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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 11, issue 16</text>
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            <text>Drinking age to be raised</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Music faculty present concert&#13;
The Parkside music faculty will&#13;
present a chamber music concert&#13;
on Sunday, Feb. 6, at 3:30 p. m. in&#13;
the Comm Arts Theater. The&#13;
event is a benefit for the Lillian&#13;
James Memorial Music&#13;
Scholarship Fund, named for a&#13;
former member of the music&#13;
faculty who died last fall. The fund&#13;
was established to support&#13;
especially talented music students&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Budget problems being solved&#13;
hv Rnh Kioclinn t. ^&#13;
with&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
PSGA is still grappling&#13;
budget difficulties, but is now&#13;
more aware of their financial&#13;
situation. At the PSGA Senate&#13;
meeting last Friday, Treasurer&#13;
Terry Tunks outlined the current&#13;
state of the PSGA budget. Tunks&#13;
was appointed to an unfilled&#13;
treasurer's position late last&#13;
SerLwfen the magnitude of&#13;
PSGA s budget shortfall became&#13;
apparent.&#13;
In her report, Tunks stated the&#13;
budget figures for December and&#13;
January are not known, due to the&#13;
length of time needed to process a&#13;
budget request.&#13;
PSGA is currently in debt in&#13;
only two areas, the secretary's&#13;
salary and the miscellaneous&#13;
account. Although PSGA no&#13;
longer employs a secretary, the&#13;
former secretary was overpaid&#13;
$6.52 due to a bookkeeping error.&#13;
The miscellaneous account stili&#13;
has a number of u npaid bills, and&#13;
senators speculated the deficit&#13;
there could be as high as $75.&#13;
Several receipts were found, one&#13;
believed to be left from the "Save&#13;
the Library Day" last spring and&#13;
an unpaid liquor bill from the&#13;
United Council meeting hosted by&#13;
Parkside this fall. University&#13;
guidelines do not permit liquor&#13;
expenses to be paid with&#13;
segregated fees, so the bill, which&#13;
is about $35, will have to be paid&#13;
from PSGA's private account, the&#13;
amount of which was not released.&#13;
Both the travel and Dialogue&#13;
newsletter accounts stand at zero&#13;
largely due to transfers from&#13;
other areas of the budget.&#13;
To offset the debts, transfers&#13;
from the Campus Book Exchange's&#13;
profits were discussed,&#13;
but the disposition of several&#13;
month's employee salaries is not&#13;
known, due both to accounting lag&#13;
and faulty bookkeeping. The book&#13;
exchange has a recorded profit of&#13;
$555 f or the fall semester, but a&#13;
part of that amount will be needed&#13;
to pay salaries, which overran&#13;
projected costs the first weeks of&#13;
this semester.&#13;
With one exception, amounts in&#13;
other areas of the budget are&#13;
between 10 an d 30 p ercent below&#13;
mid - year projections. The exception&#13;
is the mailing fund, which&#13;
was budgeted for $50 for the year.&#13;
The dollar amount in that&#13;
category is $52.36.&#13;
SUFAC has decided to allow&#13;
PSGA additional funding for the&#13;
remainder of the year, although&#13;
the amount and form this funding&#13;
will take has not yet been determined.&#13;
LILLIAN JAMES&#13;
at UW - P.&#13;
Pianist James McKeever will&#13;
perform Prelude in G Major by&#13;
Sergei Rachmaninoff and Scherzo&#13;
m B Minor by Frederic Chopin&#13;
Frances Bedford will play Sonatas&#13;
for Harpsichord by Domenico&#13;
Scarlatti. Organist Glenda&#13;
Mossman will present Chorale in&#13;
A Minor by Cesar Franck.&#13;
Also on the program are three&#13;
songs by Gabriel Faure performed&#13;
by William Weinert&#13;
baritone, and Frank Mueller,'&#13;
pianist; Cinq Pieces en Trio by&#13;
Jacques Ibert performed by Louis&#13;
Covelli, oboe, Timothy Bell&#13;
clarinet, and Daryl Durran'&#13;
bassoon; and Sonatina for&#13;
Trumpet and Piano by Walter&#13;
Hartley, by Mark Eichner,&#13;
trumpet, and August Wegner&#13;
piano.&#13;
Mrs. James taught piano, music&#13;
history and theory for many years&#13;
at the former UW Centers in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha before&#13;
joining the Parkside faculty.&#13;
Following her retirment, she&#13;
continued to conduct group tours&#13;
to the Lyric Opera in Chicago for&#13;
University Extension.&#13;
Admission to the concert is $3&#13;
for the general public, $1.50 f or&#13;
students and senior citizens or a&#13;
donation to the scholarship fund&#13;
Contributions to the fund may be&#13;
made at the concert or by contacting&#13;
Prof. Frank Mueller&#13;
coordinator of the&#13;
discipline at UW - P.&#13;
music&#13;
Winter Carnival adjustments&#13;
Drinking age to be raised&#13;
'Enjoy your beer — it may be&#13;
your last," a spokesperson for the&#13;
United Council of UW Student&#13;
Governments said recently.&#13;
Curt Pawlisch, Legislative&#13;
Affairs director for United&#13;
Council, urged students&#13;
throughout Wisconsin to contact&#13;
their state senators and state&#13;
representatives to indicate their&#13;
support for the current 18 - year -&#13;
old drinking age.&#13;
"There is a significant&#13;
movement to raise the drinking&#13;
age to 19, and eventually to 21,"&#13;
Pawlisch said. "At this time, I&#13;
would say that the odds are about&#13;
10 to 1 that the State Senate will&#13;
pass a drinking age increase by&#13;
June."&#13;
United Council, the state - wide&#13;
student association for the UW&#13;
System, is on record opposing any&#13;
attempt to raise the drinking age.&#13;
"The notion that we can curb&#13;
alcohol abuse by denying access&#13;
to it is not new in this country,"&#13;
Pawlisch said. "The attempts to&#13;
raise the drinking age represents&#13;
a return to prohibition, on a&#13;
selective basis. Prohibition didn't&#13;
work earlier in this century, and&#13;
it's not going to work now."&#13;
Pawlisch encouraged students&#13;
to contact their state legislators&#13;
on the Legislative Hotline, 1-800-&#13;
362-9696.&#13;
Harbeson participates in&#13;
international conference&#13;
Parkside Political Science Prof.&#13;
John Harbeson was one of 20&#13;
experts on land reform&#13;
representing academic institutions&#13;
and government&#13;
agencies from 10 nations who&#13;
participated in a recent conference&#13;
on "International Aspects&#13;
of Land Reform" at the International&#13;
Center for Maize and&#13;
Wheat Development near Mexico&#13;
City.&#13;
Harbeson also will be an editor&#13;
of the proceedings of the conference,&#13;
to be published by the&#13;
sponsors, which include Harvard&#13;
University, the Agency for International&#13;
Development (AID)&#13;
and the Lincoln Institute on Land&#13;
Policy of Cambridge, Mass.&#13;
Harbeson returned to Parkside&#13;
last fall after three years on leave&#13;
to work for AID, where his&#13;
projects involved on - site visits to&#13;
rural development programs in&#13;
Africa and the Caribbean. In 1973-&#13;
75, he taught at Haile Selassie&#13;
University in Ethopia in a&#13;
program coordinated by AID. He&#13;
also spent two years in Kenya&#13;
doing field research on land&#13;
reform and teaching at the Institute&#13;
of Development Studies at&#13;
University College in Nairobi. He&#13;
is the author of a book, "Nation&#13;
Building in Kenya: The Role of&#13;
Land Reform."&#13;
Wisconsin was well&#13;
represented at the conference.&#13;
Profs. Petter Dorner and William&#13;
Thiesenhusen of the UW-Madison&#13;
Land Tenure Center also participated.&#13;
Others came from Asia,&#13;
Africa, Great Britan, Latin&#13;
America and other U.S. agencies&#13;
and institutions.&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
It's time for Winter Carnival,&#13;
and while the final plans are being&#13;
made, there are some changes&#13;
that should be pointed out. As of&#13;
press time, the complete rundown&#13;
of carnival events is as follows:&#13;
Monday, February 7, the carnival&#13;
will be kicked off with a parade&#13;
starting in the Union area and&#13;
traveling down the concourse to&#13;
Main Place. The Parade - Float&#13;
competition will be judged at this&#13;
time, and the winner of the&#13;
Window Painting contest will be&#13;
announced. At 8 p.m. on Monday,&#13;
PAB will sponsor a M*A*S*H&#13;
Party down in the Union. Admission&#13;
will be $1, and if wearing&#13;
the color "olive drab," the entry&#13;
fee will be reduced to $ .50. T he&#13;
featured band that evening will be&#13;
WALLY CLEAVER. For trivia&#13;
experts, on the television series&#13;
M*A*S*H, there will be a&#13;
M*A*S*H Trivia contest during&#13;
the Party.&#13;
On Tuesday, February 8, there&#13;
will be one - half price skiing from&#13;
11 a.m. to 6 p.m. At 12:30 p.m., the&#13;
Ice - Block Sitting Contest and&#13;
Volleyball Tournament will start.&#13;
"Dog" Sled racing will begin at 1&#13;
p.m. "Dog" Sled Racing is a&#13;
newly added feature to the carnival,&#13;
and rules can be found in&#13;
the Winter Carnival brochure. 3-D&#13;
movies will be shown at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Union, admission will be&#13;
free, with the exception of th e 3-D&#13;
glasses which will cost $ .25. The&#13;
features to be shown will be, "The&#13;
Creature From the Black&#13;
Lagoon," and "It Came From&#13;
Outer Space."&#13;
Wednesday, February 8 will&#13;
bring the Jello Slurping Contest at&#13;
1 p.m. in the Union. The Volleyball&#13;
Tournament will be continued at&#13;
this time, and the winners of the&#13;
Baby Picture Contest Competition&#13;
will be announced. A new added&#13;
feature to the l o'clock hour will&#13;
be Broom Ball Relays, which will&#13;
be held (weather permitting) on&#13;
the pond behind the Greenquist&#13;
building. The rules can be seen in&#13;
the Winter Carnival brochure, and&#13;
the event will only be held after&#13;
the safety of the ice has been&#13;
checked. At 7:30 and 9 p.m.&#13;
"Raiders of t he Lost Ark" will be&#13;
shown in the Union Cinema.&#13;
of the&#13;
1 p.m.,&#13;
contest&#13;
Friday, the last day&#13;
carnival will kick off at&#13;
with the Tacky Tourist&#13;
down in the Union. Also going on&#13;
at this time will be the Family&#13;
Feud contest, and the Volleyball&#13;
Finals. At 6 p.m., the Pool Events&#13;
will begin. These include the Dog&#13;
Paddle Contest, The Biggest&#13;
Splash, The Air Mattress Relay,&#13;
and the Inner Tube Relays. There&#13;
Admission will be $1.&#13;
On Thursday, February 9 at&#13;
12:30 p.m., the Volleyball tournament&#13;
will continue, and the&#13;
Blood Drive will go on continuously&#13;
throughout the day.&#13;
There will be a basketball game at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the gym,"and the&#13;
Cheerleaders will sponsor a&#13;
Banner Contest. Rules can be seen&#13;
in the Winter Carnival brochure.&#13;
There will also be entertainment&#13;
following the game, beginning at 9&#13;
p.m., butdetails have not yet been&#13;
settled.&#13;
will be a dance afterwards, in the&#13;
gym, featuring Datillo. There will&#13;
be $1.50 admission at the door for&#13;
the whole evening, and if beach&#13;
attire is worn, there will be a $ .50&#13;
discount.&#13;
All interested parties should&#13;
sign up now for any competitions&#13;
they wish to participate in. As&#13;
always, all participation is encouraged,&#13;
along with good taste,&#13;
and it is the hope of t he committee&#13;
that students will enjoy this week&#13;
of events developed to chase away&#13;
the cold of winter.&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
Orchard Courts Default&#13;
Talk of the Town&#13;
Bikers Gear Up For Season&#13;
Thursday, January 27,1983 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Good news from '82&#13;
THE&#13;
The end of 1982 left many&#13;
Americans hopeless with thoughts&#13;
of increasing unemployment, and&#13;
climbing prices. Americans&#13;
witnessed bouts of instability in&#13;
everything they did. Finding good&#13;
news in the headlines was nearly&#13;
impossible. One good thing did&#13;
happen in 1982 though, and that&#13;
was the passage of the Orphan&#13;
Drug Bill, (1982). After Congress&#13;
passed the measure, the president&#13;
signed the act, and that made it&#13;
law. For thousands of victims of&#13;
orphaned deseases, it offers some&#13;
sense of hope.&#13;
There are about 150 orphan&#13;
diseases, some well - known, like&#13;
cystic fibrosis, others people have&#13;
never heard tell of, like Tourette&#13;
Syndrome, Wilson's disease,&#13;
neurofibromatosis, and the list of&#13;
afflictions goes on and on. There is&#13;
very little profit - making to be&#13;
done in the development of an&#13;
orphan drug. Pharmaceutical&#13;
manufacturers can't survive&#13;
without certain percentages of&#13;
profit on the medications they&#13;
Think Piece&#13;
manufacture. Development of&#13;
these medications is unpopular.&#13;
The estimated cost of researching&#13;
and experimenting with the&#13;
development of a new drug is at&#13;
$70 million. That kind of investment&#13;
is difficult to absorb if&#13;
only a few people will need the&#13;
drug. The industry itself has&#13;
produced orphan - drugs, by and&#13;
large it has absorbed any incurred&#13;
loss. Because some of these&#13;
diseases affect so few people,&#13;
clinical trials that are required by&#13;
government standards are impossible.&#13;
The passage of the act has gi ven&#13;
new "push" for the private&#13;
development of these medications&#13;
in industry. It has provided a tax&#13;
credit for the private industry for&#13;
the next seven years, which&#13;
means that the private industry&#13;
will not have to absorb all of the&#13;
loss on its own, the government&#13;
will help. While miracles may not&#13;
take place in these seven years, at&#13;
least there is a hope that people&#13;
can live with.&#13;
Where our money goes&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
As promised in the introduction&#13;
to this column, I will be presenting&#13;
you with information of great&#13;
importance to you with which you&#13;
may be unfamiliar. Well, it took a&#13;
lot of phone calls, a lot of run&#13;
around, and a lot of frustration but&#13;
here's today's story. Hold on to&#13;
your seats, it may get a little&#13;
rough in spots.&#13;
We're supposed to be proud of&#13;
our campus right? Right! We're&#13;
supposed to feel welcome here&#13;
right? Right! Well, it's a little&#13;
difficult to feel at home when&#13;
we're asked to pay rent right here&#13;
in our own backyard.&#13;
Let me throw a few facts at you:&#13;
every time the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) sponsors an event&#13;
(or anyone else for that matter) in&#13;
the Union Square they have to pay&#13;
$175 rent. Every time they show a&#13;
film in the Cinema they have to&#13;
pay $10 rent plus the projectionist's&#13;
fee (other groups have to&#13;
pay even more). Out of the 11 UW&#13;
system campuses Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee are the only two which&#13;
have to pay for the use of their&#13;
own facilities.&#13;
Where does all of this money&#13;
come from? You and me friends,&#13;
through segregated fees from our&#13;
tuition. Kind of seems silly to pay&#13;
a cover charge of about $3 af ter&#13;
you've already paid $175 to rent&#13;
the Union, doesn't it?&#13;
"You have already paid us&#13;
(through the use of segregated&#13;
fees to pay for the rent of the&#13;
Union) and you're paying again to&#13;
get in the door and there's nothing&#13;
we (PAB) can do about it," said&#13;
PAB President Chris Hammelev.&#13;
Where does all of this money&#13;
go? According to Bill Niebuhr,&#13;
director of the Union, the bulk of&#13;
the $175 goes for paying the&#13;
student help and for maintenance&#13;
(notice this does not include set -&#13;
up or take down crew or security).&#13;
Any percentage of the money left&#13;
is "profit" and goes into the&#13;
general budget which covers&#13;
among other things, "Union&#13;
overhead."&#13;
It makes sense t o pay the help&#13;
doesn't it? But let's take into&#13;
account the fact that 15% of the&#13;
Union employees are work - study&#13;
(which requires the employer to&#13;
pay only 20% of that employee's&#13;
salary) and also that the Union&#13;
won't allow the group sponsoring&#13;
the event to supply its own&#13;
volunteer help.&#13;
With winter carnival coming,&#13;
PAB has to rent the Union two&#13;
nights for student activities. This&#13;
hardly seems to be incentive for&#13;
the committee to increase carnival&#13;
activities and thereby&#13;
hopefully increase student participation.&#13;
"Why do we have to rent our&#13;
own Union," asks a frustrated&#13;
Terry Tunks, chairperson of the&#13;
Winter Carnival Committee. "I&#13;
could understand it if we could not&#13;
guarantee beer sales (on which&#13;
the Union gets 100% of the profit)&#13;
but there will be more than&#13;
enough sales."&#13;
"I think it sucks," adds an&#13;
understandably furious Hammelev.&#13;
"I can't recall any time&#13;
they (the Union) didn't make&#13;
money off beer sales."&#13;
"PAB has really been and still is&#13;
getting screwed. Just look at what&#13;
we pay for the facilities we use&#13;
compared to what the other UW&#13;
campus activities boards' pay,"&#13;
said Hammelev.&#13;
Patti Bursten, president of&#13;
Milwaukee's Union Activities&#13;
Board is also upset. Not only is&#13;
Milwaukee the only other campus&#13;
which has to pay to use its own&#13;
facilities but UW - M has to pay in&#13;
excess of $700 at times. They have&#13;
been fighting the exhorbitant fees&#13;
but have not been having success,&#13;
"We either pay or we don't&#13;
program," she said.&#13;
Marilyn Bugenhagen, assistant&#13;
coordinator of Parkside Student&#13;
Activities is investigating the&#13;
matter by surveying the other UW&#13;
system campuses and looking into&#13;
costs. "I'm wondering if students&#13;
should be charged," she commented.&#13;
"I think something needs&#13;
to be done."&#13;
Niebuhr doesen't. "It is not a&#13;
student Union or Cinema," he&#13;
said. "It is a Campus Union and a&#13;
Campus Cinema and the students&#13;
are given a priority in use and a&#13;
benefit in the cost they are&#13;
charged."&#13;
"Things haven't gone as well in&#13;
the past as they could have with&#13;
Union operations," said PSGA&#13;
President Jim Kreuser. "With the&#13;
Union Advisory Board going into&#13;
effect, maybe the Union will&#13;
become more student oriented."&#13;
On the topic of the new board&#13;
Hammelev added, "Maybe now&#13;
we will have a student oriented&#13;
Union — at least a campus&#13;
oriented union — rather than the&#13;
'Parkside Wedding Reception and&#13;
Convention Center'."&#13;
However, the Union is not alone&#13;
in this crime against the people,&#13;
the Physical Education Department&#13;
shares in this. As Wayne&#13;
Dannehl, director of Physical&#13;
Education puts it, "If there is&#13;
going to be a social event sponsored&#13;
by a student organization&#13;
the students shouldn't be charged&#13;
to use their own facilities. But if&#13;
there is going to be a major money&#13;
making event we should be able to&#13;
charge some rent."&#13;
Continued On Page Eight&#13;
^SjORGANIZATION OF PETROLEUM&#13;
EXPORTING COUNTRIES&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
It's time to gather forces!&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
It's a good thing last year's&#13;
Winter Carnival theme isn't this&#13;
year's. Last year's was 'Take This&#13;
Snow and Shovel It!!' If we had&#13;
developed something like that as a&#13;
theme, we'd probably look pretty&#13;
silly two weeks from now, when&#13;
the carnival is on, and there is no&#13;
snow. That's why this year we&#13;
have SNOW WARS: PARKSIDE&#13;
STRIKES BACK! Even if there&#13;
isn't any snow, at least we can&#13;
strike back against the cold of&#13;
winter. And what interesting&#13;
sounding contests we have this&#13;
year.&#13;
Ice Block Sitting. Of course,&#13;
only the editor of a newspaper&#13;
could be excited about this. There&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
is actually money in this folks. For&#13;
sitting on an ice block, you can&#13;
make from $10 - $20. Take into&#13;
account that you can only wear&#13;
one pair of pants, and one pair of&#13;
long underwear, and that&#13;
pnuemonia medication is $27.62&#13;
this year, and it all becomes a bit&#13;
less attractive. We excited editors&#13;
also know how to wrap plastic&#13;
around our legs. Not that I would&#13;
cheat, but I would like to know&#13;
how they plan to check if you are&#13;
following regulations according to&#13;
the Winter Carnival Rules. I won't&#13;
give any suggestions for checking.&#13;
We'll leave well - enough alone.&#13;
Then there's Broom Ball Relays.&#13;
Sure, Sure, on the ice pond behind&#13;
Greenquist. So we loose a few&#13;
students to this ice. Perhaps a few&#13;
faculty. We'll see. Now, it has&#13;
been claimed that this ice will be&#13;
checked before any games start.&#13;
The checking is the part I want to&#13;
see. How can they know if it's&#13;
safe, if they don't walk on it at all?&#13;
It will be rather amusing to see&#13;
who gets stuck checking this ice. I&#13;
don't think this comes under&#13;
physical plant job descriptions. I&#13;
may be wrong though.&#13;
Nonetheless, Winter Carnival&#13;
slowly creeps up on us, and as&#13;
goofy as it sounds, if we allow it to,&#13;
Winter Carnival will develop&#13;
friendships and some sense of&#13;
camaraderie for us. Most who&#13;
attended Fallfest noticed it, and if&#13;
time is taken, more people can&#13;
take notice this Winter, during the&#13;
carnival. It's time, to gather&#13;
forces.&#13;
Wisconsin open primary worth it!&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Unless Wisconsin residents&#13;
make a conscious effort to save&#13;
their traditionally "open"&#13;
primary before April of this year,&#13;
Wisconsinites will lose this&#13;
historic privilege!&#13;
Why is an "open" primary so&#13;
important to residents of&#13;
Wisconsin? First of all, the open&#13;
primary gives Wisconsinites the&#13;
right to vote privately, rather than&#13;
having to declare themselves as a&#13;
Republican or Democrat to the&#13;
public. Secondly, our traditionally&#13;
open primary is part of Wisconsin's&#13;
proud progressive heritage&#13;
worth preserving.&#13;
Residents may not realize that&#13;
the primary is in serious danger,&#13;
but the Democratic National&#13;
Committee won a federal court&#13;
case in 1981 (LaFollette v. the&#13;
Democratic Party of the United&#13;
States) which sustained their&#13;
authority to have no legal&#13;
obligation to recognize Wisconsin&#13;
delegates chosen through the open&#13;
primary. If our delegates are not&#13;
recognized, then our historic open&#13;
primary will not only become&#13;
obsolete, but will eventually be&#13;
replaced by a different procedure.&#13;
One of these possibilities is a&#13;
closed primary in which residents&#13;
Save Seybold&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
An open appeal hearing will be&#13;
held for Prof. Peter Seybold on&#13;
Friday, Jan. 28 at 1 p.m. in Moln&#13;
324. This is a chance for concerned&#13;
students, faculty and community&#13;
members to show their support for&#13;
Prof. Seybold and open participation&#13;
in these processes.&#13;
Marie E. Marten&#13;
will be forced to declare publicly&#13;
their party preference before&#13;
being allowed to vote. This invasion&#13;
of privacy may discourage&#13;
Independent voters from voting in&#13;
Wisconsin and other residents&#13;
whose occupations may be affected&#13;
by their party affiliation.&#13;
Another possible way of apportioning&#13;
delegates would be&#13;
through caucuses run by the&#13;
national party. In this case,&#13;
Wisconsinites would lose their&#13;
right to directly participate in the&#13;
nominating of candidates because&#13;
the. decision would become the&#13;
responsibility of a much smaller&#13;
core of highly - motivated political&#13;
activists.&#13;
As a Wisconsin resident proud of&#13;
its progressive heritage, I urge all&#13;
Wisconsinites to ask their&#13;
legislators to place the following&#13;
as a referendum question on the&#13;
April ballot:&#13;
We, the people of Wisconsin, ask&#13;
the Democratic National Committee&#13;
to respect our progressive&#13;
traditions and allow us to retain&#13;
our historic "open" primary as&#13;
the means of apportioning&#13;
delegates to the Democratic&#13;
National Convention.&#13;
It is hoped that through the&#13;
anticipated response to the&#13;
referendum, the Democratic&#13;
National Committee will be forced&#13;
to realize just how important our&#13;
"open" primary is to us in&#13;
Wisconsin. We ask them to make&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Norm Couture&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
ganger Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
_ STAFF&#13;
LeruV B.Y!7^'. Jeanne Buenker - Phillips, Patricia Cumbie,&#13;
ai,as' John Kovalic, Rick Luehr, Robb Luehr,&#13;
Kathy Rayburn, Napoleon Scarbrough, Jennie Tunkiecz.&#13;
Tetpon^ble'forriuTH tnd- by s,udents of uw ° 'lied',onal P°"cv and content, • Parkside and they are solely&#13;
RANGER isVorintedhtdthA dur.in91the academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Wrmen Dermi^ c! he,UIll°n Co°Perative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All corresn^rio^ is.req",l[ed for reprint of any portion of RANGER.&#13;
Parkside Box ™°n* addressed t0: Parkside Ranger, University of Wisconsin&#13;
• 2000' Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53141.&#13;
paper with one inch SI8?!!! * ,yPewri,,en' doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification letters must be signed and a telephone number In-&#13;
Narnes wi;! be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserves all" l^it^J|S AA.°"fay af, 3 p-m- ,or Publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory cwTent pnvi,e9es ,n re,usln9 *'nt letters which contain false or&#13;
Orchard Courts default;&#13;
Bank requests receiver&#13;
by Bob Riesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The First Bank Southeast of&#13;
Kenosha has requested that Orchard&#13;
Courts apartments, located&#13;
on Wood Rd. next to the Child Care&#13;
Center, be placed in receivership&#13;
as the result of defaulting on a $300&#13;
thousand loan.&#13;
The loans were used primarily&#13;
for renovation of the brick&#13;
buildings in the complex, known&#13;
as "Parkside Village Phase II'' at&#13;
the time of construction. The&#13;
wooden buildings, "Phase I"&#13;
were not renovated.&#13;
An attorney for the bank said&#13;
the request for receivership was&#13;
still in its preliminary stages, and&#13;
no one has yet been named&#13;
receiver. He added that it was a&#13;
common practice" and in no way&#13;
implied that the apartments&#13;
would cease operation.&#13;
A receiver is a person who&#13;
appointed by the court at the&#13;
creditor's request, oversees the&#13;
operation of the company's&#13;
operation and guarantees that the1&#13;
business is fulfilling its&#13;
obligations.&#13;
The Orchard Courts&#13;
management team, brought in by&#13;
the apartment's owner, Certified&#13;
Property Management&#13;
of Milwaukee, Wis. are the&#13;
defaulting party in the action.&#13;
They were brought in when&#13;
Parkside changed its student&#13;
housing to the Racine YMCA.&#13;
Changing the name to Orchard&#13;
Courts, the apartments now attract&#13;
people from Kenosha itself,&#13;
although about 40 Parkside&#13;
students still live there.&#13;
Although Parkside has tried to&#13;
purchase the property in the past,&#13;
they were unable to because the&#13;
value of the property was too high.&#13;
Even now, there are no plans to&#13;
acquire it, as the renovations have&#13;
actually increased the value of the&#13;
apartments.&#13;
In fact, because of the increased&#13;
value of the property, the court&#13;
could appoint one of the Orchard&#13;
Courts management team to act&#13;
as receiver. No conflict of in terest&#13;
would be created, because of t hat&#13;
increased value.&#13;
Academic games&#13;
And just what is tenure?&#13;
Seybold appeal Friday&#13;
The Behavioral Science&#13;
Division Executive Committee&#13;
will meet tomorrow to consider a&#13;
decision to grant a one year&#13;
contract extension to associate&#13;
professor of sociology Peter&#13;
Seybold.&#13;
Seybold was denied a one year&#13;
extension of his contract, a step&#13;
leading to tenure, at a contract&#13;
renewal hearing last semester.&#13;
The committee cited a lack of&#13;
creative activity as the cause.&#13;
Seybold believes that the high&#13;
marks he has gotten from&#13;
students offset any shortcomings&#13;
in scholarly research. Further, he&#13;
believes that students should have&#13;
an active part in the decision&#13;
making process, and has&#13;
therefore requested an open&#13;
hearing.&#13;
The hearing is open to the public&#13;
and will be held in MOLN 328 at 1&#13;
p. m.&#13;
by Jeanne Buenker-Phillips&#13;
The biggest prize that a faculty&#13;
member can win in the academic&#13;
game is tenure.&#13;
The typical Parkside faculty&#13;
member spends most of his or her&#13;
first six years here in the almost&#13;
single - minded pursuit of that&#13;
goal. If he or she fails in the quest,&#13;
it means, for all practical purposes,&#13;
a dead end to the&#13;
possibilities of an academic&#13;
career, given the current state of&#13;
the marketplace. If he or she&#13;
succeeds at gaining tenure, on the&#13;
other hand, it means a virtual&#13;
lifetime guaranteed appointment,&#13;
with all the benefits which that&#13;
implies.&#13;
In either case tenure decisions&#13;
are clearly the most important&#13;
ones made at Parkside in any&#13;
given academic year and certainly&#13;
generate the most interest&#13;
and controversy. Tenure is also&#13;
one of the most misunderstood&#13;
aspects of academic life,&#13;
especially for students and&#13;
community people.&#13;
Today, most people tend to see&#13;
tenure as a form of job security,&#13;
not unlike civil service or&#13;
seniority. Historically, though,&#13;
tenure evolved as a protection of&#13;
academic freedom, a guarantee&#13;
that scholars could pursue&#13;
research in sensitive areas or&#13;
discuss controversial subjects in&#13;
class without the fear of losing&#13;
their positions. University&#13;
professors, by the nature of their&#13;
work, need to be free to challenge&#13;
"conventional wisdom" or attack&#13;
"sacred cows", if they are to push&#13;
back frontiers of knowledge in&#13;
their field. In this sense tenure is&#13;
akin to Congressional or&#13;
diplomatic immunity, the&#13;
privilege between doctor and&#13;
patient or lawyer and client. It is a&#13;
condition of labor which&#13;
professionals need to pursue their&#13;
craft. Tenure is also a vote of&#13;
confidence or respect given by a&#13;
person's colleagues on the basis of&#13;
his or her performance during the&#13;
probationary period.&#13;
The institution of tenure grew&#13;
up in the medievil university&#13;
where the right of academic&#13;
freedom needed to be protected&#13;
from repressive governments and&#13;
churches. According to Professor&#13;
John Buenker, "tenure grew out&#13;
of the midevil conception of the&#13;
university of a corporation with&#13;
contractual rights that required&#13;
special conditions of labor.&#13;
Universities were governed by&#13;
boards of st udents or faculty who&#13;
conferred tenure on those judged&#13;
worthy." Although tenure is officially&#13;
conferred by the Board of&#13;
Regents and the university administration&#13;
today, the tradition&#13;
of having the faculty make the&#13;
professional evaluations continues.&#13;
According to the University of&#13;
Wisconsin rules and regulations,&#13;
tenure is an "appointment for an&#13;
unlimited period granted to a&#13;
ranked faculty member by the&#13;
board upon the affirmative&#13;
recommendation of the appropriate&#13;
academic department,&#13;
or its functional equivalent, and&#13;
the chancellor of an institution via&#13;
the president of the system."&#13;
Procedurally, the question of&#13;
tenure at Parkside is first considered&#13;
by the candidate's&#13;
Security&#13;
Divisional Executive Committee,&#13;
the "functional equivalent" of th e&#13;
appropriate academic department.&#13;
If the divisional recommendation&#13;
is positive, it is&#13;
reviewed by the Personnel&#13;
Review Committee, a campus -&#13;
wide body consisting of one&#13;
representative from each division&#13;
plus four at - large members. This&#13;
is to insure that certain campus -&#13;
wide standards are maintained&#13;
and the divisions make a serious&#13;
effort to evaluate their candidates.&#13;
If the P.R.C. recommendation is&#13;
positive, it is transmitted by the&#13;
chairman to Vice Chancellor/&#13;
Dean of Faculty Lorman A.&#13;
Ratner, who has been delegated&#13;
the authority to make such&#13;
decisions of Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Although the Vice Chancellor&#13;
conducts a separate investigation&#13;
of his own, he generally accepts&#13;
the recommendation of the P. R.&#13;
C. and the Divisional Executive&#13;
Committee. If the P. R. C.&#13;
recommendation has been&#13;
negative, the Vice Chancellor&#13;
could go with the positive&#13;
recommendation of th e Divisional&#13;
Executive Committee, but he&#13;
cannot grant tenure without the&#13;
positive recommendation of at&#13;
least one faculty committee.&#13;
Although the Vice - Chancellor can&#13;
ignore positive recommendations&#13;
from the P. R. C., that likelihood is&#13;
rare if the faculty takes its task&#13;
seriously.&#13;
It is also a faculty prerogative to&#13;
develop rules for evaluating&#13;
faculty members, "after con-&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#13;
February 16 named&#13;
"Lobby Day" in Madison A Parkin8 regulations refresher course&#13;
A spokesperson from the United&#13;
Council of University of Wisconsin&#13;
Student Governments announced&#13;
recently that UW students will&#13;
converge upon the state capitol in&#13;
February to protest a tuition increase&#13;
requested by the UW&#13;
Board of Regents.&#13;
Curt Pawlisch, Legislative&#13;
Affairs Director for United&#13;
Council, said that students&#13;
throughout the UW System will&#13;
meet with their State&#13;
Representatives and State&#13;
Senators in Madison on February&#13;
16th to discuss the level of tuition&#13;
for the next two academic years.&#13;
The UW Board of Regents has&#13;
requested that tuition be set at 27&#13;
percent of the cost of instruction&#13;
for both 1983 - 84 and 1984 - 85.&#13;
Tuition has traditionally been set&#13;
at 25 p ercent.&#13;
"This is a neutron - bomb - type&#13;
budget request," Pawlisch stated.&#13;
"The University claims it needs a&#13;
tuition increase to defend itself&#13;
from the recession. But the&#13;
defense will result in empty&#13;
classrooms — a tuition increase&#13;
contributes to the growing&#13;
financial burden placed upon&#13;
students and their families — and&#13;
it's a burden many students no&#13;
longer can carry."&#13;
Tuition for 1983 - 84 will be $50.00&#13;
above its current level for resident&#13;
undergraduates. In 1984 - 85, it will&#13;
be $80.00 above the 1983 - 84 level.&#13;
"I urge all students in the UW&#13;
system to come to Madison on&#13;
February 16th, so we can make a&#13;
strong impression on the&#13;
legislature that the defense of&#13;
higher education from budget&#13;
cutbacks should not include&#13;
solutions which lead to a&#13;
shrinkage in student population,"&#13;
Pawlisch said.&#13;
by Vince Gigliotti&#13;
It's the beginning of a new&#13;
semester, this means new&#13;
students and new class schedules&#13;
for returning students. Although&#13;
the parking regulations remain&#13;
the same, a short review may help&#13;
those who are new at Parkside&#13;
and refresh the memories of&#13;
returning students.&#13;
Everyone who parks a vehicle&#13;
on campus must have a valid&#13;
parking permit. If you have an&#13;
"S" on your permit, that permit is&#13;
invalid. It was only good for the&#13;
Fall Semester. Permits can only&#13;
be purchased from the Campus&#13;
Security Department. Do not buy&#13;
permits from any individuals,&#13;
these are usually stolen permits.&#13;
When you get caught using a&#13;
stolen permit you will receive a&#13;
$15 pa rking ticket and you must&#13;
turn in the stolen permit. You will&#13;
also need to buy a new permit to&#13;
park on campus and you will be&#13;
out the money you paid for the&#13;
stolen permit. This could get very&#13;
expensive. Only buy your permit&#13;
from Campus Security.&#13;
If yo u have a white permit, you&#13;
may park in any of the lots,&#13;
anytime of the day. The white&#13;
permit does not entitle the owner&#13;
to park in Reserved, Disabled or&#13;
metered areas. If you park at a&#13;
meter you must put money in the&#13;
meter. The meters are here for&#13;
campus visitors, not students. The&#13;
white permit lots are the Union&#13;
Lot, the Comm / Arts Lot and the&#13;
Phy Ed Lot.&#13;
The white permit does not&#13;
guarantee you a space in a particular&#13;
lot. If the lot you want to&#13;
park in is full, you must go to&#13;
another lot. Since the Phy Ed Lot&#13;
rarely fills up completely, the&#13;
excuse that a lot was full is not a&#13;
valid reason to park illegally.&#13;
There is never any parking&#13;
allowed on Outer Loop or Inner&#13;
Loop Roads.&#13;
If you have a green permit you&#13;
must park in the Tallent Hall Lot&#13;
until 1:00 p. m. After 1:00 p. m.&#13;
you may park in any of the lots.&#13;
Green permits are not allowed to&#13;
park in the Phy Ed Lot until after&#13;
1:00 p. m. Green permit owners&#13;
may not park in any Reserved,&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#13;
Three internal auditors addressed&#13;
members of t he Parkside&#13;
Computer Club and the Parkside&#13;
chapter of DPMA on the subject of&#13;
internal auditing on the evening of&#13;
Dec. 7.&#13;
"The Best Seat in the House"&#13;
was the title of the presentation by&#13;
Tom Twinem, Dennis Duran and&#13;
Chuck Kohli, certified internal&#13;
auditors for Wisconsin Electric.&#13;
The field of i nternal auditing is&#13;
a "well - kept secret," according&#13;
to Twinem. Internal auditors&#13;
analyze and evaluate the financial __&#13;
and operating activities of a&#13;
corporation and report their&#13;
recommendations to the corporation's&#13;
directors. Internal&#13;
auditing transcends public accounting&#13;
as a profession and has&#13;
its own professional organization,&#13;
the Institute of Internal Auditors,&#13;
which sponsors a certification&#13;
The obscure field of&#13;
internal auditing explained&#13;
program for its members. Over 24&#13;
thousand internal auditors belong&#13;
to this forty - year - old&#13;
organization, and that figure will&#13;
rise considerably as management&#13;
becomes increasingly aware of&#13;
the value of internal auditing.&#13;
Duran pointed out that one of&#13;
the most attractive aspects of&#13;
internal auditing is its independence&#13;
within the company.&#13;
Internal auditors make their&#13;
appraisals for either the chairman&#13;
or the board of d irectors, so they&#13;
must have the freedom to report&#13;
objectively. Internal auditing&#13;
covers all facets of a company&#13;
which makes for a variety of interesting&#13;
tasks, and the high&#13;
visibility to top management&#13;
increases promotional opportunities.&#13;
When performing an audit, the&#13;
auditors first familiarize themselves&#13;
with the subject, its policies&#13;
and procedures, according to the&#13;
management's objectives. A&#13;
formal program for conducting&#13;
the audit is then drawn up and&#13;
field research is done to satisfy its&#13;
demands. The product is the audit&#13;
report, which is written up and&#13;
submitted with appraisals and&#13;
r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s f o r&#13;
management action.&#13;
Within the field there is the&#13;
specialized field of electronic data&#13;
processing (EDP) auditing. Kohli,&#13;
an EDP auditor, explained how&#13;
the EDP auditor is interested in&#13;
the evaluation and verification of&#13;
information systems controls.&#13;
Programmer access, down time,&#13;
libraries, security, power&#13;
requirements and applications&#13;
development are just some of the&#13;
areas where controls are of interest&#13;
to the EDP auditor.&#13;
ITVV A1TU T Marquette University&#13;
LSAT&#13;
Law School Admission Test Review&#13;
2 Saturdays, February 5-12&#13;
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.&#13;
FEE: $95&#13;
LOCATION: Lalumiere Language Hall, Room 205&#13;
Marquette University Campus&#13;
For more information contact:&#13;
Marquette University&#13;
Division of Continuing Education&#13;
1918 West Wisconsin Avenue&#13;
Milwaukee. Wl 53233&#13;
224-7345 or 224-7499&#13;
Thursday, January 27, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Parkside grad&#13;
deals in dreams&#13;
Jennie Tunkiecz&#13;
Not all Parkside graduates&#13;
become what they originally set&#13;
out to be. One communications&#13;
graduate, for example, now works&#13;
closely with chickens, gorillas,&#13;
belly dancers, and strippers and&#13;
claims he can make any fantasy&#13;
come true. This amazing entrepeneur&#13;
is Larry Zamba, 25,&#13;
president of Warn Bam Singing&#13;
Telegram! Inc.&#13;
While at Parkside Zamba had&#13;
the same battle plan that most&#13;
King awarded Fisher scholarship&#13;
LARRY ZAMBA, president of&#13;
Warn Bam Singing Telegram.&#13;
most students have; send out&#13;
resumes and get a job. It didn't&#13;
work out exactly that way.&#13;
"I knew that based on my&#13;
personality I would have a little&#13;
bit of trouble conforming to&#13;
bosses who say 'Come in, wear a&#13;
suit and tie, work hard, be&#13;
humble, and we'll take care of&#13;
you,' I'm not that kind of individual,"&#13;
said Zamba. Donning a&#13;
silver jumpsuit, a yellow t - shirt&#13;
bearing the company logo and&#13;
white Nikes, Zamba showed he is&#13;
definitely not the three piece suit&#13;
COMING THURS., FEB. 3&#13;
UNION SQUARE 9 P.M.&#13;
YOU BET YOUR... \&#13;
« Swe e t f j h e e k s :&#13;
type of man.&#13;
Zamba feels he learned some&#13;
important things in college. "My&#13;
company is founded on the&#13;
'Theory Y Co.' that I learned from&#13;
Prof. Lee Thayer. I also developed&#13;
the prototype for Cluck the&#13;
Wonder Chicken, a telegram&#13;
character, while participating in&#13;
Prof. David Holmes' Phantasicus&#13;
Festival. But a lot of college was&#13;
crap," said Zamba. "College is&#13;
what you make of it, but I was a&#13;
little bored."&#13;
The most vital aspect of college&#13;
to Zamba was the time given to&#13;
mature. "College game me four&#13;
more years to grow up. It allowed&#13;
me to sit and age; much like a&#13;
cheese." And now around&#13;
Kenosha, Zamba has become&#13;
quite a big cheese.&#13;
After graduating, Zamba held a&#13;
variety of jobs before coming up&#13;
with the telegram idea. He first&#13;
worked as a free lance&#13;
photographer. "That's when I had&#13;
my first inkling that I should go&#13;
into business for myself," said&#13;
Zamba. Then he worked at a child&#13;
care center, La Macchia Travel&#13;
Agency and as a substitute&#13;
teacher for the Kenosha School&#13;
District.&#13;
Zamba got the idea to start a&#13;
singing telegram service in&#13;
Kenosha when he saw an ad for&#13;
another company. "I thought I&#13;
could do something like that, then&#13;
I started reading a little bit more&#13;
about it. I saw that telegrams&#13;
were becoming a very hip tWng to&#13;
do so I decided to give it a try and&#13;
see what would happen," he said.&#13;
His telegram business has&#13;
flourished into a popular corporation&#13;
in only two years. Zamba&#13;
is also now offering others the&#13;
opportunity to open their own&#13;
franchises of the singing telegram&#13;
service in Milwaukee and&#13;
Madison.&#13;
The popularity of the business is&#13;
due to Zambas' enthusiasm and&#13;
the company's motto: making&#13;
people happy. "The thrust of our&#13;
business is to make people happy.&#13;
We pride ourselves in being one of&#13;
the 'premier' singing telegram&#13;
organizations in the country. Our&#13;
performances last 15 minutes and&#13;
the audience gets a complete&#13;
scripted show — it's not ad - libbed,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Despite a lack of free time,&#13;
Zamba is enjoying his success and&#13;
plans to continue working hard&#13;
until he reaches his goal. "Owning&#13;
your own business really cuts&#13;
down on your social life. You have&#13;
to spend a lot of time with it instead&#13;
of going out. Right now,&#13;
working 10 -12 hours a day is not&#13;
unusual. My goal is to become a&#13;
millionaire by the time I'm 30 — if&#13;
I keep up this pace I probably will&#13;
be," concluded Zamba with a&#13;
smile.&#13;
The&#13;
I Alternative&#13;
Spring Break&#13;
Vacation!&#13;
From ONLY 369 Plus $30 Bahamian Tax&#13;
Includes:&#13;
•Roundtrip Airfare on&#13;
Boeing 707 Charter to&#13;
Freeport or Nassau.&#13;
•7 nights Deluxe Hotel&#13;
Accommodations.&#13;
•Roundtrip Transfers from&#13;
Airport to Hotel.&#13;
•Baggage Handling.&#13;
•Taxes &amp; Gratuities.&#13;
•Complimentary&#13;
Cocktail&#13;
P^ty. _ a?&#13;
The $175 Peg Fisher Communication&#13;
Scholarship was&#13;
presented to Rachel King, a senior&#13;
in Communication, on January 17,&#13;
1983. A Communication faculty&#13;
awards committee selected Ms.&#13;
King as the recipient of this&#13;
competitive award on the basis of&#13;
* Club Events *•&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
The Art Addicts will meet on&#13;
Monday, Jan. 31 in CA 111 at 1&#13;
p.m. Topics to be discussed will be&#13;
the '83-'84 budget and elections,&#13;
Winter Carnival and the&#13;
semester's scheduled events.&#13;
Please attend — all are welcome&#13;
to participate.&#13;
Accounting&#13;
The Accounting Club will hold&#13;
two special meetings to elect&#13;
officers for the next semester. On&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 2 at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Moln 107 the election of the top&#13;
four officers will take place.&#13;
Nominations for chairpersons for&#13;
the different committees will also&#13;
be taken. Then, on Monday, Feb.&#13;
14 at 1 p. m. in Moln 107 the&#13;
chairpersons will be elected.&#13;
Other club business will also be&#13;
discussed. Getting involved in the&#13;
Accounting Club not only looks&#13;
good on your resume, it's a good&#13;
opportunity for the personal&#13;
growth as well.&#13;
Security . . .&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
Disabled or meter areas.&#13;
During periods of snow and bad&#13;
weather it becomes very important&#13;
that you park properly.&#13;
When you arrive on campus, look&#13;
for the lots that have been already&#13;
plowed. Nothing slows up the&#13;
plowing process as bad as a few&#13;
cars parked in the middle of the&#13;
lot.&#13;
Another way of getting to and&#13;
from campus is the bus. Both the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine City Bus&#13;
systems serve the campus. There&#13;
is also an Evening Bus Service&#13;
that leaves the campus at 9:30 p.&#13;
m. Monday through Thursday.&#13;
This service has two buses. One&#13;
has a route through Kenosha and&#13;
the other through Racine.&#13;
Schedules for all the buses are&#13;
available at the Union Information&#13;
Desk. Pick up a&#13;
schedule and keep it handy, you&#13;
may need to use the buses some&#13;
day.&#13;
Purchase your permits only&#13;
from Campus Security. Display&#13;
your permits when you park on&#13;
campus and park only in the&#13;
proper places. Obey the parking&#13;
regulations and avoid paying&#13;
parking tickets. Remember&#13;
you're not the only person to use&#13;
the lots. Be considerate of others&#13;
when you park.&#13;
SUNDAY CHICAGO&#13;
DEPARTURES WEEKLY&#13;
GO FREE! Organize a&#13;
group of 25, or 15 for 1/2&#13;
FREE TRIP! CALL NOW&#13;
for Reservations! Space&#13;
is definitely LIMITED!&#13;
1st come, 1st Served!&#13;
Reservations after Feb. 1&#13;
on a Space Available&#13;
Basis Only.&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
Sun &amp; Ski Adventures&#13;
2256 North Clark Street&#13;
Chicago. IL 60614&#13;
312-871-1070&#13;
"excellent qualifications extremely&#13;
well presented," according&#13;
to Janet Wells, a member&#13;
of the committee.&#13;
First publicized in the Ranger in&#13;
early December, the scholarship&#13;
required applicants to meet a&#13;
number of criteria. Among them&#13;
were a current GPA of 3.2 and a&#13;
desire to pursue a communication&#13;
career in a business environment.&#13;
The award was presented to Ms.&#13;
King at the opening session of this&#13;
spring's Modules with&#13;
Tenure . . .&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
sultation with appropriate&#13;
students and with the approval of&#13;
the Chancellor." At Parkside&#13;
these rules were developed in the&#13;
first few years of its existence.&#13;
The U. W. rules hold that "tenure&#13;
is not required solely because of&#13;
years of service." In other words,&#13;
tenure is not a reward for&#13;
longevity, a form of seniority, or a&#13;
plum given to those who don't&#13;
"rock the boat." Specifically,&#13;
tenure can be granted wily after&#13;
an evaluation of "teaching,&#13;
research, and professional and&#13;
public service and contributions to&#13;
the institutions."&#13;
These criteria are developed&#13;
and written out, so that each&#13;
faculty member can know what&#13;
they are from the day of initial&#13;
appointment. Probationary&#13;
faculty are also supposed to get&#13;
annual progress reports in their&#13;
merit reviews and through&#13;
discussions with their chairperson,&#13;
to determine how well&#13;
they are meeting the criteria.&#13;
If tenure is an "unlimited appointment",&#13;
does that mean that&#13;
universities are "stuck" with&#13;
faculty who prove to be "deadwood"&#13;
after having earned&#13;
tenure? Contrary to popular&#13;
Special counseling&#13;
Professional Communicators. Ms.&#13;
Fisher, a consultant / trainer who&#13;
is a Professional Associate of the&#13;
Communication Program,&#13;
declared her intention to sponsor&#13;
the one - time scholarship after&#13;
presenting a module to students&#13;
last October. Modules with&#13;
Professional Communicators, a&#13;
program designed to bring&#13;
students and successful practitioners&#13;
together, was launched&#13;
in the Fall as a part of the revised&#13;
Communication curriculum.&#13;
belief, tenured faculty members&#13;
can be dismissed, but the process&#13;
is extremely difficult, in order to&#13;
protect academic freedom and to&#13;
minimize the possibility of people&#13;
being fired for political or&#13;
ideological beliefs.&#13;
In the UW System, the dismissal&#13;
of a tenured faculty member&#13;
requires the ultimate approval of&#13;
the Board of Regents, can come&#13;
only after a proper hearing, and&#13;
can only be for "just cause." The&#13;
latter criteria is deliberately&#13;
vague and general but has usually&#13;
been held to cover such areas as&#13;
demonstrated incompetence,&#13;
abuse of academic freedom, and&#13;
"moral turpitude", whether&#13;
sexual or financial. In all cases,&#13;
the burden of proof for making the&#13;
charges stick is on the institution.&#13;
In the vast majority of cases,&#13;
however, tenure does not amount&#13;
to a lifetime appointment. There&#13;
can be no doubt that tenure&#13;
sometimes protects incompetent&#13;
instructors or breeds a sense of&#13;
arrogance. More importantly,&#13;
though, it is the best guarantee in&#13;
an imperfect world that faculty&#13;
members have been judged&#13;
competent by a jury of their peers&#13;
and can continue to pursue their&#13;
teaching and research without&#13;
threats to their well - being.&#13;
sessions set&#13;
Do you need help developing&#13;
assertive skills? Overcoming&#13;
public speaking anxiety? Help to&#13;
quit smoking? Help in overcoming&#13;
a specific fear (heights, water,&#13;
driving, etc.)?&#13;
Special group counseling&#13;
programs are being offered this&#13;
semester to Parkside students&#13;
concerned with any of these&#13;
problems. The programs are&#13;
sponsored by psychology&#13;
professor William Morrow.&#13;
Students in his Behavioral&#13;
Counseling class will conduct the&#13;
groups under his supervision. The&#13;
programs are free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
The programs will employ&#13;
structured counseling and&#13;
training procedures which have&#13;
been found in controlled studies to&#13;
be relatively effective for particular&#13;
problems. Each program&#13;
will involve six to ten counseling /&#13;
training sessions, plus homework&#13;
activities.&#13;
Sign - up cards will be available&#13;
at the Main Place information&#13;
kiosk. The deadline is Wednesday&#13;
Feb. 2. &gt;Ranger n eeds writers,&#13;
photographers, etc. . .&#13;
This Thurs.f Jan. 27&#13;
FOLLOWING&#13;
UW-PAR KSIDE&#13;
VS.&#13;
MARION COLLEGE&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Danein" Machine&#13;
9:00 PM UNION SQUARE&#13;
Free with basketball ticket exchange at&#13;
the game - or — $2.00 at the door&#13;
More pop and new wave appear&#13;
as Milwaukee radio changes&#13;
hv Tnnv - ^&#13;
RANGER Thursday , January 27, 1983&#13;
Bayuzick and DeVinny display&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Many strange things are happening&#13;
on the Milwaukee radio&#13;
scene, some good, some bad, but&#13;
all strange. First the bad things.&#13;
In case you don't already know&#13;
WFMR, the classics - and - jazz&#13;
station, has turned to an (cringe)&#13;
adult contemporary format. Pop&#13;
music, in other words. However&#13;
at the same moment that WFMR&#13;
dropped the classics, another&#13;
station, namely WXJY at 98 FM&#13;
picked them up. WXJY also&#13;
picked up some of WFMR's disc&#13;
jockeys, and may apply for the&#13;
FMR call letters. The only&#13;
problem with this arrangement is&#13;
that while WFMR broadcasts the&#13;
likes of Bach, Beethoven, and&#13;
Brahms from the middle of&#13;
Milwaukee with an eight - hundred&#13;
foot antenna and twenty -&#13;
thousand watts of power, WXJY&#13;
squeaks a three - thousand watt&#13;
signal from a two hundred foot&#13;
antenna in Menominee Falls. If&#13;
you can get WXJY in the Racine -&#13;
Kenosha area, you are luckv&#13;
WUWM, the University of&#13;
Milwaukee's station, hired Obie&#13;
Yadgar, the former FMR jockey,&#13;
and is expanding its classical&#13;
format. So even with FMR gone,&#13;
there seems to be an abundance of&#13;
RON CUZNER - man without&#13;
a radi o station.&#13;
Jazz is another matter.&#13;
Suprisingly, Ron Cuzner, host of&#13;
"The Dark Side" jazz program&#13;
and teacher here at Parkside, has&#13;
not yet been hired by any&#13;
Milwaukee radio station — I don't&#13;
understand this, as Cuzner's&#13;
unique, and the best radio&#13;
program in the area. There is a&#13;
large void left with the demise of&#13;
'Dark Side' — hopefully one of the&#13;
Milwaukee stations will have the&#13;
foresight and good taste to hire&#13;
Cuzner.&#13;
WLPX, formerly a strictly&#13;
sixties and heavy metal rock&#13;
station, has gone new wave. Yes&#13;
you heard right. LPX is playing&#13;
Joe Jackson, The Clash, Flock of&#13;
Seagulls, The Psychedelic Furs,&#13;
Men at Work and the like. I think&#13;
this is a good thing — for a long&#13;
time the only new music heard on&#13;
LPX was crap like Journey, 38&#13;
Special, Styx, and other drekkish&#13;
types. With the new format LPX&#13;
has picked up on some fresh,&#13;
innovative music. This change&#13;
probably came about simply&#13;
because of new wave's rising&#13;
popularity — LPX has to keep its'&#13;
ratings up. However, LPX's&#13;
play list hasn't loosened up much.&#13;
Most of the new wave played is the&#13;
popular stuff — LPX isn't really&#13;
taking any chances with their new&#13;
format, but at least they are&#13;
willing to change. I'm surprised&#13;
that WQFM didn't make the jump&#13;
to new wave first — for a long&#13;
time, QFM was known as a&#13;
progressive music station, but all&#13;
you hear on QFM now is the junk&#13;
that LPX used to play. There is no&#13;
Parkside art professors Dennis&#13;
Bayuzick and Doug DeVinny will&#13;
be exhibiting their creative work&#13;
at Mount Mary College in&#13;
Milwaukee Jan. 17 through Feb. 14&#13;
as part of a four - person show.&#13;
The other artists are Lisa&#13;
Englander and Estherly Allen&#13;
from Milwaukee.&#13;
Bayuzick, assistant professor of&#13;
art, will be showing both oil and&#13;
airbrushed acrylic works from his&#13;
on - going series of dream - inspired&#13;
paintings. He has his&#13;
Master of Fine Arts degree from&#13;
Ohio University School of Art and&#13;
was a visiting professor of&#13;
painting there before coming to&#13;
Parkside in 1977.&#13;
His most recent exhibitions&#13;
include the 1982 Wisconsin&#13;
Biennial Juried Exhibit at the&#13;
Madison Art Center and the Great&#13;
Lakes Regional Juried Show at&#13;
the Valley Art Center in&#13;
Cleveland, Ohio.&#13;
Bayuzick will also be exhibiting&#13;
a recent work in the National&#13;
Comics Art Invitational Exhibit at&#13;
Edinboro State College in Pennsylvania&#13;
during January.&#13;
DeVinny, associate professor of&#13;
art and currently Coordinator of&#13;
the Art Discipline, will be&#13;
exhibiting recent figurative prints&#13;
and drawings at Mount Mary. He&#13;
has a Master of Fine Arts degree&#13;
in print - making from Indiana&#13;
University, and taught at Mesa&#13;
College in Colorado and Skidmore&#13;
College in New York before&#13;
coming to Parkside in 1979.&#13;
His most important recent&#13;
exhibitions include the 1982 Boston&#13;
Printmakers Juried National&#13;
Show and the Rockford and&#13;
Vicinity Juried Show at the&#13;
Burpee Art Museum.&#13;
New M usic&#13;
'Dallol' mixes soul and reggae&#13;
SWVS^SSS^:&#13;
Berndt paintings on display at gallery&#13;
by Napoleon Scarbrough&#13;
There is a new trend of music&#13;
coming into its own amid the&#13;
clutter of different sounds that&#13;
dominates America's airwaves.&#13;
This is African Soul music fused&#13;
with Jamaican Reggae. The&#13;
marriage produces a totally&#13;
unique sound. Since many&#13;
J a m a i c a n s , e s p e c i a l l y&#13;
An exhibition of paintings and&#13;
drawings by Madison artist&#13;
Randall Berndt will be on display&#13;
in the Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery until Feb. 3. The one -&#13;
man show will consist of&#13;
imaginative and often humorous&#13;
figurative works inspired by the&#13;
artist's personal mythology of&#13;
bizarre characters and improbable&#13;
scenarios / narratives,&#13;
all treated in a unique cartoon -&#13;
expressionistic style.&#13;
Berndt received his Master of&#13;
Fine Arts degree in painting from&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Madison in 1969 and he has taught&#13;
drawing and painting there as&#13;
well as at the Madison Area&#13;
Technical College. He also has&#13;
been a visiting artist in the&#13;
Sheboygan Public School System.&#13;
Currently he is self - employed as&#13;
a full - time artist in Madison.&#13;
He has exhibited in many juried&#13;
shows throughout the state and&#13;
Midwest, including Wisconsin '81&#13;
at UW - Stevens Point, the 61st&#13;
Annual Wisconsin Painters and&#13;
Sculptors Exhibit at UW -&#13;
Milwaukee, the 1st Wisconsin&#13;
Biennial at the Madison Art&#13;
Center and Wisconsin Directions&#13;
II at the Milwaukee Art Museum.&#13;
His exhibition at UW - Parkside is&#13;
supported in part through a&#13;
special project grant from the&#13;
Wisconsin Arts Board.&#13;
Regular gallery hours at UW-P&#13;
are Monday through Thursday, 1&#13;
to 6 p.m. and Tuesday and Wednesday&#13;
from 7 to 10 p.m.&#13;
Computer course to be offered&#13;
A noncredit course in the&#13;
business and professional use of&#13;
the personal computer is being&#13;
offered by University Extention at&#13;
Parkside beginning Monday, Jan.&#13;
31.&#13;
The course will help answer&#13;
many questions, such as how a&#13;
personal computer could help you&#13;
in your business or profession, and&#13;
what software and hardware is&#13;
available and how to proceed with&#13;
your selection. It is designed to&#13;
survey the market, discuss real&#13;
problems, identify strengths and&#13;
weaknesses of actual computer&#13;
products and provide guidance in&#13;
the installation and use of&#13;
microcomputers. Each person&#13;
will have the opportunity to use a&#13;
personal computer and&#13;
representative business systems&#13;
as word processing and Visicalc&#13;
spreadsheets.&#13;
The instructor, Robert Luke of&#13;
Kenosha, is an independent&#13;
business consultant with over 20&#13;
years experience in the computer&#13;
field. He specializes in the&#13;
productive use of computers for&#13;
business and industry.&#13;
The class will meet on four&#13;
Mondays, 7:30 - 9:30, in Tallent&#13;
Hall. The fee is $20. Register with&#13;
University Extension, UWParkside,&#13;
Tallent Hall, Ext. 2312.&#13;
Body Shoppe&#13;
free to&#13;
students&#13;
If you are trying to lose weight&#13;
but not doing anything about it,&#13;
then consider visiting the Student&#13;
Health Center in Moln D-115 and&#13;
enrolling in the "Body Shoppe."&#13;
The Body Shoppe is a free, ten -&#13;
week, individualized, self - help&#13;
weight loss program.&#13;
After choosing a meal plan and&#13;
a realistic and attainable weight&#13;
loss goal, you will be able to&#13;
stop weekly, at your convenience,&#13;
to weigh in and to obtain written&#13;
information and materials to take&#13;
along. Each week look for "helps"&#13;
and suggestions in the fabric wall&#13;
hanging near each scale. You will&#13;
find the following: a weekly&#13;
recipe, a weekly bulletin,&#13;
nutritious news and exercise tips&#13;
A nurse will be available to&#13;
provide additional information.&#13;
To enroll, contact the Student&#13;
Health Center between Jan. 17 and&#13;
Feb. 11.&#13;
Rastafarians, can trace their&#13;
roots to Ethiopia, the blend is&#13;
quite natural.&#13;
One such group that has found&#13;
this blend is Dallol, an Ethiopian&#13;
band from Addis Ababa, the&#13;
capital of that nation. Of the four&#13;
man band, Greg Barnes, guitarist,&#13;
is the only Jamaican.&#13;
The fusion that the three&#13;
Ethiopians and one Jamaican&#13;
produce can be enjoyed at its best&#13;
on their new single release&#13;
"Reggae Boogie," which was&#13;
produced by Rita Marley, whom&#13;
they've recently toured with.&#13;
Other material includes "Reggae&#13;
Moonlight" and "Reggae&#13;
Makousa," an afro - beat straight&#13;
ahead funk / reggae blend, and&#13;
"Ashkru," a traditional Ethiopian&#13;
number.&#13;
Combine all this with the band's&#13;
laid back attitude and you have&#13;
some of the best "Ethiopian&#13;
Reggae" you have laid ears on. If&#13;
you are looking for some music&#13;
with African roots, Dallol is good,&#13;
sound diggings.&#13;
Primary-&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTOBANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
FOOD PLANS, 1983&#13;
SAVE UP TO 9%&#13;
• BREAKFASTS&#13;
• LUNCHES&#13;
• COMBINATION&#13;
FROM $117 TO $322&#13;
For Contract Information Contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Rm. 209 Or Call 553-2200&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
an exception in our case by&#13;
recognizing our delegates at the&#13;
nominating convention.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
Regine Rademacher&#13;
Student Co-Chairperson of&#13;
the Citizen's Committee to&#13;
SAVE OUR PRIMARY&#13;
c/o Pre-Law Society&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
dulcet ^nppe&#13;
In The Parkside Union&#13;
FEATURING YOUR&#13;
FAVORITE CANDY,&#13;
NUTS AND SNACKS&#13;
SOLD THE OLD&#13;
FASHIONED WAY&#13;
JANUARY SPECIAL FREE Z4 Lb. Sampler&#13;
With Any Purchase&#13;
of $1.00 or More&#13;
Located in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the Info. Ctr.&#13;
Thursday, January 27,1983 RANGER&#13;
Feature Survey&#13;
As Feature Editor, I want to&#13;
know what Parkside students&#13;
are interested in seeing in the&#13;
Feature section of The Ranger.&#13;
I want to know what you like&#13;
what yOU don't like, what you&#13;
think we have too much of, and&#13;
what we don't cover enough.&#13;
Features include movie&#13;
reviews, album reviews, interviews&#13;
and general Feature&#13;
articles (humor, etc.) so when&#13;
thinking about your response,&#13;
please don't write about news&#13;
or sports sections. This survey&#13;
is just for Features. You can&#13;
drop off this blank at the&#13;
Ranger office. I would greatly&#13;
appreciate your time in filling&#13;
out the survey.&#13;
etc? the F"&#13;
2. What do you dislike about Features section?&#13;
4. Any other comments?&#13;
d0 you most often read in Features, and why What&#13;
articles do you remember most from last semester?&#13;
1635 50th St., Kenosha&#13;
654-6382&#13;
THE SPINNING WHEEL&#13;
LIVE LOUNGE MUSIC&#13;
Every Saturday Night&#13;
NO COVER&#13;
EARLY BIRD SPECIAL&#13;
25710 oz. Tappers 8 a.m.-12 noon&#13;
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK&#13;
FIVE DIFFERENT BRANDS OF BEER&#13;
ON TAP&#13;
Old Style, Michelob, Stroh's, Budweiser, Bud Light&#13;
Regular 10 oz. Glass 50*&#13;
Frosty Schooners 55* — Mugs 75'&#13;
Wednesday Night Is Pitcher Night&#13;
Kamikazes, Alabama Slammers, Watermelons&#13;
32 oz. Pitcher Only $4.00&#13;
Food Available 8 am to II pm&#13;
Quarter or Half Pound&#13;
Cheeseburgers &amp; Hamburgers&#13;
Homemade Chili&#13;
YOU'VE TRIED THE REST&#13;
NOW TRY THE BEST&#13;
if&#13;
Talk of the Town' brings new wave to Union&#13;
by Kathy Ray burn&#13;
Talk Of the Town appeared&#13;
Friday night at the Union Square,&#13;
to a large and responsive crowd!&#13;
The band was labeled new wave&#13;
and had they felt the majority of&#13;
the audience were of that persuasion,&#13;
they might have kept on&#13;
that track. But as usual, most&#13;
groups encounter a varied&#13;
audience and Talk of the Town&#13;
responded well to the challenge.&#13;
The band played a mixture of&#13;
Nick Lowe, The Clash, The Who,&#13;
Elvis Costello, Squeeze, The&#13;
Rolling Stones, XTC, The Byrds&#13;
The Producers and The Kinks!&#13;
Talk of the Town also slipped in a&#13;
few numbers the crowd were not&#13;
familiar with, compositions of&#13;
their own. As usual there was an&#13;
element in the crowd who refused&#13;
to partake of a new listening&#13;
experience. The guy behind me,&#13;
upon hearing an original lyric,&#13;
yelled, "play something I know,"'&#13;
as the beer sloshed back and forth&#13;
m his cup. This typical response&#13;
infuriates any self - respecting&#13;
band member who is serious&#13;
MARTY ROSS, lead vocalist&#13;
of "Talk of the Town".&#13;
about his music.&#13;
Then about three fourths of the&#13;
way through the evening, one of&#13;
the guitarists, Breck "Opie"&#13;
Burns, began toying with guitar&#13;
riffs and the majority in the crowd&#13;
roared their approval. The band&#13;
gave in and followed with Lynyrd&#13;
Skynyrd, Deep Purple, and Led&#13;
Zeppelin.&#13;
Talk of the Town is comprised of&#13;
four musicians who have banded&#13;
together briefly during a transitional&#13;
period in each of their&#13;
respective careers. Marty Ross,&#13;
lead vocals and guitar for the&#13;
band, is a member of The Wigs, a&#13;
Milwaukee based band. The Wigs&#13;
have a successful LP released in&#13;
the Milwaukee area. Soon he will&#13;
be joining other members of The&#13;
Wigs, who are now in California&#13;
furthering the band's career. Both&#13;
Scott Kruger, bass and vocals,&#13;
and Breck Burns, vocals and lead&#13;
rhythm guitars, are members of&#13;
The Shivers, another successful&#13;
band from Milwaukee. Sean&#13;
McCue is drummer for the band.&#13;
There are many ways to spend a&#13;
Friday evening. The Union Square&#13;
with Talk of the Town was one of&#13;
the better. You can catch the band&#13;
' °— vy.mi guiuu lliivvee FreeDb.. q4 oonn 9933 QQEFMM..&#13;
Milwaukee Rep opens The Foreigner'&#13;
AA nnpeww pcnomm#e»dHyv Kbtyr Milwaukee's&#13;
favorite playwright, Larry Shue,&#13;
will kick off the second half of the&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater's&#13;
1982-83 season. THE&#13;
FOREIGNER will run through&#13;
February 20 in the Performing&#13;
Arts Center's Todd Wehr Theater.&#13;
What could possibly happen to a&#13;
shy English desk clerk visiting a&#13;
quiet little resort in the Georgia&#13;
woods? Plenty! Through a wild&#13;
series of hilarious twists, poor&#13;
Charlie Baker discovers the&#13;
privileges, pitfalls and powers&#13;
that come when he accidentally&#13;
assumes the role of a non - English&#13;
speaking guest.&#13;
THE FOREIGNER is the&#13;
second work by MRT actor /&#13;
playwright Larry Shue to be&#13;
presented on the Rep mainstage.&#13;
In 1981, his first full - length Dlav&#13;
THE NERD, was the comedy hit&#13;
of the season; a farcical story that&#13;
recently received its European&#13;
premiere with England's Manchester&#13;
Royal Exchange Theater.&#13;
Mr. Shue has been a resident&#13;
artist with the MRT since 1977. His&#13;
other plays include GRANDMA&#13;
DUCK IS DEAD, WENCESLAS&#13;
SQUARE and a children's play&#13;
MY EMPEROR'S NEW&#13;
CLOTHES.&#13;
MRT Resident Director Nick&#13;
Faust will make his Rep main-&#13;
S^Ldebut by staging THE&#13;
FOREIGNER. Since joining the&#13;
Company in 1980 he has directed a&#13;
number of new plays at the MRT's&#13;
Court Street Theater and he&#13;
recently staged his second&#13;
production of the Rep's A&#13;
CHRISTMAS CAROL. He is&#13;
currently director of the MRT's&#13;
new research and development&#13;
wing, The Lab.&#13;
Alan Brooks will be featured as&#13;
the well - meaning Charlie. Mr.&#13;
Brooks has performed with MRT&#13;
during the past three seasons,&#13;
most recently as the First&#13;
Narrator in A CHRISTMAS&#13;
CAROL. Other MRT appearances&#13;
include: Ola Endressen in&#13;
KINGDOM COME, Don Juan in&#13;
SECRET INJURY, SECRET&#13;
REVENGE and Christian in&#13;
CYRANO DE BERGERAC. He&#13;
has also performed with the Asolo&#13;
State Theater, the Virginia&#13;
Museum Theater and in New York&#13;
with the C.S.C. Repertory Company.&#13;
The cast includes MRT&#13;
newcomers Kenneth Albers, a&#13;
frequent guest actor with the&#13;
Cleveland Play House, as&#13;
Charlie's English friend Froggy&#13;
and veteran actress Bonnie Horan&#13;
as the good - natured resort&#13;
owner, Betty. Larry Ballard, who&#13;
recently played Bob Cratchit in A&#13;
CHRISTMAS CAROL, continues&#13;
his first MRT season in the role of&#13;
David, a dedicated minister with a&#13;
dangerous side to his personality.&#13;
Ellen Lauren, who recently&#13;
portrayed Laura in the MRT's&#13;
production of THE GLASS&#13;
MENAGERIE, will play the&#13;
minister's dissatisfied wife&#13;
Katherine. Another MRT veteran,'&#13;
William Leach, returns to the&#13;
company to play the sinister&#13;
building inspector Owen. Peter&#13;
Rybolt, an intern with The Lab&#13;
will make his MRT debut as&#13;
Katherine's gentle, dim - witted&#13;
brother, Ellard.&#13;
Set design for THE&#13;
FOREIGNER is by Bil&#13;
Mikulewicz, costumes by Patricia&#13;
M. Risser, lighting by Dawn&#13;
Chiang, and properties by Sandy&#13;
Struth. Robin Rumpf is the stage&#13;
manager.&#13;
Tickets range from $4 t o $12. A&#13;
$1 discount is offered to senior&#13;
citizens and students. Tickets are&#13;
available at the PAC box office,&#13;
929 North Water Street, or may be&#13;
charged to MasterCard or Visa by&#13;
calling 273-7206.&#13;
THE FOREIGNER will be&#13;
performed Tuesdays through&#13;
Fridays at 8:00 p.m., Saturdays at&#13;
5:00 p.m. and 9:15 p.m., and&#13;
Sundays at 7:30 p.m. Matinees are&#13;
at 2:00 p.m., Jan. 26, Feb. 6, 9 and&#13;
16.&#13;
The Rep is well - equipped to&#13;
accommodate patrons who are&#13;
blind or in wheelchairs. A signed&#13;
performance of THE&#13;
FOREIGNER will be presented at&#13;
2:00 p.m., on Sunday, February 6.&#13;
Deaf and hearing impaired&#13;
patrons should contact the Performing&#13;
Arts Center box office at&#13;
273-7206.&#13;
SHOOTING TEAM STANDINGS&#13;
Team w L&#13;
National Guard in ?&#13;
CMI ^ I&#13;
UW-Parkside II q q&#13;
Marty's 7 5&#13;
Boduens 7 5&#13;
Paradise 7 c&#13;
UW-Parkside I 6 g&#13;
Rairoad Products 6 6&#13;
Alfredos 5 7&#13;
Hole Crew 5 7&#13;
Colonial Liquors 4 g&#13;
Western Printing 4 3&#13;
W&#13;
I&#13;
JasckiMi les&lt; 7&#13;
•H&#13;
IfU/P „A; ™Jr' ,'"V°°d^'and 9em"et'ichkeii&#13;
UWP Union • Sat, Feb. 5 &amp; 12 • 6 om l am&#13;
FEATURING: A Rhine wine punch reception anH mr-D* -i *&#13;
authentic five course German meal prepared by UW-P'S HririPiih« L an&#13;
head cook; live zither music and Bavarian folk dlndnn " b0rn&#13;
terta.nment; followed by dancing to a six piece "oomrah"h?rJ?'"nerr.*n"&#13;
man beer hall atmosphere. Imported beer and wine avaihthio a&#13;
ADMISSION: $16.50 per person (check or MaSercharae for&#13;
dinner and entertainment. Seating limited Admnrl ? f°r reception,&#13;
Make checks payable to UW - Parish and ma'fTo C^T™ T °NLY'&#13;
Center, UW - Parkside, Box No. 2000, Kenosha 53U1F, ,!?fo!:™ation&#13;
formation call: 553-2345. ^enosna, 53141. For further&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Park^&#13;
inSport&#13;
Shots&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Welcome back to the grind&#13;
folks.&#13;
As you know, 1982 was an&#13;
eventful year in sports. San&#13;
Francisco won its first Super Bowl&#13;
(in its first try), the Brewers&#13;
almost won the World Series, and&#13;
the football season was interrupted&#13;
by a totally unnecessary&#13;
strike. But let's not dwell on the&#13;
past ; 1983 is a whole new year&#13;
and a lot of interesting and&#13;
shocking things are going to occur&#13;
this coming year. Some of these&#13;
will come to pass, some will not.&#13;
You decide.&#13;
• • *&#13;
Super Bowl XVII: The&#13;
Washington Redskins beat the&#13;
Miami Dolphins 24-17, i n front of&#13;
the first non - sellout crowd in&#13;
Super Bowl history. After the&#13;
game, the spectators jump in their&#13;
chartered bus and go to Pizza Hut&#13;
to celebrate.&#13;
Spring training opens in Florida&#13;
and Arizona. George Steinbrenner&#13;
visits the Yankee training camp,&#13;
gets disgusted, and announces&#13;
— • — • " g W — —• J mm, f •&#13;
Predictions for '83 sport season&#13;
that he is trading the entire team&#13;
to Taiwan in exchange for their&#13;
little league team. Surprisingly,&#13;
Billy Martin gets a vote of confidence.&#13;
March 14 — G erry Cooney vs.&#13;
Renaldo Snipes: In his first fight&#13;
since losing to Larry Holmes last&#13;
June, Cooney pounds out a&#13;
unanimous decision, despite&#13;
losing one round for repeated low&#13;
blows. After the bout, Snipes&#13;
announces that he is leaving&#13;
boxing and going to be the first&#13;
male mezzo - soprano for the New&#13;
York Metropolitan Opera.&#13;
Baseball season opens: The&#13;
Chicago Cubs begin their pennant&#13;
drive with a narrow 17-16 win in&#13;
their opener. Meanwhile, the New&#13;
York Yankees (now the Orientals)&#13;
are soundly beaten by Toronto 16-&#13;
1. Steinbrenner admits that he&#13;
made a mistake and recalls the&#13;
Yankees from Taiwan. Billy&#13;
Martin receives another vote of&#13;
confidence. The next night, the&#13;
Yankees are soundly beaten by&#13;
Toronto 14-2.&#13;
NHL Playoffs: Chicago and&#13;
Boston gain the Stanley Cup final;&#13;
the Blackhawks by beating Wayne&#13;
Gretzky and the Edmonton Oilers,&#13;
the Bruins by eliminating the New&#13;
York Islanders, stopping their bid&#13;
for their fourth straight Stanley&#13;
Cup. In the final, the Blackhawks&#13;
destroy the Bruins four games to&#13;
none, bringing a champion to&#13;
Chicago for the second time in&#13;
three years (the Sting being the&#13;
last).&#13;
NBA Playoffs: Milwaukee wins&#13;
the Eastern Division following a&#13;
surprisingly easy three games to&#13;
one victory over Boston; in the&#13;
west, Los Angeles has no trouble&#13;
with Phoenix, winning three&#13;
games to none. In the final, Bob&#13;
Lanier and Marques Johnson lead&#13;
the Bucks to their first championship&#13;
in twelve years, winning&#13;
four games to three.&#13;
Major League Baseball: At the&#13;
All - Star break, the four divisional&#13;
leaders are the Cubs, Padres,&#13;
Mariners, and the Brewers.&#13;
All - Star Game: The American&#13;
League finally breaks its long&#13;
losing streak, winning 4-3 in 11&#13;
innings. World Series MVP&#13;
Darrell Porter's wild throw to&#13;
third allows Oakland's Rickey&#13;
Henderson to score.&#13;
Mid - August: The New York&#13;
Yankees, 21 games behind&#13;
Milwaukee, are sent to Japan in&#13;
exchange for the Yomiyuri&#13;
Giants, who are only 10 games out&#13;
of first in their division in&#13;
Japanese baseball. Billy Martin&#13;
remains in New York to lead the&#13;
team. George Steinbrenner&#13;
repeats his confidence in Billy.&#13;
The Yankees (?) go on to finish 30&#13;
games out of first.&#13;
College Football: Defending&#13;
national champs Penn State lose&#13;
their opening game of the season&#13;
to Yale 27-24, on a last - second&#13;
field goal.&#13;
Major League Baseball&#13;
Playoffs: N.L. — Cubs - Astros; no&#13;
one expected it, but they made it.&#13;
The Cubs take 3 games to win&#13;
their first pennant in 38 years.&#13;
A.L. — M ilwaukee - Seattle; the&#13;
Mariners win the first game at the&#13;
Kingdome, but the Brewers roar&#13;
back to take the next three to win&#13;
the A.L. flag. So it's the Cubs and&#13;
the Brewers in the World&#13;
Series??!! The Brewers go on to&#13;
win the world championship in six&#13;
games, setting records for home&#13;
runs, RBIs, hits, team batting&#13;
average, and chewing tobacco&#13;
used by a manager.&#13;
Two NFL coaches are canned in&#13;
November: Frank Rush in&#13;
Baltimore and Mike Ditka in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
And finally, near year's end,&#13;
Muhammed Ali announces that he&#13;
will come out of re tirement again,&#13;
lured by a guaranteed purse of&#13;
$100 million. His opponent will be&#13;
Billy Martin. The fight will take&#13;
place at the tavern of Billy's&#13;
choice. The fight ends in the third&#13;
round, when Ali trips in the ring&#13;
and falls on Billy, knocking him&#13;
flat. While recovering in the&#13;
hospital, Billy is fired by George&#13;
Steinbrenner and is replaced by&#13;
Mr. T from "Rocky III." George&#13;
states that, "Mr. T will inspire my&#13;
team to win, or else, and besides,&#13;
he's a better boxer."&#13;
~ ° v " 'Nuff said. Bye !! tJjy~ • ;&#13;
Gaitens and Sweetman start bike season by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
With the fitness craze in full&#13;
swing, did you ever wonder how it&#13;
started?&#13;
For Pat Gaitens, a pre-med&#13;
student at Parkside, his biking&#13;
career started two and one half&#13;
years ago when his grandpa gave&#13;
him a bike. Gaitens fixed up the&#13;
bike and began racing.&#13;
His fiance, Jill Sweetman, a&#13;
psychology major began riding&#13;
eight months ago on the same&#13;
bike. She started biking to spend&#13;
more time with Gaitens but soon&#13;
found she really enjoyed the sport.&#13;
"The first time I went riding, I&#13;
couldn't even make it a mile and a&#13;
half. Pat was patient with me but I&#13;
know he was thinking, 'how can I&#13;
go out with her if she can't ride&#13;
with me?' "&#13;
Gaitens races on the track at the&#13;
Washington Bowl in Kenosha, but&#13;
he feels road racing is his&#13;
specialty. He has had recent&#13;
success on roads including&#13;
finishing fourth in a Milwaukee to&#13;
Kenosha 100 mile road race.&#13;
Sweetman is licensed for the '83&#13;
season and plans to specialize in&#13;
track racing. She has ridden&#13;
numerous road races.&#13;
Both are members of the&#13;
Kenosha Wheelmen which fields a&#13;
team of 30 racers in four&#13;
categories. Sweetman and&#13;
Gaitens race in the senior division&#13;
(16-35 years old).&#13;
Gaitens owns two bikes. For&#13;
road racing, he has a Raleigh&#13;
Professional which lists for $1,200.&#13;
His track bike is a Schwinn&#13;
Paramount, which retails for&#13;
$3,000.&#13;
Sweetman's bike is a Raleigh&#13;
Supercourse, which lists for $560.&#13;
The couple estimates they spend&#13;
$600 a season each on their sport.&#13;
This price includes repairs,&#13;
clothing, equipment and tires.&#13;
Gaitens commented, "It's like any&#13;
other sport, if you want to get&#13;
something good, it's going to be&#13;
expensive. My shoes cost $80."&#13;
Training for the track season&#13;
starts in February. Gaitens and&#13;
Sweetman start by doing base&#13;
work, to get back in shape.&#13;
Gaitens explained, "In&#13;
February and March, we do&#13;
something called spinning. We&#13;
ride in low gear. It keeps the&#13;
muscles loose and doesn't strain&#13;
the legs. It really works your legs&#13;
and gets your heart rate up."&#13;
"Between March and April, we&#13;
have to put in 1,500 miles before&#13;
we can even start to train with the&#13;
teams," commented Sweetman.&#13;
After about 2,500 miles, the two&#13;
begin to specialize. Sweetman will&#13;
do more sprint and speed work,&#13;
while Gaitens does distance&#13;
training.&#13;
The racers use the hard / easy&#13;
method of training. Mondays are&#13;
light days, riding a few miles to&#13;
make sure nothing is wrong with&#13;
the bike. Tuesdays are race days.&#13;
They average 25-30 miles a day.&#13;
"The good thing about this&#13;
training schedule is a person can&#13;
be both a road and track racer,"&#13;
commented Gaitens.&#13;
Another way their lives have&#13;
changed is commitment. Neither&#13;
racers drink and try to avoid red&#13;
meats and fried foods. "We&#13;
shouldn't eat ice cream, but after&#13;
a race we always stop at the D.Q.&#13;
for an ice cream cone," said&#13;
Sweetman.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
SPRING BREAK in DAYTON A BEACH&#13;
Lathrop &amp; 2 1st&#13;
(almost)&#13;
WE'RE NOT&#13;
NARROW MINDED&#13;
$2.00&#13;
per pitcher&#13;
Present this ad -&#13;
get $2 off any&#13;
Family Pizza&#13;
or Chicken&#13;
MARCH 11 • 20, 1983&#13;
Arrangements by&#13;
ECHO TRAVEL, INC.&#13;
MCI 52571F&#13;
UW (Parkside)&#13;
FOUR PER ROOM TRIP INCL UDES $209 • Round trip motor coach transportation via modern&#13;
highway coaches to Daytona Beach, Florida leaving&#13;
Friday, March 11&#13;
• Seven nights accommodations at the exciting Texan&#13;
Motel of Daytona Beach. Located at 701 South&#13;
Atlantic Ave., it is one of t he most demanded hotels&#13;
on the strip at that time&#13;
• A truly great schedule of activities including our&#13;
famous pool deck parties and belly flop contest&#13;
• Optional excursions available to Disney World,&#13;
Epcot, and several other attractions&#13;
• Numerous bar and restaurant discounts&#13;
• The services of full time travel representatives&#13;
• All taxes and gratuities&#13;
• Guaranteed kitchenette or oceanfront available at&#13;
small additional charge (4 per room only)&#13;
A QUALITY TRW-A LOWPRICE-A GREATTIME&#13;
The Texan Motel, located right in the central area of the strip, is definitely the&#13;
place to be during spring break. The hotel has a pool, big party deck, restaurant, a&#13;
great bar, color TV, air conditioned rooms and plenty of activities. Pictures are&#13;
available where you sign up. Our motor coaches are nothing but the highest quality&#13;
highway coaches. We also give you more extras with our trip than anyone else.&#13;
Don't blow it and go on a lower quality trip. LAST YEAR OVER 8,000 PEOPLE&#13;
ENJOYED THIS TRIP.&#13;
SIGN UP NOW AT THE&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION OFFICE RM. 209&#13;
8:00 AM-4:30 PM MON.-FRI.&#13;
OR CALL 553-2200&#13;
Thursday, January 27, 1983&#13;
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
The Women's Basketball season&#13;
has been off to a fairly good start&#13;
with a 7-7 record thus far.&#13;
The last two games they played,&#13;
they won. North Central was&#13;
defeated by Parkside. The score&#13;
was 69-66. North Central is ranked&#13;
number two in the third division.&#13;
This last Friday, the women were&#13;
victorious over Oshkosh; the game&#13;
ran into over time with Parkside&#13;
winning 68-60.&#13;
The team's two players that&#13;
have performed well are Laurie&#13;
Pope and Robin Henchel. Lori&#13;
averaged 14.8 points per game and&#13;
Robin averaged 12.4.&#13;
The team has t hree games this&#13;
week here at home. On Tues. they&#13;
played against Marquette. This is&#13;
a conference game. Coach Goggin&#13;
commented, "This is a rather&#13;
important game and we should&#13;
win." This weekend the team also&#13;
plays against Stevens Point on&#13;
Friday night, and St. Norbert, 3:00&#13;
on Saturday af ternoon. Both games&#13;
are at Parkside.&#13;
SOCCER SELECTIONS&#13;
Parkside had two members of&#13;
the '82 soccer team named to the&#13;
NAIA Area V All - Star team.&#13;
Goalie Dan Opferman tied with St.&#13;
John's Terry Lienendecker for.his&#13;
selection to the team. Forward&#13;
Jimmy Banks, who broke a school&#13;
record with the most goals in the&#13;
season was also selected. Coach&#13;
Hall Henderson was selected as&#13;
SPORT NEWS CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Coach of the year.&#13;
Parkside was also represented&#13;
by many players on the '82&#13;
Wisconsin All - Star first team.&#13;
These players were: fullback&#13;
Andy Buchanan, midfielder Jim&#13;
Spiel ma nn and forwards Jimmy&#13;
Banks and Greg Santaga.&#13;
Honorable mentions went to&#13;
goalie Dan Opferman and fullback&#13;
A1 Gibson.&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
The Men's Basketball team&#13;
schedule has included many&#13;
games back to back. Although on&#13;
a five game losing streak, Coach&#13;
Rees Johnson is not upset with the&#13;
teams performance to date.&#13;
Johnson said, "Chicago State was&#13;
ranked number two in the NAIA&#13;
when we played them. We led until&#13;
a minute and 53 seconds&#13;
remaining. I think the kids played&#13;
real well."&#13;
Until the first week of March,&#13;
the team will be averaging about&#13;
three games a week. "Playing so&#13;
many games can be tough&#13;
because the players don't have&#13;
much time to recover. The games&#13;
take a lot of intensity. With a&#13;
mature team, it's a lot easier to&#13;
do. It is a good experience for the&#13;
team, though."&#13;
Tonight the team will try to&#13;
improve their 6-9 record when&#13;
they go against Marion College.&#13;
Johnson feels the teams will be&#13;
well - matched and expects a good&#13;
game. Eau Claire and Parkside&#13;
have a rivalry going and Johnson&#13;
feels the game on Saturday night&#13;
to be a real challenge. On&#13;
Tuesday, the team hosts Chicago&#13;
State who should be ranked&#13;
number one by then.&#13;
Coach Johnson expects Jay&#13;
Rundles and Daryl Jackson to be&#13;
back in action this week. Brian&#13;
Diggins has been the high scorer&#13;
averaging 17.5 poin ts per game.&#13;
FITNESS PROGRAM&#13;
The physical education&#13;
department now has an early&#13;
morning fitness program. Various&#13;
sports will be offered from 6 a.m.&#13;
to 7:50 a.m. — Monday through&#13;
Friday. Fitness buffs may play&#13;
racquetball, swim or lift weights.&#13;
The indoor track will be open to&#13;
runners, joggers and walkers on&#13;
Mondays, Wednesdays and&#13;
Fridays. On Tuesdays and&#13;
Thursdays, tennis courts will be&#13;
available.&#13;
Participants are asked to&#13;
provide their own equipment for&#13;
their respective sport. Locks,&#13;
lockers and towels can be rented.&#13;
The early bird fitness program&#13;
is available to all students and&#13;
faculty staff holding a current&#13;
validated I.D. Guests are&#13;
welcomed, but a $2 fee is rendered.&#13;
Tennis and Racquetball&#13;
Reservations can be made by&#13;
calling 553-2159 between 8 a.m.&#13;
and 8 p.m. (Fridays until 4 p.m.)&#13;
Reservations can be made one&#13;
week in advance. For more information,&#13;
call 553-2245.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
HONDA CB 360, 1974, excellent condition. 886&#13;
0479 eves.&#13;
FORD 200 I nch, 6 cylinder motor, $100 . 632&#13;
9439.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
COLLEGE REP WANTED to distribute&#13;
"Student rate" subscription cards on&#13;
campus. Good income, no selling involved.&#13;
For information and application write to:&#13;
CAMPUS SERVICE, 1747 W. Glendale&#13;
Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85021.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
MOLLY: Welcome back. I hope you had fun&#13;
in Houston. I had great fun with the&#13;
children. Next time though, I'm going with&#13;
you. Ed&#13;
ED: Hope you had a Happy New Year without&#13;
me. A Lonely Reporter&#13;
BOB: I promise to do twice as many next&#13;
week, if you'll forget about this week.&#13;
You're so understanding. Guess who?&#13;
LONELY: We'll forgive you for the stories.if&#13;
you forgive us for the party. Ed and Bob&#13;
HI RAGS!!!&#13;
PAT: Chrissie said she's going along next&#13;
time too.&#13;
MARGIE: Whose last name ends in an "E:"&#13;
Happy Birthday a few days late. While you&#13;
may be in your 30's, you don't look a day&#13;
over 27. Guess Who???&#13;
MOLLY: You don't look a day over 38 and 254&#13;
days. Love, your good friend Chrissie.&#13;
PAT: I agree with her. Love, your good&#13;
friend, Pat.&#13;
PAT HARMANN '82.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY to Parkside's most&#13;
Handsome, Smartest, Sweeper! Love, Mrs.&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
TO A GOOD FRIEND who helps me more&#13;
than he knows — Happy Birthday Andy!!!&#13;
Love, Pat.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY ANDY: you don't look a&#13;
day over 29 a nd 364 days. Love, Chrissie.&#13;
AHHNDY: Happy Birthday, 3 decades and&#13;
still going strong! Patty.&#13;
ANDY: Happy Birthday! Long live the&#13;
Business Manager!! Tony&#13;
ANDY: Happy Birthday! Rick&#13;
BLOODY 'ELL, not another bloody birthday!!!&#13;
Tracy and Dave.&#13;
TOTTENHAM can Thrash United ANY day&#13;
Bloody Northerner. BJ&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Tori&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY ANDY: You're still not&#13;
over the hill! N.E.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY ANDY: Massood.&#13;
WE LOVE YOU even if you are 29 plu s. The&#13;
I.B.T.E. Club.&#13;
LOU: I really missed you this past vacation.&#13;
Sorry about the party. The movie was great&#13;
fun, and so was dinner. Too bad you weren't&#13;
there. Better luck next time. I still think&#13;
you're a cutie. Love, Ed.&#13;
I J&amp;L INC.: I heard it was "Three's Company"&#13;
in Puerto Rico.&#13;
LOU: for your sake, it better not have been.&#13;
MOLLY: I hope you took care of Ed for me&#13;
while I was in the South. She told me all the&#13;
fun you had, but she is a story teller. Lou&#13;
STACEY: I thought I'd write a classified for&#13;
you. You know why, and I'll see you in&#13;
Spring, or early summer. I'll count the&#13;
days. You count the minutes. Hope you're&#13;
having fun. Think of you often! PAT&#13;
LOU: Don't worry. Ed was a good girl while&#13;
you were gone. She didn't give me any&#13;
trouble. We took her in as live-in help over&#13;
the break. Mommy - M olly • M oonwalker.&#13;
Geriatric at small.&#13;
PAT: Glad you're back. I just hope the snow&#13;
falls before it's too late. Pat&#13;
WATCH FOR NEXT WEEK'S&#13;
EXCITING TRIVIA COLUMN&#13;
Think Piece Isn't it interesting that there is&#13;
no set criteria, according to Dr.&#13;
Dannehl, for deciding what is&#13;
social and what is money making&#13;
or how much he charges for&#13;
events (whaether he bases it on a&#13;
percentage of the door or a flat fee).&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
Also, isn't it interesting that the&#13;
Maynard Fergusen concert last&#13;
semester was considered by&#13;
Dannehl's office a money making&#13;
event (after all, they did charge&#13;
$2.50 a ticket and the concert cost&#13;
more to produce than it brought in&#13;
in revenue) and PAB was charged&#13;
$200 for rental of our own gym.&#13;
Well, I hope the ride wasn't too&#13;
rocky. After all, these have just&#13;
been facts on how your money is&#13;
spent. Just something to think&#13;
about.&#13;
SUPER BOWL SUNDAY&#13;
IN UNION SQUARE&#13;
EE&#13;
MIAMI&#13;
DOLPHINS&#13;
VS.&#13;
YASHINGTOI&#13;
REDSKINS&#13;
ON OUR T SCREEN&#13;
1 r-&#13;
1 '/ &gt;&#13;
/&#13;
4&#13;
y&#13;
SI 3y&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
/ )&#13;
/&#13;
'A&#13;
FOR DETAILS STOP DOWN&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION REC CENTER&#13;
• Pre-Game Programming • The Game&#13;
• Post-Game Locker Room Coverage&#13;
DOORS OPEN 3:00 P/l/l&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING! 5!4% Interest Iff Your Daily&#13;
Balance Is $500.00 er Mere!&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis.&#13;
414-843-2388&#13;
CALL OR&#13;
TO HELP YOU GROW!&#13;
SIOP HI FOR DETAILS</text>
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