&#13;
something new. The latest rage to&#13;
hit the thrill - seekers ia&#13;
bouldering. Forget the fancy&#13;
pinions and ropes ~ mountain&#13;
climbing. All that's really needed&#13;
for bouldering is a good pair of&#13;
non-skid shoes.&#13;
Bouldering is the art of throwIng&#13;
oneself upon a boulder, and then&#13;
climbing to the top. Safety wise. it&#13;
comes nowhere near the da~er of&#13;
mountain climbing: boulden just&#13;
don't grow as big as mountains.&#13;
So big dea 1. Wha t has all this got&#13;
do do with Parkside? This place&#13;
was not exactly built on a boulder&#13;
run. Well, here it is: let's be a little&#13;
innovative and come up with our&#13;
own sport.&#13;
How about "bricking" We&#13;
certainly are notata loss for bnck&#13;
walls. Parkside students would&#13;
have ample opportumty to try&#13;
tberr 11Is, for" "" plont of&#13;
IIldoor spa&#13;
Beoides, it "" poy:chololl'C11&#13;
value Hurt1inc you f ta&#13;
wall would ~ a good coiba&#13;
after a bad exam&#13;
Time tria. could lei&#13;
MaIO Place The no luraI&#13;
there prov\d a ~ 01 ou,,,,,JOn'y&#13;
- lype seWng for the a&#13;
Inclined YteJl,)ou"n&#13;
sky, at I....)&#13;
Whyshould cili like Vor\&#13;
and Ourago "" all the fun'&#13;
Bricking could be the beclnlli&#13;
a new breed 01 human ny ..., ......&#13;
I"e\'islled The rhildml 01 brick&#13;
"ould !&lt;-am 10 brick ~&#13;
could walk&#13;
The library could tart dlarg&#13;
admilalon for the In the&#13;
house "" .. of the tr menu&#13;
Oh well, belore&#13;
earned .,. .. y could lIOlIl&#13;
please go up therf, and pe&#13;
plastic "llII oIf the aU'&#13;
Parkside to host ACU·I&#13;
by Jell Wicks&#13;
Approximately 211 to 25 colleges&#13;
from three states are gomg to&#13;
participate in the Associaboo of&#13;
College Unions - International&#13;
(ACU-I) regional tournament to&#13;
be held in the Parkside tinion&#13;
February II, 12 and 13. Tbe&#13;
tournament will feature C1ghl&#13;
events with over 300 people&#13;
competing for a chaoce to advance&#13;
to the •'ational In·&#13;
tercollegiate Championships to be&#13;
held in April at Georgia Instllute&#13;
of Technology in Atlanta. Georgia&#13;
The events in the tournament&#13;
consist of backgammon. biUiards.&#13;
bowling, chess, darts, frisbee.&#13;
table soccer, and table tennis. Of&#13;
these eight events, four will ecture' on Poland to be given :.~:,.both men's and "omen's&#13;
The players representing&#13;
"Pdao:lin Crisis: Now and by a representative government. Parkside and a native of Poland, Parkside in the ACU·I tournament&#13;
"will be the title of a slide The crux of the dilemma is the last visited Poland in 1974during are Jim Lovell (hackgammonl.&#13;
to be given by Dr. Eugene dl'chotomy of the political the 30th aRrmivebrlsiaryI ofhtihetaPloklishh Bill Stoner (billiards). cott&#13;
'orkiewicz on Wednes day, aspl'rations of the Polish state a.nd Peoples epu c. n . s I . e Hartnell, John Peterson. JaIy&#13;
17,inUnion 104at 1 p.m. the Polish people. The Polish wfill hg·ive a brief. hisItoendca anrdeviWewI']] Podella, Willy Yee, BJaerrby BZIg ekr character has not been in the past 0 t e lSSUes mvo v (men's bowling); r roc ..&#13;
Glliorkiewiczbelieves that the and is not now amenable to sub- comment on the post·WWII way, Ellen Beewar. Kr~s&#13;
Os ci the Polish nation that jugation from within or from. development of Poland and the Schaeffer, Jan 0echler ,,,omen&#13;
makingbeadlines must be without," he states. Polish daily life as they relate to bowling): Gary Bowen. Gary&#13;
tood in a historical and today's dilemma. Adelsoo (chess), George Thome&#13;
phi I Th P r h Gasiorkiewicz, a professor of The talk is being sponsored by (darls); Jim Dunne (table soctedcaa&#13;
contextt.b" . ge 0 IeSd Ll'fe SCI'ence / Allied Health a t the Ll'brary / Learning center. cer)' Jeff Darnel, Ed FrancISCO,&#13;
y are no em serv Matt Giovanelli. and Brian Walley GreatCostume Films" to begin (l~~leo~~~i~_ town players will&#13;
stay at the Kenosha Holiday Inn&#13;
including Leslie Caron, Maurice The hand "Overkill" will be there&#13;
Chevalier, LouiS Jourdan and from 9 p.m. until midnight on&#13;
Hermione Gingold. Friday, Feb. 12 for some late • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : Alpha-Omega Players In :&#13;
: NEIL SIMON'S : ~ "CHAPTER TWO" ~ : A DINNER THEATRE •&#13;
•: Sunday, Feb. 28th at 5:45 p. m. Showtime • 7:00 p. m. •:&#13;
: STUDENTS $600 All $eats Reserved in Advance :&#13;
: GUESTS $700 Call 553·2345 :•&#13;
: for ticket information :&#13;
• IN UNION CAFETERIA •&#13;
: PRODUCED BY REPERTORY THEATRE OF AMERICA :&#13;
•: NEXT WEEK :• • •&#13;
: FRANK ABAGNALE- 'Con Artist' :&#13;
• •&#13;
: Appearing • wed., Feb. 24th :&#13;
•• ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••&#13;
Ranger oRen a&#13;
15%&#13;
commls Ion to all&#13;
ad alespeople.&#13;
Stop by Ranger&#13;
oHlee (WLLC&#13;
0139, next to&#13;
CoHee Shoppe)&#13;
if intere ted&#13;
Thursday. February 11. 1982 RANGER&#13;
10&#13;
Photo by Ma&#13;
DAN WINTER wrestles opponent despite cast on arm~&#13;
thing about it is tha t you have to people every year. S&#13;
find out for yourself what is good from high schools aren~&#13;
for you and you just can't fool sure as to their future g&#13;
yourself in this. You've got to some of them will stick&#13;
work at that (education) too, as and some of them won't Y&#13;
much as your wrestling. only bring a horse to W~ler&#13;
Ranger: What's on the horizon Ranger: Lastly, what is .&#13;
for you? being a member of the it&#13;
Gruner: I'm kind of getting out team?&#13;
of the competition kind of scene, Gruner' J d 't&#13;
because I've accepted the Lord in couldn't ~ II on ~,&#13;
my life and it's leading me to, ~ y explam it to&#13;
well I don't feel like I should be cause you d have to corne&#13;
beating on people like that. It's see, for yourself. It's&#13;
something that might hinder me you ve got to see and feel.r&#13;
from my salvation. I still lift anybndy interested to c&#13;
weights but I'm not so fanatical ~:eChr'k t~ut the team,&#13;
ahoutworking out any more. I just w rki gO t.e tl~eets alii&#13;
want to stay in shape. I'd like to li~e fit o~ 10 gym. AlII&#13;
maybe stay around for another .1 nd .eventually&#13;
year or so to see what happens and wanting to do It, you'll fmel&#13;
see where the Lord leads me. to get on the team.&#13;
Ranger: Would you like to see Ranger: Any big meets&#13;
'more wrestlers on the team? up'?&#13;
Gruner: Sure. Gruner: Yeah, we'll be&#13;
Ranger: How do you think that the NCAA II Midwest&#13;
could be achieved? on Feb. 19 and the&#13;
Gruner: Well, Coach Koch does Nationals on Feb. '%l and 28.&#13;
100st of the recruiting and he's will see some high - level&#13;
done a good Job of gettiI)g new petition bere, for sure.&#13;
: .... .&#13;
-a@~ &amp;1."&#13;
-: t5~&#13;
school. Carr's 25 point performanee&#13;
last Wednesday paced&#13;
the Blugolds to an 88-71 victory&#13;
over UW-Superior and brought his&#13;
career total to 1,999, surpassing&#13;
Mike Ratliff's 1,994.&#13;
The Rangers are well aware of&#13;
Carr and the Eau Claire Blugolds.&#13;
For the past three years, Eau&#13;
Claire has defeated Parkside in&#13;
the state championship game to&#13;
earn an invitation to the NAIA&#13;
National Tournament held in&#13;
Kansas City. .&#13;
The Blugolds record is 19-2 this&#13;
year and they are presently&#13;
ranked 2nd in the NAJA.&#13;
Women's Basketball&#13;
The women's basketball team&#13;
will be hosting the NAIA district&#13;
semi - finals next Monday, Feb.&#13;
15. The games will start at 7 p.m,&#13;
SERVICESOFFER£D&#13;
TYPING - Professionally done.&#13;
rates. Fast service. South K&#13;
6068.&#13;
PIANO LESSONS OFFERED nHI'&#13;
Racine. Call 554-0890.&#13;
Sports Spotlight&#13;
Bob Gruner adds experience&#13;
Ranger: But you only have six&#13;
full - time wrestlers.&#13;
Gruner: We've always had that&#13;
problem with not having a full&#13;
team. We don't have quantity but&#13;
we've got quality, and that's what&#13;
we're looking for.&#13;
Ranger:· Are there any limiting&#13;
factors that would hold hack a&#13;
gifted wrestler at Parkside as&#13;
opposed to some of the bigger&#13;
schools?&#13;
Gruner: Maybe money. Well,&#13;
the only thing that you can't do&#13;
here is have competition all the&#13;
time like at NCAA I schools. They&#13;
can afford to have competition all&#13;
the time. NCAA's pays for your&#13;
flights to and back from tournaments&#13;
so if you place, it's no&#13;
problem. We get enough from the&#13;
athletic department to get by.&#13;
But where we're at, you can still&#13;
go to tournaments where you'll&#13;
find that high - level competition.&#13;
Northern Open, Midlands' tournament&#13;
and others have folk style&#13;
wrestling as well as freestyle and&#13;
maybe a few Greco Roman styles.&#13;
During the season, a wrestler can&#13;
go to any open tournaments,&#13;
whatever style it may he.&#13;
Ranger: How a bout school and&#13;
classes?&#13;
Gruner: Well, you've got to&#13;
study and stuff, but I really came&#13;
to school to wrestle. That's one&#13;
thing that I kind of regret. fn high&#13;
school I wasn't even pushed as a&#13;
student, and I just drifted in and&#13;
out of classes. But when I got to&#13;
college, I found out tha t you need&#13;
an education to carryon. The&#13;
Parkside's sports notebook&#13;
Note: In an ellort to learn more&#13;
about the sport 01 wrestling,&#13;
reporter Joe Kimm has completed&#13;
an In-depth fnterview wfth Bob&#13;
Gruner, the aSlistant coach for&#13;
the Par'tside wrestHng team.&#13;
Ranger: How did wrestling&#13;
start at Parkside for you?&#13;
Gruner: Well, coach Koch&#13;
started off as a rookie coach and&#13;
built up the team from scratch.&#13;
KeMy Martin was the first All -&#13;
American and I became an All -&#13;
American also in my freshman&#13;
year in 75-76. I worked hard to&#13;
become the natimal champ in the&#13;
NAJA'sand Iwrestled with a lot of&#13;
top notch wrestlers from all over&#13;
the United States and foreign&#13;
countries during those years.&#13;
Ranger: How has wrestlir.g&#13;
changed over the years?&#13;
Gruner: The way wrestling is&#13;
going now, it's going more&#13;
towards free style and entertainment&#13;
for the audiences.&#13;
People want to see some moves,&#13;
nice throws and stuff that's artistic.&#13;
They dro't want to see two&#13;
guys going out there and just&#13;
locking horns. Wrestling is kind of&#13;
a gruesome sport for some people,&#13;
going out there and trying to&#13;
control another man's body, rot&#13;
when yw see a nice move&#13;
executed with style, it's a&#13;
beautiful sight.&#13;
I feel that with the techniques&#13;
that we have amassed over the&#13;
years, collectively, we here at&#13;
Parks ide are teaching and&#13;
practicing wrestling at a much&#13;
higher level than most of the other&#13;
by Greg Bonoflglio&#13;
Nordic Ski Club&#13;
The fifth amual Parkside Cross&#13;
County ski race was held last&#13;
Sunday on the UW-Parkside Cross&#13;
Country course. 240 skiers,&#13;
r~ng from. novice to expert&#13;
linen, partiCIpated in the two&#13;
NEW offer from the oldest&#13;
and largest truly internationl&#13;
bookclub. "A&#13;
belter way to buy books."&#13;
The Academic Book Club&#13;
has expanded the Idea 01 a&#13;
traditional book club into a&#13;
complelely new and unique&#13;
concept.&#13;
SAYE 20.... %&#13;
ON ANY' BOOK IN PRINT!&#13;
Sawe.p" 10%&#13;
ON SELECTED TITLES. o NO GIMMICKS o NO HIDDEN CHARGES o AND NO HARD SELL&#13;
Just low. low prices every&#13;
day 01 the year; unlimited&#13;
choice of books; and fast&#13;
efficient. personal servic~&#13;
on every order.&#13;
ACADEMIC BOOK CLUB&#13;
u:i:":eill" Vlnunt, New York 1)611-&#13;
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Sri Lank. •&#13;
Afrlu: P. O. 10. 1st, lIla,o.Ogua St.,. Nlteri. • ,7:;:;;,---------- I Pleue lell me, withouT any obligation&#13;
on my pari, how I can Ol"o.f' for mY'elt Iend tor my friends anywhef"e in ttte WOl'"lc:l Iany book in Pf"lnt, from any publisher.&#13;
'rom any country, in 1I1mO!t any Ilangu&amp;9'!. •&#13;
Tell me In addlllon how I can save 20-&#13;
4Cl"tr on these books joining the&#13;
ACADEMIC BOOK CLUB lind paying II&#13;
membership lee as Iowa, 1.Bedaily ($6.~&#13;
annually).&#13;
I understand thaI one of the leatures of&#13;
the' club is thai I am nol now. nor will I&#13;
~er be, under any obligation whetsoever&#13;
to buy any particular book or quantity of&#13;
books frOm Academic Book Club.&#13;
PLEASE PRINT:&#13;
Cin:;le appropriate abbrevlation(s): Dr.&#13;
Prof. Rev. Mr. Mrs. Miss Ms.&#13;
Name ..&#13;
Address •••&#13;
........ P.Code.&#13;
Note. .. Date .&#13;
5S22578201, date I -------------~&#13;
state schools except maybe&#13;
Madison. They have world&#13;
champions and Olympic veterans&#13;
like RuSS Heleckson, Lee Kemp,&#13;
and Andy Rian who know. and&#13;
practice top notch techniques.&#13;
We're a small school. Madison&#13;
might ha ve 30 people in the&#13;
wrestling room, we have six.&#13;
Ranger: Does that mean we&#13;
have less of a chance to win?&#13;
Gruner: This year is our third&#13;
year for NCAA competition. Tha t&#13;
is a higher level competition than&#13;
'say, NAIA. Brian lrek, Mike&#13;
Muckerheide, Matt Kluge, and&#13;
Danny Winter are our top four&#13;
wrestlers this year. Danny Winter&#13;
at 134 Ibs. placed third in both&#13;
nationals and qualified for NCAA&#13;
l. Sowhat happens is that if Danny&#13;
places this year, he's got a chance&#13;
to go to the NCAA's again. He's&#13;
already a four - time All -&#13;
American.&#13;
See, from all this experience&#13;
tha t we are gaining individually&#13;
am as a team, we've been&#13;
building a big snowball _ of&#13;
knowledge so thatafter a while we&#13;
can drill our men at a level that&#13;
other schools, especially the&#13;
bigger ones, are drilling their·&#13;
men.&#13;
We're more of a tournament&#13;
team, and we like going to tournaments&#13;
because it's a lot more&#13;
fun and worthwhile even though it&#13;
is a bit costly. Weare currently&#13;
putting our men through an eight -&#13;
step system that was put together&#13;
by Bob-Lawson, our former track&#13;
coach and it's working out well.&#13;
race event. One race covered 15&#13;
kilometers, the other covered. 5&#13;
kilometers .&#13;
Peter Gallenz of Rockford,&#13;
Dlinois led all finishers in the 15&#13;
kilometer race with a time of&#13;
54: 47. Eric Schmidt of Milwankee&#13;
was second with a time of 54: 53,&#13;
and Terry Daley of Menomonee&#13;
Falls placed third with a time of&#13;
55:17. Parkside's Kai Hansen of&#13;
Union Grove placed seventh&#13;
finishing with a time of 56:28:&#13;
Hansen is President of the&#13;
Parkside Nordic Ski Club.&#13;
John Burril of Hales Corners&#13;
Wisconsin won the 5 kilomete:&#13;
race with a time of 25:31 in the 16-&#13;
and - over age bracket. Brookfield's&#13;
Betsy Borowski was the top&#13;
women's finisher in the 16 - and -&#13;
over age bracket, posting a time&#13;
of 32:25. Luke Bowdensteiner of&#13;
West Bend won the Novice Co-ed&#13;
II (!l-12 age bracket) division by&#13;
Union Concourse&#13;
Feb. 11-12&#13;
9:00-2:00&#13;
posting a time of 32:41.&#13;
Tournament Director Edward&#13;
Wallen, an Associate Professor of&#13;
Life Science at Parkside,&#13;
described the conditions of the two&#13;
race' tracks as being scmewha t&#13;
less than desirable. "The conditions&#13;
were a little bit rough.&#13;
When the race began (11 a.m.),&#13;
there were strong north - easterly&#13;
winds blowing at around 25&#13;
m.p.h., which brought the temperature&#13;
down to about 14degrees&#13;
helow zero. The race ended with&#13;
near blizzard conditions," said&#13;
Wallen.&#13;
An awards banquet was held at&#13;
the Physical Education building&#13;
after the race.&#13;
Keeping in touch&#13;
Tony Carr, a 6-3senior guard on&#13;
the UW-Eau Claire Blugold&#13;
basketball team, owns the new&#13;
career scoring record for his&#13;
Sponsored By&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon/&#13;
Marketing Club&#13;
MtSCELLANEOUS&#13;
COME JOIN the international sf&#13;
friendly game of soccer. Felm,l8ry&#13;
m. Phy. Ed. Bldg. Beginners&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
HAPPY VALENTINES DAY to E&#13;
PAB! Spu Brothers&#13;
HAPPY VALENTINES DAY.ShefTY&#13;
Chick" Spu Brother&#13;
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY R&#13;
STAFF, it's great to be one of&#13;
TO THE EDITOR, will you be mv V8&#13;
Pretty please! I'll be yoursl Linda.&#13;
TO THE FENClNG TEAMl H8&#13;
Day!!!! S.E.&#13;
EL PRESIDENTE: HapPV Valentine&#13;
By the way, what new political s&#13;
{and we mean manipulative power&#13;
have you come up with lately?&#13;
TO THE EDITOR: We are I'IOldlng&#13;
basketball set hostage. Will negof18tt&#13;
m. on Friday, in the Union.&#13;
T. DREW ROGERS: Your mother&#13;
you funny. And it's not eeceuse of&#13;
Malan!&#13;
·mming Club goes under&#13;
!launy Shuemate&#13;
Ibe recent budget cuts&#13;
It P8rkside, one of the&#13;
programs to be&#13;
will be the Parkside&#13;
11te termina tion of the .-I women's swimming&#13;
the coaching position&#13;
ed in Chancellor Alan&#13;
'5 convoca non Address&#13;
~nning of the fall&#13;
I!I&lt;JUglilheSwim Club will&#13;
to exist, the number of&#13;
t5 swimming hasn't&#13;
The freedom of heing _8 team with mandatory&#13;
has encouraged many&#13;
~ become involved.&#13;
. to Barbara Lawson,&#13;
II the Swim Clu,b, :'We've&#13;
up kids who didn t ha ve&#13;
.... to practice, but they&#13;
..,un at noon or they might&#13;
,tnight, a couple of nights a&#13;
'e've picked up those types&#13;
,Id they still like comaIXI&#13;
sometimes we have&#13;
lids who don't practice at&#13;
;.st like to compete,"&#13;
'ti(ll, however, has been&#13;
CIItile Ra~ers. As Lawson&#13;
"We've been losing, hut&#13;
tha~'s predictable because we just&#13;
don t have all the bodies that we&#13;
need - especra' IIy because we&#13;
d~n~ ha~e ,3 diver and. we give up&#13;
a e diving points to the other&#13;
teams. Also, because it's a club&#13;
~:e~?e,vteryone will go to every&#13;
One of the exciting highlights of&#13;
the SWim Club's many seasons&#13;
~s been an annual event called&#13;
The Ranger Relay" whi h .&#13;
held" ,c rs&#13;
. In November. Lawson ex.&#13;
plamed, "It's prohahly the first&#13;
meet of. its kind. It's all co-ed&#13;
relays With two women and two&#13;
men on every team."&#13;
This event survived eight&#13;
seasons. and has served as a&#13;
conclusion to the women's fall&#13;
seas?n a~ as a beginning to the&#13;
m~n s wmter season. "It's a&#13;
?nIque meet," said Lawson,&#13;
because you don't seed anything&#13;
In other words, you don't put all&#13;
t~e fast teams together, you don't&#13;
give the fast teams the middle&#13;
lanes, so yay never know. That's&#13;
part of the fun of the meet, as well&#13;
as th~ eve~ts, that you never know&#13;
who IS going to win."&#13;
Next year, although it's&#13;
doubtful, the Swim Club could&#13;
continue, but on a different ba .&#13;
Lawson said, "Il depends on ~e students. If there are students that&#13;
really want to continue the Swim&#13;
Club all they have to do is find&#13;
themselves a faculty advisor and&#13;
register and make provisions to&#13;
use the pool." Of COUrse this w?Uld be minus Lawson' and&#13;
mInUS competition&#13;
The women's swim season has&#13;
already ended competition for the&#13;
y~r, but the men's Swim Club&#13;
Willm.ake their final splash at the&#13;
Parkside Invitational to be held on&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 13 Parkside "ill&#13;
host Beloit , Ripon. Carroll&#13;
C3:rt~age, Lawrence and th~&#13;
Illinois School of Technology&#13;
Swimming for Parkside will be&#13;
Greg Schaafsman, who is expected&#13;
to do well in the&#13;
backstroke; Joe Upthagrove&#13;
Mtddie Distance; Mark FlYM'&#13;
Sprints: Bob Fritchen and Kai&#13;
Sorenson, Free . Style and Dave&#13;
Tuinstra, breaststroke.&#13;
Competition will begin at 11&#13;
a:ro. With the diving championships.&#13;
Swimming is expected&#13;
to begin at 2 p.m.&#13;
..&#13;
PARKSIDE'S JUNE BAUER fences a Notre Dame opponent.&#13;
Photo by Kilrtn No~&#13;
nners race for nationals ~yPaUy DeLuisa&#13;
track season is upon us. a. men's and women's&#13;
perlarming well, it proves&#13;
an exciting one for&#13;
. ,the Ranger men&#13;
Traitlhe St. Norbert&#13;
ck Meet.&#13;
. Witherspoon took&#13;
fiethe sprinting events&#13;
: yd. dash in 6.42&#13;
300 yd. run in&#13;
poon also teamed&#13;
Anderson, Glenn&#13;
AI Correa to win the&#13;
-ent with a time of e:Won the mile in&#13;
::It second in the 1000&#13;
2:27.9. Correa contributed&#13;
a second place finish in&#13;
the mile, as he was clocked at&#13;
4:39. He won the 600 yd. run in&#13;
1:20.1.&#13;
Anderson won the pole vault&#13;
with a mark of 13' 6".&#13;
In the two mile, Dan Stublaski&#13;
won with a 9:51.9 clocking, while&#13;
Steve Brurmer was third with a&#13;
time of 10:00.5.&#13;
, Commenting tha t her team is&#13;
doing well, Parkside women's&#13;
track coach Barb Lawson also&#13;
feels that her Rangers need more&#13;
experience.&#13;
In a meet held Jan, 29 at Purdue,&#13;
Parkside's top long - distance&#13;
runner, Debbie Spino won her heat&#13;
and placed sixth in the mile run&#13;
with an official time of 5:08.89.&#13;
Dona Driscoll ran the 440 in 1:01.7&#13;
to finish 11th.&#13;
The distance medley relay team&#13;
of Barh Osborne, Linda&#13;
Pfeilstifter, Dona Driscoll and&#13;
Debbie Spino was disqualified&#13;
after officials admitted they had&#13;
miscounted the Ranger team's&#13;
iaps.&#13;
Lawson said that shot putter&#13;
Denise Schreiber also did well in&#13;
her event.&#13;
This past Saturday the women's&#13;
track team travelled to Oshkosh&#13;
and tied for third place in an indoor&#13;
meet there.&#13;
Parkside's Dona Driscoll won&#13;
the 600 yard run with a 1:30&#13;
clocking and Debbie Spino took&#13;
the two mile with 11:05.&#13;
Sue Meyer placed third in the&#13;
two mile with a time of 12:27 and&#13;
Lowrie Melotik was tourth in the&#13;
same event at 12:30.1.&#13;
Barb Osborne was second in the&#13;
1000 yard run and Linda&#13;
Pfeilstifter was fifth in 3:23.9.&#13;
The Titans of Oshkosh won the&#13;
five-team meet.&#13;
.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.: ..'&#13;
Patronize&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
;.:.;.;.;.;.. . .. :..••: :.:.::&gt;..•.•......&#13;
RANGER&#13;
PARKSIDE'S RAY DUCKWORTH pulls • rr~~~&#13;
board. See next week's Ranger for full co'"&#13;
games.&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Rangers slashed •In •&#13;
b) KartDOI"l\ood&#13;
Sporn Editor&#13;
The Parkside fencing team .. d&#13;
yet another 100gb meet pa&#13;
weekend at Iichigan Late&#13;
University. The men' and&#13;
women's teams lost to&#13;
school that attended the&#13;
including home - ate&#13;
Madison&#13;
The "omen lost to u...r boo&#13;
,lichigan State, l~ They then&#13;
went 011 to hattie agall"! or&#13;
thwestem University to lose eoee&#13;
again, this time l:!-l&#13;
The Ra ~er \\omen too 00 the&#13;
Badge, state fencers to lose It 12&#13;
4 That we to he the Ia&#13;
the women took on that da&#13;
the "omen decided 10 hI&gt; a go&#13;
aga mst the Uni er Ity of&#13;
~lichigan - Dearborn 1bi dId not.&#13;
however, tum rot tn lheir fa\"lJl"&#13;
as they lost ~.&#13;
The men didn't do any better&#13;
They lost to . hchtgan late. 7&#13;
but did slightly betterwt not good&#13;
enough against . 'orthwe tern&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC. AnuTICfOOr ...&#13;
fOIl .-aR'. TfAMSAlIa ALl Il"Ol'1'....-~-.... .- tlliOPl'Ct ....&#13;
, ....t .... -..-., ---_.,.,. ~ .. .._---&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 1 DISCOU T D&#13;
0) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE IT MS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
12&#13;
Thursday. February 11. 1982 RANGER&#13;
New. game 'kills' boredom in Village&#13;
by Karen Norwood&#13;
~portsEditor&#13;
There's a Killer 00 the loose!!!&#13;
Well, actually there are many&#13;
killers 00 the loose, and most of&#13;
them live in the Village.&#13;
Nowbefore you start panicking,&#13;
you'd better read 00. Killer is a&#13;
game currently being played by 39&#13;
d the Village tenants, The rules&#13;
are simple, to join the game you&#13;
must first find the man who&#13;
originated Killer at Parkside, chip&#13;
in one dollar, and roy a rubher&#13;
dart gun. Once you do aU of this,&#13;
you draw the name of someone&#13;
who is also playing the game, and&#13;
that is the person that you are out&#13;
to shoot ard "kill".&#13;
There are a few catches to this,&#13;
me is that you can only kill&#13;
WELCOME&#13;
lEI. VIII&#13;
SC.H..O.O.L.S&#13;
aeul&#13;
IEllO.AL&#13;
IAIIES&#13;
CIAllPI •• SHIPS F.". 11.13,&#13;
1982 n. 'ar•••d.&#13;
1.1••&#13;
CARROL COLLEGE&#13;
COLLEGE OF LAKE CO.&#13;
CONCORDIA COLLEGE&#13;
DE PAUL UNIVERSITY&#13;
ELMHURST COLLEGE&#13;
ILL INST. OF TECH.&#13;
LAWRENCE UNIV.&#13;
LOYOLA U.&#13;
LAKESHORE&#13;
MADISON TECH. UNIV.&#13;
MARQUETTE UNIV.&#13;
MICHIGAN TECH.&#13;
MORAINE PARK TECH.&#13;
NORTH CENTRAL&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
NORTH PARK COLLEGE&#13;
NORTHWESTERN UNIV.&#13;
TRITON COLLEGE&#13;
UNIV. OF CHICAGO&#13;
U. OF ILLINOIS - CIRCLE&#13;
U. OF ILLINOIS - MED.&#13;
GR.&#13;
UNIV. OF WISCONSIN&#13;
- EAU CLAIRE&#13;
- GREEN BAY&#13;
- LACROSSE&#13;
- MADISON&#13;
- MILWAUKEE&#13;
- OSHKOSH&#13;
- PARKSIDE&#13;
- PLATTEVILLE&#13;
- RIVER FALLS&#13;
- STEVENS POINT&#13;
- STOUT&#13;
- SUPERIOR&#13;
- WHITEWATER&#13;
WAUBONSEE COMM.&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
WHEATON COLLEGE&#13;
WESTERN WISC. TECH.&#13;
someone when they don't have&#13;
their gun in their hand, The other&#13;
is tha t while you are tracking&#13;
down your victim, someone else is&#13;
trying to make you his victim.&#13;
Once you have killed your&#13;
person, you assume the name of&#13;
the person that he was supposed to&#13;
kill, so you really are always after&#13;
someone, and no one knows who&#13;
has whose name.&#13;
Tim Fisher, originally from&#13;
Chicago, used to play a similar&#13;
game while he was in high school,&#13;
and he felt that the people living in&#13;
the Village didn't know each other&#13;
well enough, so by putting two and&#13;
two together, Fisher decided that&#13;
he would bring Killer to Parkside.&#13;
The game originated in Havard&#13;
University, according to Fisher,&#13;
and has spread to many different&#13;
universities across the nation.&#13;
With its spreading came different&#13;
variations on the rules, and different&#13;
names, such as Assassins&#13;
and l-Spy.&#13;
The game at Parkside started&#13;
two weeks ago Monday at 10p.m.&#13;
and Fisher hopes to see the conclusion&#13;
of it by Valentines Day, He&#13;
also foresees the starting of a new&#13;
round of Killer sometime in the&#13;
near future, but it will be limited&#13;
to people who live in the Village,&#13;
or close to parkside. They will&#13;
also have a limit on the number of&#13;
players participating to keep the&#13;
game from becoming out r of -&#13;
hand,&#13;
Each "Killer" must report his&#13;
victim's name to the head of the&#13;
game, and there is a running tally&#13;
kept of those still alive, and those&#13;
that are "dead," Fisher has set up&#13;
a panel of judges to determine&#13;
whether a killing was legal or not&#13;
in case of a- dispute.&#13;
The sole survivor of the game&#13;
gets 75% ri all the money tha twas&#13;
chipped in at the beginning of the&#13;
game. The person who "killed"&#13;
the most people gets the other&#13;
25%.&#13;
Should you wish a double - dose&#13;
of paranoia, and want to join the&#13;
game, you must contact Tim&#13;
Fisher .. , if he is still alive, that&#13;
is.&#13;
PARKSIDE'S TIM FISHER&#13;
brings "Killer" to the Village.&#13;
Photo by Marti:&#13;
Improve your memory&#13;
Order this memo board now-before you forget!</text>
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      <name>dean eugene norwood</name>
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    <tag tagId="1480">
      <name>dean of faculty</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1478">
      <name>teacher excellence award</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
