<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3083" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/3083?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T20:20:14+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="4690">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/cf65ac150668368748ddf0c0f20f6980.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5fa92b12cea76c1ece11ca55cb1a62c1</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="70511">
            <text>Volume 11, issue 18</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="70512">
            <text>Greenquist - Preliminary studies indicate extensive modification needed</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="70522">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="90644">
            <text>W_ Universily of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, February 10, 1903&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
Preliminary studies indicate extensive modification needed&#13;
by V Bob Rnh Kieclinx Kiesling ml l l • . .1 1 1 !K . . . ..&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A p reliminary report published&#13;
by the Milwaukee engineering&#13;
firm Bert Fredricksen Inc., has&#13;
indicated that extensive&#13;
renovations will be needed to&#13;
bring Greenquist Hall's ventilation&#13;
system to state health and&#13;
safety standards.&#13;
According to the report,&#13;
deficiencies were discovered last&#13;
July when making energy conservation&#13;
modifications on the&#13;
system, as required by the state's&#13;
1982 energy conservation project.&#13;
The modifications, however, were&#13;
based on the original ventialtion&#13;
plans and failed to account for a&#13;
1975 modification when the animal&#13;
facility was added.&#13;
The project inspector, visiting&#13;
while work was in progress,&#13;
noticed an immediate safety&#13;
hazard. He noted that in addition&#13;
to air control devices and heat&#13;
exchangers being the wrong size,&#13;
large portions of the existing&#13;
ductwork are severely corroded.&#13;
The heat exchangers and the air&#13;
control devices, known as VAVs&#13;
(for Variable Air Volume), caused&#13;
an added resistance to airflow&#13;
within the existing system.&#13;
Estimated airflow velocities are&#13;
between 25 and 30 per cent of&#13;
minimum levels.&#13;
Also, ventilation fans in&#13;
Greenquist had been slowed to&#13;
lessen noise within the&#13;
labratories. The energy&#13;
modifications did not reflect this&#13;
knowledge, and the firm made&#13;
immediate recommendations to&#13;
bring the ventilation in Greenquist&#13;
to minimum safety levels, at the&#13;
expense of the energy&#13;
modifications.&#13;
The balancing subcontractor,&#13;
Bal - Air, was instructed to speed&#13;
up the airflow by increasing the&#13;
speed of the ventilation fans and&#13;
running them continuously. In&#13;
addition, they recommended that&#13;
the VAVs be disconnected. The&#13;
balancing firm was then asked to&#13;
balance the ventilation system at&#13;
the correct levels.&#13;
The system rebalancing has&#13;
recently been completed, and the&#13;
engineering firm is preparing a&#13;
final report, due out sometime in&#13;
the next month, to make specific&#13;
recommendations and cost&#13;
estimates for the system&#13;
overhaul. Jack Dudley, Director&#13;
of the Physical plant, said the&#13;
costs would be "easily $1 million."&#13;
The known problems to be&#13;
rectified include a correction of&#13;
the positive air pressure within&#13;
the laboratories. If the air&#13;
pressure is positive, or greater&#13;
than the pressure in surrounding&#13;
spaces, fumes from a toxic spill&#13;
could be transmitted from one lab&#13;
to other areas of the building. In&#13;
addition, exhausts from the fume&#13;
hoods are combined with the&#13;
general room exhausts, which&#13;
creates the possibility of hazardous&#13;
chemical mixtures within the&#13;
system. Intermittent operation of&#13;
the exhaust fans also means that&#13;
fumes settle in the horizontal&#13;
sections of the ducting, increasing&#13;
duct deterioration.&#13;
The fume hoods in many labs&#13;
are being used as storage&#13;
cabinets, restricting airflow even&#13;
further. The firm also said the fire&#13;
dampers in the fume hoods create&#13;
more of a fire and health hazard&#13;
than they are supposed to&#13;
alleviate.&#13;
The engineering firm listed&#13;
Sexual harassment&#13;
survey results&#13;
The Sexual Harassment&#13;
Committee drew 551 responses&#13;
from its questionnaire distributed&#13;
among students, faculty, and&#13;
staff. Of the respondents, 234&#13;
females and 212 males were&#13;
identified as full time students,&#13;
staff or faculty. The others — of&#13;
equal importance for our purposes&#13;
— were part time or did not&#13;
identify their category.&#13;
In response to the question&#13;
asking if the respondent believed&#13;
there was sexual harassment on&#13;
this campus, more men then&#13;
women checked "not all all";&#13;
more women checked "rarely."&#13;
At least 40 more women than men&#13;
checked "with some frequency"&#13;
to this question. Only 7 women and&#13;
3 men believed that sexual&#13;
harassment occurs "extensively"&#13;
on this campus.&#13;
The second question dealt with 5&#13;
forms of uninvited sexual attention&#13;
and the respondents were&#13;
asked to check any that applied.&#13;
Women checked one or more&#13;
kinds of unwanted attention 3&#13;
times more often than men did; 5&#13;
full time students (3 women and 2&#13;
men) checked the final response,&#13;
indicating they had received a&#13;
threat implying that if the demand&#13;
for sexual favors was not met&#13;
their grade (s) or employment&#13;
situation could be affected. So did&#13;
2 m ale faculty members.&#13;
The third question listed five&#13;
possible means for eliminating&#13;
unwanted sexual attention and&#13;
asked respondents to mark as&#13;
many as they felt would be effective.&#13;
Some respondents pointed&#13;
out that effectiveness would be&#13;
determined by such a variety of&#13;
factors and situations that it was&#13;
difficult to make a judgment.&#13;
However, almost twice as many&#13;
women felt that "ignoring the&#13;
behavior and doing nothing" was&#13;
a possible solution. Well over 300&#13;
respondents, both male and&#13;
female, felt that "asking the&#13;
person to stop and / or avoiding&#13;
the person" was a useful action.&#13;
Noticeably fewer, especially&#13;
among female staff members, felt&#13;
that "reporting the person to a&#13;
counselor / superior" was appropriate.&#13;
"Filing a formal&#13;
complaint" was checked&#13;
proportionately by about the same&#13;
number of men and women. Few&#13;
respondents checked "there is&#13;
little that people can do to make&#13;
others stop harassing them&#13;
sexually."&#13;
The questionnaire provides the&#13;
committee with some information&#13;
concerning current attitudes&#13;
among UWP clientele towards&#13;
sexual harassment. It also served&#13;
as another means to attract public&#13;
attention to the issue of sexual&#13;
harassment and to the existence&#13;
of the committee, whose members&#13;
wish to be helpful to anyone&#13;
feeling harassed. Anyone interested&#13;
in a detailed analysis of&#13;
the questionnaire and its results is&#13;
invited to consult with the committee.&#13;
&#13;
some specific recommendations&#13;
to correct the problems. They&#13;
include maintaining proper&#13;
pressure relationships between&#13;
spaces, running air supply and&#13;
exhaust systems constantly,&#13;
removing the VAVs, removing&#13;
inlet vanes from exhaust and&#13;
central supply fans, and revising&#13;
the automtic control system.&#13;
They also said that the hood&#13;
exhausts need to be separated&#13;
from the general room exhausts,&#13;
and that horizontal hood ducting&#13;
be replaced with PVC ducting to&#13;
prevent future corrosion. Additional&#13;
collection and ejection&#13;
systems will need to be added.&#13;
Dudley said that larger ducting&#13;
will need to be installed in the labs&#13;
to decrease the noise level by&#13;
decreasing the airflow velocities.&#13;
"Some of them are terrible," he&#13;
said.&#13;
He also said that there was no&#13;
estimate for the time needed to&#13;
get the project approved so work&#13;
can begin. He did say, however,&#13;
that most of the work would have&#13;
to be done during the summer, so&#13;
that classes are not disrupted.&#13;
Dudley estimated that work could&#13;
begin as early as the summer of&#13;
1984.&#13;
Dudley added that he will be&#13;
working closely with the science&#13;
department on the modifications&#13;
so the ventilation more closely&#13;
conforms with the department's&#13;
needs. "We'll be redesigning the&#13;
whole thing," he said.&#13;
He said the administration will&#13;
push for the work to be completed&#13;
in the shortest time possible, and&#13;
that the work be done properly.&#13;
There have been problems with&#13;
the Greenquist ventilation since it&#13;
was built and the University will&#13;
seek to correct the problems now.&#13;
"It is our position that we don't&#13;
care how much it costs," he said.&#13;
New SOC chair elected&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
Valerie Olson was recently&#13;
elected the new chair of Student&#13;
Organizations Council (SOC).&#13;
Olson was very pleased to be&#13;
elected Chair, and looks forward&#13;
to a year of growth for SOC. "In&#13;
the past year, the level of&#13;
awareness within SOC has been&#13;
raised greatly," commented&#13;
Olson. "That is certainly a good&#13;
sign. All of the organizations need&#13;
to be aware of consequences. At&#13;
this point, I don't see things as&#13;
needing to be changed within our&#13;
organization. Things just need to&#13;
be refocused." Olson pointed out&#13;
that the new guidelines clearly&#13;
state what SOC should be.&#13;
Currently, Olson feels that a&#13;
main goal for SOC is simply to get&#13;
people to come. Meetings are&#13;
attended by people who "probably&#13;
feel obligated to come to make&#13;
sure that what has happened in&#13;
the past doesn't happen again." It&#13;
is a priority for Olson to make the&#13;
advantages of SOC known. She&#13;
feels that people question the&#13;
advantages of t he organization as&#13;
a whole, perhaps because not all&#13;
VALERIE O L SO N&#13;
of the advantages are tangible,&#13;
but the advantages are there, and&#13;
available for use. "People have to&#13;
make good use of them," stated&#13;
Olson.&#13;
"A lot of the organizations face&#13;
the same problems. Lack of&#13;
participation, lack of funds, lack&#13;
of positive interaction between the&#13;
clubs. For these groups, SOC can&#13;
be used as a sounding board in&#13;
finding resolutions to problems,&#13;
and can be a process of l earning&#13;
how to market that club to that&#13;
clubs best interest."&#13;
Olson would like to make SOC a&#13;
learning process for all involved,&#13;
and she would like to make people&#13;
more aware of what's happening.&#13;
"Instead of the same five or six&#13;
people being involved, and well&#13;
informed, everyone who is a&#13;
member should be at a certain&#13;
level of awareness," said Olson.&#13;
"Right now," continued Olson,&#13;
"I think we should focus in on&#13;
finding the solutions for the&#13;
problems we have. New problems&#13;
will always develop, but we have&#13;
to tackle the current, timely&#13;
problems now."&#13;
SUFAC summary charting&#13;
Unit&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Health Office&#13;
Housing&#13;
Union&#13;
Auxiliary Accounting System&#13;
Union Debt Service&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Performing Arts &amp; L ecture&#13;
Student Organization Council&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Winter Carnival&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
The Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocations Committee&#13;
(SUFAC), a subcommittee of&#13;
PSGA, has finished final&#13;
budgeting for the 1983-84&#13;
1982-83&#13;
$53,585.00&#13;
$40,483.00&#13;
$2,400.00&#13;
$66,248.00&#13;
$22,851.00&#13;
$194,857.00&#13;
$6,000.00&#13;
$90,500.00&#13;
$16,823.00&#13;
$35,542.00&#13;
$9,267.00&#13;
$24,660.00&#13;
$7,503.00&#13;
$4,000.00&#13;
$13,556.00&#13;
$160.00&#13;
$17,057.10&#13;
$4,733.00&#13;
$610,225.10&#13;
83/84 Final&#13;
$55,582.90&#13;
$42,507.00&#13;
$2,500.00&#13;
$69,239.00&#13;
$33,750.00&#13;
$204,945.00&#13;
$6,300.00&#13;
$90,500.00&#13;
$19,957.00&#13;
$58,549.00&#13;
$0&#13;
$22,125.00&#13;
$11,674.00&#13;
$4,000.00&#13;
$20,896.00&#13;
$140.00&#13;
$17,057.10&#13;
$4,861.00&#13;
$664,582.10&#13;
Dollar Change&#13;
$1,997.00&#13;
$2,824.00&#13;
$100.00&#13;
$3,182.00&#13;
$10,899.00&#13;
$10,088.00'&#13;
$300.00&#13;
$ -0-&#13;
$3,134.00&#13;
$26,187.00&#13;
$9,267.00&#13;
$24,660.00&#13;
$11,989.01&#13;
$ -0-&#13;
$7,340.00&#13;
$20.00&#13;
$ -0-&#13;
$ -0-&#13;
$43,293.01&#13;
% Change&#13;
3.7&#13;
5.0&#13;
4.2&#13;
4.8&#13;
47.7&#13;
5.2&#13;
5&#13;
0&#13;
18.6&#13;
73.7&#13;
-100&#13;
-100&#13;
159.8&#13;
0&#13;
54.1&#13;
-12.5&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
7.1&#13;
academic year. SUFAC&#13;
annually allocates a portion&#13;
of the students' total tuition&#13;
fees called segregated fees.&#13;
This tabel shows the final&#13;
amount to be allocated by&#13;
SUFAC for the various&#13;
campus groups and&#13;
organizations.&#13;
INSIDE Winter Carnival kicks off&#13;
Sophie's Choice Wrestling Profile &#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Open primary: RIP&#13;
J he Democrats have done it. They have achieved their goal in&#13;
abolishing Wisconsin's open primary. We feel that this is a gross&#13;
restriction of the Wisconsin voters' rights. The open primary law, first&#13;
created by Governor LaFollette in the 30's, guaranteed that the electorate&#13;
of this state would be freed of the restrictions that the two partv&#13;
system imposes on the voters.&#13;
Voters would first have to register as a Democrat to vote in the&#13;
Democratic primary. These party affiliations would go on record on&#13;
state voter roles. Declaration of a party, whether Republican' or&#13;
baltotC ' '&#13;
S 3 Seri0US breach of the Principal of elections by secret&#13;
As mentioned above, the open primary is a state law. It is a sad state&#13;
of affairs when a political interest group (which is what the Democratic&#13;
party actually is) can overturn state laws, and be supported by the&#13;
courts.&#13;
Democrats argue that an open primary would allow Republicans to&#13;
vote for a weak Democratic candidate, thereby weakening the party On&#13;
the surface, the argument is reasonable, but it is a fact that crossover&#13;
votes are frequently deciding factors in elections. What the Democrats&#13;
actually seek is a stratification of party followings.&#13;
In the "free market of political ideas," as the United States purports&#13;
to have the two. party system seriously limits debate between opposing&#13;
political viewpoints. With the dominance of the two virtually indistinguishable,&#13;
shifting coalitions predominant in government the&#13;
closed party systems represent a serious, perhaps insurmountable&#13;
barrier to entry to that market.&#13;
I Letters to the editor: "&#13;
Sanctuaries supported&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have been following, with&#13;
great interest, the development of&#13;
the sanctuarys here at Christo&#13;
Rey and in Milwaukee. I'm glad to&#13;
see so many people taking an&#13;
active interest in this important&#13;
issue.&#13;
Many of the Catholic churches&#13;
in Racine, and the Milwaukee&#13;
Archdiocese, are participating in&#13;
"Renew," Renewal of our faith.&#13;
During this next season we'll be&#13;
studying "Empowerment of the&#13;
Spirit." It is designed to help us&#13;
lead lives of r especting and caring&#13;
for other people.&#13;
The fifth week focuses on social&#13;
justice. The mission outreach, to&#13;
which the Spirit moves us, calls&#13;
for direct assistance to meet&#13;
immediate needs, and also for the&#13;
change of unfair systems. It&#13;
becomes then, the duty of every&#13;
Christian to be concerned about the&#13;
quality of everyone's life in this&#13;
world. It is our duty to defend&#13;
human beings against anything&#13;
that would degrade or lessen their&#13;
worth. We must become a part of&#13;
those movements that try to&#13;
reverse such inequalities. The&#13;
quality of our lives will be&#13;
measured by our desire to serve&#13;
and share.&#13;
To create a better world, Jesus&#13;
looks to us to perform daily acts of&#13;
kindness; and also to move&#13;
beyond, by working to change any&#13;
systems or network of actions that&#13;
is hurting His people. We must be&#13;
conscious that it is the duty of all&#13;
of us to help with these refugees.&#13;
We must be open, not just to their&#13;
needs, but to learning from them.&#13;
Life, then*to us as Christians,&#13;
can never be a cheap commodity.&#13;
Jesus is concerned about the&#13;
quality of life and takes special&#13;
care with those whose lives seem&#13;
worthless.&#13;
Our responsibility is to transform&#13;
the face of the earth and to&#13;
change that which stifles the&#13;
human spirit.&#13;
Bobbi Abler&#13;
639-9122&#13;
Responds to Think Piece'&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am responding to the 'Think&#13;
Piece' of 3 February by Bruce&#13;
Preston entitled "Someone Must&#13;
Be Responsible!" In particular, I&#13;
am responding to his last&#13;
paragraph which read: One article&#13;
can't change a lot. One feeble&#13;
attempt at an awareness committee&#13;
can't change a lot. Tougher&#13;
drunk driving laws can't change a&#13;
lot. The death of a loved one can.&#13;
Is that what it's going to take until&#13;
you think before you drive?&#13;
I have no quarrel with the basic&#13;
idea Bruce has presented here,&#13;
that if you change the cosmetics of&#13;
a situation but not the mind behind&#13;
the situation, then you really&#13;
haven't changed anything. This&#13;
theory is played out daily in the&#13;
world around us. Bruce made lite&#13;
of this concept in what he termed&#13;
the 'out - of - sight - out - of - mind'&#13;
mentality. People have a tendancy&#13;
to think that by changing a&#13;
few external cosmetic qualities, in&#13;
this case, raising the drinking age,&#13;
you have somehow alleviated a&#13;
problem, here, drunken driving,&#13;
and how we think about the&#13;
consumption of alcohol. I have a&#13;
few thoughts of my own to relate.&#13;
Does anyone believe that by&#13;
gaining knowledge we will&#13;
overcome our undesireable&#13;
behaviors? We have understood&#13;
the destructability of war for&#13;
thousands of years; still we arm&#13;
ourselves. We realize that&#13;
cigarette smoking leads to lung&#13;
cancer; still we smoke. We know&#13;
that by drinking we are dulling&#13;
our senses; still we drink and&#13;
drive. We know that biologically&#13;
people are the same; still we&#13;
seperate races and cultures as if&#13;
we are different. Can we change&#13;
any of the above examples of&#13;
human behavior without changing&#13;
our mode of thinking? Does a&#13;
change in behavior indicate a&#13;
change in mind?&#13;
What is it that leads human&#13;
beings to act in manners, which&#13;
upon reflection, seem so very&#13;
inhuman? If we 'see' certain&#13;
behaviors as inhuman or as undesireable,&#13;
how come we cannot&#13;
change them? If we know causes,&#13;
reasons, consequences and the&#13;
results of certain human&#13;
behaviors, what keeps us from&#13;
moving down the better path?&#13;
I do not believe that 'awareness'&#13;
is a key. We are 'aware' of many&#13;
decadent and debilitating human&#13;
behaviors, and the consequences&#13;
of these behaviors, yet we continue&#13;
in these ways. We have&#13;
knowledge of and acknowledge&#13;
the existence of many inhuman&#13;
activities and behaviors, yet we do&#13;
not cease from performing *these&#13;
acts. The whole process of acting&#13;
different in the world and towards&#13;
it's inhabitants depends on&#13;
'seeing' the world differently. We&#13;
will always act as we think, and if&#13;
we think without wisdom or love of&#13;
God, we will act accordingly. And&#13;
no cosmetic change in the appearance&#13;
of how we live will ever&#13;
change how we think.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
Christopher Dorf&#13;
RON, WE'RE G0ING\/BUT PLEASE, NO jup ^cript^ x&#13;
TO HAVE TO LET YOUVOFF-THE CUFF C OMMENTS j . pJHc JHF THitoiowr^ OUT ON SPEAKING I O N ELIMINATINGiCpRPOR-l'WD L EAVETHE THINKING&#13;
.ENGAGEMENTS AGAIN.JUTE T AXES OR WHATNOTA to ub&#13;
-&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Ranger Editor&#13;
And February is an interesting&#13;
month. It puts people into very&#13;
interesting moods. In the past few&#13;
months, it was very possible to&#13;
even go golfing, though it was a bit&#13;
cold, it was possible to go, because&#13;
there wasn't a great deal of snow&#13;
to be found. Suddenly February&#13;
comes, and we get show, we get&#13;
cold, and an entirely different&#13;
mood and tone has been created.&#13;
It's crisp, precise, looking for only&#13;
those who seek the good from it. If&#13;
there are none to be found,&#13;
February can linger on for much&#13;
longer than any of u s care to have&#13;
it.&#13;
Perhaps that's the really funny&#13;
thing about February, it is the&#13;
shortest month, and yet, for the&#13;
people of the clockwatching&#13;
mentality, it drags on forever,&#13;
never seeming to find an end, to&#13;
February stays forever&#13;
air TL 1 . i. . TT--.&#13;
Think Piece&#13;
find rest. There never seems to be&#13;
much visible life in the midst of&#13;
February. All of the animals are&#13;
asleep. Even my cats are much&#13;
more groggy during this month.&#13;
As if they know. Maybe if we could&#13;
see things moving in a lifelike&#13;
sense, we would feel as if the&#13;
month would come to an end that&#13;
much more quickly. Maybe not.&#13;
When the month brings snow,&#13;
everything looks new, and yet&#13;
everything looks preserved,&#13;
rather old, as if it has to be&#13;
preserved. The trees are all&#13;
covered in white, and everyone&#13;
goes out to get a picture or two,&#13;
before the snow melts off of the&#13;
trees, and some of us will end up&#13;
waiting again for a different&#13;
chance. Perhaps a chance that&#13;
will never come. Maybe if we had&#13;
those two extra days added onto&#13;
the month, like every other&#13;
month, it would seem regular.&#13;
How can anything seem regular&#13;
when it sets so many things into a&#13;
different mode of operation?&#13;
Runners can't run outside, it&#13;
would seem a bit dangerous. Cars&#13;
shouln't even be out in this&#13;
weather. (Some cars shouldn't be&#13;
out in any weather, but that's a&#13;
different subject.)&#13;
Basically, people pay less attention&#13;
to what takes place around&#13;
them. Most are either interested&#13;
in going out of doors, into the&#13;
snow, or they simply dream,&#13;
daydream that is, to time when&#13;
things are warmer, and they feel&#13;
better about venturing outdoors.&#13;
So while these people are busy&#13;
trying to determine where they&#13;
would like to be, we sit around, go&#13;
to classes, do some occasional&#13;
studying. (Heaven forbid that&#13;
we'd do too much of that), and we&#13;
plug through the month. Most of&#13;
us trying to find an end or a&#13;
resting place too.&#13;
Defining the 'Final Frontier'&#13;
V? UfAP 4/\n T • « « . - by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
This week's column is going to&#13;
take an interesting side - step. A&#13;
lot of things have happened these&#13;
past couple of weeks which have&#13;
made me stop and think. They&#13;
weren't especially extraordinary&#13;
but compiled they tell an interesting&#13;
story.&#13;
The theme for this week's Think&#13;
Piece comes from a recent lecture&#13;
given by Dr. Lee Thayer. While&#13;
discussing technology and our&#13;
desire to conquer he said, "Space&#13;
is not our final frontier, finding out&#13;
how to get along with each other&#13;
is." This planted a seed of inquiry&#13;
which blossomed as the week&#13;
grew.&#13;
When you think about it, he's&#13;
right. We can travel by land, sea&#13;
and air. We have forged the&#13;
forests, oceans and galaxies. We&#13;
have even pondered developing&#13;
communities under water and on&#13;
the Moon but what good will they&#13;
be if we can't live together? Who&#13;
cares if you can travel to Mars at&#13;
the speed of sound or light if when&#13;
you get there you face the same&#13;
problems in getting along that you&#13;
thought you had escaped?&#13;
A couple of weeks ago some&#13;
friends and I were watching Sweet&#13;
Cheeks in the Union. My friend&#13;
accidently knocked into a girl and&#13;
started up a conversation with&#13;
her. We introduced ourselves and&#13;
as she was leaving she remarked&#13;
that she had just moved here from&#13;
New Hampshire three weeks&#13;
earlier and that this was the&#13;
longest conversation she had had&#13;
with anyone. We had only talked&#13;
for ten minutes.&#13;
I am involved with the Rotary&#13;
youth exchange for high school&#13;
students. I have met and had&#13;
extensive talks and wonderful&#13;
relationships with people from all&#13;
over the world but I can't even&#13;
name the people who live on my&#13;
block. Or in my first (or last) class&#13;
of the day for that matter.&#13;
We go through each day looking&#13;
the other way when a stranger&#13;
passes us in the hallway rather&#13;
than taking the God - awful first&#13;
step and smiling. We spend more&#13;
time and energy condemning&#13;
someone for their race, beliefs or&#13;
sexual preferences than we do&#13;
trying to understand them We&#13;
spend more time ignoring that&#13;
person next to us or in front of us&#13;
than we could saying "Hi" to&#13;
them. Or (horror of horrors)&#13;
actually trying to get a little&#13;
conversation going.&#13;
All is not lost, we just need a&#13;
first step. We just need to try. If&#13;
three total strangers (a security&#13;
guard, a groundskeeper, and a&#13;
student) can take the time to push&#13;
my car out from a snow bank in&#13;
the dreaded mini car lot then we&#13;
can all take the time to smile.&#13;
After all, a stranger is just a&#13;
friend you haven't met. I know&#13;
that was a worn out cliche, but it is&#13;
something to think about.&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
&lt;Ranger 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;
STAR=S&#13;
'&#13;
Stant Business Mana&#13;
9&#13;
er&#13;
Micha&lt;f|VKaHaiea?&#13;
n&#13;
i? B"&#13;
enker " P hillips, Patricia tumble,&#13;
S Lvburn M0hn&#13;
,&#13;
Kovalic&#13;
' Rick Luehr&lt; Robb Luehr,&#13;
RANGER is WR^MEN AND Napo,eon Scarb™U9b&#13;
/ Jennie Tunkiecz.&#13;
e^S'LeTy' 'tSSSfi T&#13;
C&#13;
*UW ParkSide and theV are S0,elV&#13;
Writ»PnER iS Prin,ed by the UrTloi?Cooperative'p dUrin9 breaks and holidaVs&#13;
'&#13;
5? &amp;»&lt;«#•. wSSJ5iT«S5f* R*&#13;
nser&#13;
' u"&#13;
iver8l,v 01 wlsconsln&#13;
°&#13;
ne inch mar9'nsaCAMP&#13;
[eMprVm^e&#13;
c&#13;
(&#13;
I'Ktte&#13;
?' doublesP&#13;
ac&#13;
ed on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification. A" le,ters must be and a telephone number inreserves&#13;
all editorial privileges3 in ref?,'«inn bubllca,ion Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
^defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Faculty evaluation system is&#13;
effective, Chancellor says&#13;
by Jeanne Buenker-Phillips Parksirf* r» r •&#13;
The ongoing debates over the Handh b- les and P&#13;
rocedures&#13;
relative merits of teaching and priori?0 ^ 7?e aforementioned&#13;
scholarly activity as criteria for ls&#13;
,&#13;
defined as follows:&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 10,1983&#13;
scholarly activity as criteria for&#13;
evaluating faculty members&#13;
frequently seem to revolve around&#13;
two opposing views.&#13;
One, popular among many&#13;
students, is that college faculty&#13;
are so concerned with research&#13;
that they reward those who ignore&#13;
or merely tolerate undergraduate&#13;
students and punish those who are&#13;
perceived as "good teachers"&#13;
The other stereotype, more like a&#13;
faculty nightmare, is that institutions&#13;
which don't stress&#13;
research and publication have a&#13;
faculty full of "deadwood" or&#13;
professors who "die" or "retire"&#13;
intellectually once they achieve&#13;
tenure.&#13;
The criteria used to evaluate&#13;
professors is divided into three&#13;
areas: teaching, creative activity&#13;
and service. According to the UW0&#13;
.?®achin8 includes any&#13;
tivity related to course&#13;
evelopment, course&#13;
prpentation, course related&#13;
interaction with students,&#13;
evaluation of s tudent progress,&#13;
tutoring, advising, and to other&#13;
learning services required by&#13;
students. Creative activity&#13;
consists of c ontributions by an&#13;
individual in the forms or&#13;
media typical of his discipline,&#13;
art, or profession, and which&#13;
are available for critical&#13;
evaluation by his/her peers&#13;
within his/her discipline, art,&#13;
or profession. Contributions&#13;
include, but are not limited to,&#13;
books, monographs, articles,&#13;
reviews, and conference&#13;
papers; works of art, concert&#13;
performances, dramatic&#13;
performances, and literary&#13;
Caldwell named&#13;
minority affairs director&#13;
The appointment of Franzcine&#13;
A. Caldwell as Coordinator of&#13;
Minority Student Programs at&#13;
Parkside was announced last&#13;
week.&#13;
Caldwell comes to Parkside&#13;
from Northern Illinois University&#13;
where she has been an&#13;
educational, vocational and&#13;
personal counselor since 1975.&#13;
Before that she worked as a&#13;
YMCA youth counselor and a&#13;
community outreach college&#13;
counselor in Chicago, and headed&#13;
Educational Opportunity Center,&#13;
a community organization, in St.&#13;
Louis. She has a B.A. degree in&#13;
English and Physical Education&#13;
from Graceland College and an&#13;
M.A. in Educational Counseling&#13;
from Washington University.&#13;
At Parkside, Caldwell will&#13;
coordinate an expanded minority&#13;
student program effort made&#13;
possible by a special grant from&#13;
the UW System which will total&#13;
$400,000 over a minimum of four&#13;
years. Under the grant, five additional&#13;
staff will be hired in the&#13;
counseling and academic skills&#13;
FRANZCINE CALDWELL&#13;
cording to Carla Stoffle, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Educational&#13;
Services, to whom Caldwell will&#13;
report. The intensive learning and&#13;
counseling experience which&#13;
characterizes the CHAMP&#13;
program for junior and senior&#13;
works; and research reports&#13;
and design proposals. Contributions&#13;
in the process of&#13;
preparation may be considered&#13;
as evidence of creative activity.&#13;
Service consists of&#13;
contributions to the affairs of&#13;
the University, community,&#13;
and profession. University&#13;
service includes contributions&#13;
to the governance, administration,&#13;
and operation&#13;
(but excluding teaching) of&#13;
UW-Parkside of the UW&#13;
System; community service&#13;
includes contributions beyond&#13;
mere membership to the&#13;
organization, administration,&#13;
governance and operation of&#13;
professional organizations."&#13;
This format is not unique to&#13;
Parkside. In fact, it is the norm in&#13;
any college or university which&#13;
purports to be serious. Faculty&#13;
should be practitioners of a&#13;
scholarly discipline, more than&#13;
just "teachers", as in elementary&#13;
and high schools. This belief is&#13;
referred to as the "teacher -&#13;
scholar" ideal. Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin believes that the ideal&#13;
"teacher / scholar" model is that&#13;
of, "an alive, intellectual person."&#13;
This person is, "one who is always&#13;
active and always inquiring." He&#13;
added, "This individual is an&#13;
active, alert, intellectual in his&#13;
field who on the one hand&#13;
publishes and on the other is a&#13;
good teacher."&#13;
Frequently individuals see a&#13;
conflict between teaching and&#13;
creative activity. Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, however, sees "no conflict&#13;
at all," and believes the two&#13;
are "totally integrated." At one&#13;
point the Policies and Procedures&#13;
Handbook states that, "special&#13;
consideration shall be given to&#13;
contributions in the area of&#13;
teaching." When evaluating&#13;
professors, a bit more emphasis is&#13;
put on the teaching evaluation of&#13;
the professor than is put on the&#13;
creative activity and service&#13;
evaluations. According to Guskin,&#13;
"when you look at teaching, you&#13;
need someone with an active mind&#13;
which you judge through&#13;
scholarship." He also said that&#13;
one must ask, "Does this person&#13;
have a kind of intelligent mind&#13;
that will carry over a long period&#13;
of time, keep up - to - date, and not rl«.. . — on m i •&#13;
Racine Public Library&#13;
hosts Berge exhibition&#13;
Topical cartoons by Paul Berge&#13;
are on display in the Racine&#13;
Public Library meeting room.&#13;
Berge, a Racine resident, is a 1981&#13;
graduate of St. Olaf's College,&#13;
Northfield, Minnesota. During his&#13;
college years he was an editorial&#13;
cartoonist for the school&#13;
publication, Manitou Messenger.&#13;
His work has also appeared in the&#13;
UW - Parkside Ranger, Madison&#13;
Independent, Mathematics&#13;
Magazine, area newspapers and&#13;
other publications. Berge's&#13;
cartoons show his great talent for&#13;
caricature as well as a keen insight&#13;
into local and national issues&#13;
of c urrent interest.&#13;
The exhibit will be on display&#13;
through February, and may be&#13;
viewed during library open hours.&#13;
Seybold demonstration&#13;
set for Wednesday&#13;
A demonstration protesting the&#13;
Behavioral Science Division&#13;
Executive Committee's decision&#13;
to deny sociology professor Peter&#13;
Seybold a one - year contract&#13;
extension will be held on Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 16 at 1 p. m. The&#13;
demonstration will begin at the&#13;
Union cafeteria and proceed to&#13;
Main Place.&#13;
All Parkside students, staff and&#13;
faculty as well as concerned&#13;
community members are urged to&#13;
attend.&#13;
What did the Vikings&#13;
find in America&#13;
Scandinavian legend contends&#13;
that Vikings visited North&#13;
America three centuries before&#13;
Christopher Columbus made his&#13;
voyage to the West Indies. There&#13;
is archeological evidence to&#13;
support the legends, but it is&#13;
unknown just how much of the&#13;
legend is true, and which parts are&#13;
truer than others.&#13;
Dr. Jay Ruud, an English instructor&#13;
at Parkside, will present&#13;
his slide lecture, "Leif Erikson,"&#13;
IRS offers free&#13;
Income Tax service&#13;
at the Kenosha Public Museum on&#13;
Feb. 13 at 1:30 p. m. The&#13;
presentation is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
During the presentation, Ruud&#13;
will examine the aspects of Viking&#13;
life and culture which enable them&#13;
to make the voyage, and passages&#13;
from Norse sagas describing the&#13;
discovery of "Viniand," as the&#13;
Vikings named North America.&#13;
The program is sponsored by the&#13;
Kenosha County Archeological&#13;
Society and the Anthropology Club&#13;
areas to expand minority student school students will be ap- of time, keep up - to - date fa nd not&#13;
services. 'P1,ed to students during their first dry up?" Teaching carries more&#13;
The promise shown hv WAJS*™- a&#13;
f, uw"&#13;
Park&#13;
side. weight, but a teacher must be a&#13;
Parkside^s Creatine Hi^hPr h £&#13;
18 aiTd at&#13;
,&#13;
students wha scholar because a faculty member&#13;
*npp£iennw c" ob&#13;
taimng the do so. Caldwell also will direct the&#13;
special UW System grant, ac- CHAMP program.&#13;
Guskin believes that "teaching&#13;
Continued On Page Nine&#13;
The Volunteer Income Tax&#13;
Assistance Program (VITA) will&#13;
offer free income tax assistance&#13;
and preparation for the poor,&#13;
elderly and handicapped at three&#13;
area locations beginning Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 9, and continuing to&#13;
the filing deadline, April 15.&#13;
The program is sponsored by the&#13;
IRS, which trains VITA personnel.&#13;
Assistance will be offered at:&#13;
Library / Learning Center,&#13;
Wednesdays and Thursdays, from&#13;
1 to 3 p. m., and Saturdays from 10&#13;
a. m. to 2 p. m. in the second floor&#13;
Overlook Lounge. (Directions are&#13;
Human relations for&#13;
available from the circulation&#13;
desk.)&#13;
Kenosha Public Library Southwest,&#13;
7979 - 38th Ave., Tuesdays&#13;
from 6:30 to 8:30 p. m.&#13;
Racine Public Library, 75 - 7th&#13;
St., Tuesdays from 6:30 to 8:30 p&#13;
m.&#13;
Reproducible copies of all 1982&#13;
federal income tax forms are&#13;
available at all three locations for&#13;
a nominal copying charge.&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
Parkside program is available by&#13;
calling 553-2345 or 553-2386.&#13;
LIC s Lobby Day to be held on Wednesday housing managers&#13;
On Feb. 16, students students from all hike. u .. „ , . . . &amp;&#13;
over the UW System will be&#13;
driving enmasse to the state&#13;
capitol to meet with their&#13;
representatives and Senators to&#13;
speak out on the issues that&#13;
directly affect them.&#13;
At 12:15 p.m. there will be a&#13;
press conference in room 415, the&#13;
Northwest committee room,&#13;
where several state reps, will talk&#13;
to the students.&#13;
Among the issues that will be&#13;
discussed are, the raising of the&#13;
drinking age, The Solomon&#13;
Amendment, and the tuition fee&#13;
hike.&#13;
A bill (SB-l) will raise the&#13;
drinking age in the state of&#13;
Wisconsin to 19. At this time the&#13;
bill is predicted to pass easily in&#13;
both houses.&#13;
The Solomon Amendment is an&#13;
amendment that makes any&#13;
student who has not filled out his&#13;
Selective Service Documents&#13;
ineligible to receive any form of&#13;
financial aid.&#13;
As of next Fall, tuition for in -&#13;
state students will be raised from&#13;
25 percent of the cost of instruction&#13;
to 27 percent. Also, a&#13;
group of highly conservative&#13;
lobbyists have put together the&#13;
Blaney Report which suggests&#13;
that tuition should cover 33 percent&#13;
of the total cost for instruction.&#13;
&#13;
Anyone interested in going up to&#13;
Madison for the Lobby Day should&#13;
contact Dave Schroeder, or Dave&#13;
Higgens at the PSGA office before&#13;
noon on Monday, Feb. 14. The cars&#13;
will be leaving at approximately 9&#13;
a.m. Wednesday. If you are not&#13;
able to attend the rally in&#13;
Madison, call the Legislative&#13;
Hotline in Madison toll free at 1-&#13;
800-362-9696. The Students' Voice&#13;
needs to be heard.&#13;
Human relations for low income&#13;
housing managers is the subject of&#13;
a four - week short course (noncredit)&#13;
offered through the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Extension&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
William Berggren, with Human&#13;
Resource Associates, Racine, an&#13;
administrative systems&#13;
suiting firm, will instruct&#13;
Berggren has taught for -&#13;
Parkside, GTI Racine, and MATC&#13;
Milwaukee, and has experience in&#13;
management and planning&#13;
industry.&#13;
conMr.&#13;
&#13;
UW&#13;
for&#13;
He will cover interpersonal&#13;
relationships, solving disputes,&#13;
assigning responsibilities, high&#13;
turn over and racial problems.&#13;
The elderly - the poor and those&#13;
who become poor; age groups —&#13;
will also be considered, as well as&#13;
how to get tenants to assume&#13;
responsibilities. New managerial&#13;
styles and skills will be explored.&#13;
The class will meet on 4 Mondays,&#13;
beginning February 21 7 - 9&#13;
P- m ., at Tallent Hall. The fee is&#13;
$20. Registrations will be taken at&#13;
the University Extension office in&#13;
Tallent Hall, phone 553-2312.&#13;
BSO sets schedule for February&#13;
The Black Student's&#13;
Organization is sponsoring an&#13;
exhibit of new library books in&#13;
black studies in the Library /&#13;
Learning Center during the month&#13;
of February. Also in the Library&#13;
this month is a display on the life&#13;
of Dr. Martin Luther King.&#13;
Other BSO events scheduled for&#13;
the month of February include: A&#13;
lecture by Dr. Stephanie&#13;
Williams, on Feb. 14, titled&#13;
"Medical School: Do You Have&#13;
What It Takes?" On Feb. 15, a&#13;
lecture by musician Larry Bandy:&#13;
"Black Music: Past, Present and&#13;
Future." On Feb. 17, political&#13;
science professor Frank Gilliam&#13;
will talk about the civil rights&#13;
movement.&#13;
A concert featuring area gospel&#13;
choirs will be held Feb. 18, and on&#13;
Feb. 22, professor Marvin&#13;
Dawkins will speak on "Blacks in&#13;
Education." Marva Dawkins, a&#13;
clinical psychologist, will speak&#13;
on "Mental Health in the Black&#13;
Community," on Feb. 23.&#13;
On Feb. 24 a panel discussion&#13;
will be held with Charles Wallace,&#13;
the corporate treasurer of Pabst&#13;
Brewing, Milton Lewis, a labor&#13;
relations attorney for Allis -&#13;
Chalmers, on "Black Development&#13;
in Business." BSO will be&#13;
hosting a "College Night" dance&#13;
in Union Square on Feb. 25. T he&#13;
band will be announced.&#13;
Further information on these&#13;
events is available from Esrold&#13;
Nurse or Margarita Hargrove,&#13;
phone 553-2575, or by stopping at&#13;
their office in WLLC D-175.&#13;
On Friday, February 18, 1983 at&#13;
8:00 p.m., the Milwaukee Section&#13;
of th e American Chemical Society&#13;
will sponsor a lecture entitled,&#13;
"Drug Abuse: Research, Medical&#13;
and Social Aspects". The lecture&#13;
will be presented by Joseph M.&#13;
Benforado, M.D., at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Milwaukee. All section members&#13;
and their guests are welcome&#13;
Dinner will be available at 7:00&#13;
p.m.; reservations are required&#13;
only for the dinner.&#13;
The use of drugs precedes&#13;
recorded history. The earliest&#13;
drugs were derived from plantsDrug&#13;
abuse lecture&#13;
today, many reach us from&#13;
chemical laboratories.&#13;
Laboratory discoveries have&#13;
brought tremendous benefits to&#13;
society but many drugs are now&#13;
subject to abuse. Because both the&#13;
use and abuse of drugs is&#13;
widespread, citizens should be&#13;
aware of the social and medical&#13;
implications of continuing&#13;
research.&#13;
Dr. Benforado is Professor of&#13;
Medicine at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Madison. He&#13;
specialized in the treatment of&#13;
patients with drug abuse&#13;
problems. &#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983&#13;
Winter Carnival hits&#13;
Parkside with a&#13;
blizzard of activity&#13;
PARKSIDE'S DART TEAM placed third out of 16 entries in the window painting contest Monday.&#13;
THE SALEM CENTRAL High School's Falcon&#13;
Drum Majorettes put on a show in Main Place&#13;
Monday after the parade. &#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 10,1983 5&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER, of course, led off the show.&#13;
"RANGER" EDITOR Pat Hensiak gets a hug from her companion,&#13;
Darth.&#13;
DESPITE THE COLD weather, some enjoyed the parade, to the&#13;
amusement of spectators.&#13;
Photos by&#13;
M asood Shafiq&#13;
and Robb Luehr&#13;
THE COMPUTER CLUB'S winning float got an effective guard. &#13;
AIR FORCE EXPERIENCE&#13;
IT'S&#13;
SECOND&#13;
VW*&#13;
by Patrick Luchak&#13;
Medical anthropology is the sub&#13;
- discipline of anthropology that&#13;
focuses on investigating areas of&#13;
study related to man's health. The&#13;
scope of the studies performed by&#13;
Medical Anthropologists is as&#13;
broad as the subject of health&#13;
itself. Studies include topics such&#13;
as aging, communicable diseases,&#13;
comparative medical systems,&#13;
nutrition and anthropological&#13;
genetics, to name only a few of t he&#13;
areas now being researched by&#13;
medical anthropologists.&#13;
arena of medical research is&#13;
becoming more apparent. The&#13;
studying of human diseases and&#13;
how people perceive and treat&#13;
these diseases as members of a&#13;
particular culture is giving us a&#13;
far different outlook towards&#13;
health and illness than we get by&#13;
strictly studying a virus beneath a&#13;
microscope or trying different&#13;
drugs on a bacteria culture until&#13;
one affects it.&#13;
Man's attitude towards health&#13;
and disease varies from culture to&#13;
culture, in areas of diagnosis,&#13;
treatment, and general concepts.&#13;
The reason for these differences&#13;
are often due to the environment&#13;
in which each society must survive&#13;
in. Both the existence of&#13;
Inter Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship will have Pastor Jerry&#13;
Worshim of Grace Baptist Church&#13;
speak on "Stewardship: Time and&#13;
Money," on Wednesday, Feb. 16 at&#13;
1 p.m. in Union 207. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to attend.&#13;
As a discipline, medical anthropology&#13;
is quite young;&#13;
however, its usefulness in the&#13;
John Deigh, a moral&#13;
philosopher from Northwestern&#13;
University, will be the guest of th e&#13;
Parkside Philosophical Society on&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 10. Dr. Deigh will&#13;
discuss theories of punishment.&#13;
The talk begins at 2p.m. in CA 233,&#13;
with a question and answer period&#13;
to follow. Feel free to bring a&#13;
friend or two.&#13;
The Student Nurse Association&#13;
of Parkside will present a&#13;
program "Dealing With a Patient&#13;
in a Hospice Program," in MOLN&#13;
107 at 7 p.m. on Mar. 1 by Barbara&#13;
Hammes, R.N. The program will&#13;
be followed by an open discussion.&#13;
Pi Mu Epsilon is back and&#13;
coming on strong for Spring '83&#13;
Because PME is a national&#13;
honorary mathematics society, it&#13;
has a certain prestige that is&#13;
unequalled by any other club.&#13;
Students interested in the wonders&#13;
of math and its applications are&#13;
invited to attend the social&#13;
reorganization meeting on&#13;
* FIGHT&#13;
AGAINST&#13;
W BIRTH&#13;
* DEFECTS&#13;
MARCH OF DIMES&#13;
THIS SPACE: CONTRIBUTED BY T H t: PUBLISHER&#13;
• Jube Jells&#13;
• Licorice Bully&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Milk Carmels&#13;
• Orange Slices&#13;
• Peanut Butter Chip&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
• Peppermint Kisses&#13;
• Rootbeer Barrels&#13;
• Sour Balls&#13;
• Spearment Leaves&#13;
• Starlite Mints&#13;
• Carmel Targets&#13;
• Cinnamon Discs&#13;
• Candy Pops&#13;
• Corn Nuts&#13;
• Assorted Perky&#13;
• Assorted Royal&#13;
• Assorted Toffee&#13;
• Bridge Mix&#13;
• Burndt Peanuts&#13;
• Butterscotch Discs&#13;
• Candy Coffee Discs&#13;
• Carmel Bully&#13;
• Chocolate Drops&#13;
• Chocolate Jots&#13;
• Chocolate Peanuts&#13;
• Chocolate Raisins&#13;
• Chocolate Stars&#13;
• Jelly Beans&#13;
• California Mix&#13;
® Caribbean Delicacy&#13;
• Carob Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Carob Raisins&#13;
• Carob Peanuts&#13;
• Natural Pistachio&#13;
• Red Pistachio&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Sunflower Seeds&#13;
• Student Food Mix&#13;
• Yogurt Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Yogurt Peanuts&#13;
• Yogurt Raisins&#13;
© Yogurt Sesame Brittle&#13;
• Smoked Almonds whole&#13;
X29 - U .S. Air Force&#13;
experimental prototype&#13;
developed by&#13;
Grumman Aerospace&#13;
Ca//&#13;
co//*&#13;
uut not ,' CenSe&#13;
fourse/f fLgu,&#13;
'&#13;
r&#13;
ecI.&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF FEB. 140i&#13;
CORN N UTS&#13;
25% OFF &#13;
RANGER&#13;
by David Schroeder&#13;
What really makes movie&#13;
reviewing difficult is when one sits&#13;
in the theater, pad and pencil in&#13;
hand, ready to take notes, and&#13;
then one is so totally blown away&#13;
by the picture that when its over,&#13;
you realize you haven't taken one&#13;
note passed the opening credits.&#13;
Sophie's Choice is such a movie.&#13;
The movie takes place in "a&#13;
strange a place as Brooklyn." It&#13;
follows the path of a young writer&#13;
named Stingo (Peter MacNicol)&#13;
once he moves into a boarding&#13;
house. He is soon befriended by a&#13;
couple from the upstairs room.&#13;
Sophie, (Meryl Streep) a Polish&#13;
Streep gives choice performance in 'Sophie'&#13;
hrnoHor immigrant immigrant and and a a victim victim of nf Au sch­ Ansch. ar«ri , .&#13;
witz, and her hot tempered&#13;
boyfriend, Nathan (Kevin Kline)&#13;
offer Stingo a strange welcome,&#13;
Wustum opens new exhibits&#13;
The Racine Art Association&#13;
announces its exhibitions for&#13;
February and March, 1983 at the&#13;
Wustum Museum in Racine. The&#13;
exhibits open with a reception&#13;
which is open to the public from&#13;
2:00 - 4:00 p. m., Sunday afternoon,&#13;
Feb. 13, 1983.&#13;
The main exhibition will be&#13;
Wisconsin Photography '83. This&#13;
is the third time the Racine Art&#13;
Association has organized this&#13;
biennial, state - wide, fine art&#13;
photography competition.&#13;
Wisconsin Photography '83 was&#13;
juried by V erna Curtis, Associate&#13;
Curator of the Milwaukee Art&#13;
Museum who selected 136&#13;
photographs created by 46 artists&#13;
from a group of 937 photographs&#13;
entered by 100 Wisconsin&#13;
photographers.&#13;
Each artist was asked to submit&#13;
a portfolio of 10 p hotographs for&#13;
consideration and those selected&#13;
for the exhibition will display&#13;
from two to six pieces per artist to&#13;
give Museum visitors better ideas&#13;
of the photographer's body of&#13;
work.&#13;
The exhibit will travel to Nicolet&#13;
College in Rhinelander for&#13;
exhibition in April 1983.&#13;
This exhibition is supported by a&#13;
grant from the Wisconsin Arts&#13;
Board with funds from the State of&#13;
Wisconsin and the National Endowment&#13;
for the Arts. Additional&#13;
support of t he exhibition has been&#13;
provided by Boston Store, Gold&#13;
Medal, Inc., Heritage Bank, The&#13;
Journal Times, Marine First&#13;
National Bank and Twin Disc.&#13;
The second exhibit is titled&#13;
Ghita Hardimon: Graphic Constructions.&#13;
Hardimon is a&#13;
Highland Park, Illinois artist who&#13;
creates three - dimensional relief&#13;
constructions out of cut - up&#13;
sections of her own multi - colored&#13;
intaglio prints. Hardimon&#13;
received her M.F.A. degree at&#13;
Northwestern University and her&#13;
B.F.A. degree at the School of t he&#13;
Art Institute of Chicago. She has&#13;
exhibited extensively in Wisconsin&#13;
and Illinois and is in a number of&#13;
corporate and private art&#13;
collections.&#13;
Both exhibitions continue&#13;
through March 20 at the Wustum.&#13;
Viewing hours at the Wustum&#13;
are: 1 - 5 p. m. seven days a week,&#13;
and 1 - 9 p. m. Monday and&#13;
Thursday. The Wustum is located&#13;
at 2519 Northwestern Avenue&#13;
(Highway 38) in Northwestern&#13;
Racine. Admission is free.&#13;
Milwaukee Rep. opens Chekhov play&#13;
For the first time in ten years,&#13;
the intricate characters and&#13;
subtle plots of Anton Chekhov will&#13;
be presented by the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory Theater. Uncle Vanya&#13;
will run February 25 tl.rough April&#13;
3 in the Performing Arts Center's&#13;
Todd Wehr Theater.&#13;
In Uncle Vanya, all is not well&#13;
on the Serebryakov estate. The&#13;
usual tranquility of aristocratic&#13;
country life has been totally&#13;
disrupted by the arrival of the old&#13;
professor and his lovely young&#13;
wife. Russia's master playwright&#13;
creates a fascinating 19th - century&#13;
portrait of his country's ill -&#13;
fated upperclass in this intriguing&#13;
world classic.&#13;
Uncle Vanya will be performed&#13;
Tuesdays through Fridays at 8:00&#13;
p. m., Saturdays at 5:00 p. m. and&#13;
9:15 p. m., and Sundays at 7:30 p.&#13;
m. Matinees are at 2:00 p. m.,&#13;
Feb. 27, March 2, 9, 20, 23, an d 30.&#13;
The Rep is well - equipped to&#13;
accommodate patrons who are&#13;
blind or in wheelchairs. A si gned&#13;
performance of Uncle Vanya will&#13;
be presented at 2:00 p. m on&#13;
Sunday, March 20. Deaf and&#13;
hearing impaired patrons should&#13;
contact the Performing Arts&#13;
Center box office at 273-7206.&#13;
Skylight presents The Secret Marriage'&#13;
The Skylight Comic Opera will&#13;
present its third production of the&#13;
1982-83 season, Domenico&#13;
Cimarosa's "The Secret&#13;
Marriage", in English, through&#13;
Feb. 20 a t the Skylight Theatre,&#13;
813 North Jefferson Street.&#13;
Though frequently performed and&#13;
considered part of the standard&#13;
repertoire in Europe, it is seldom&#13;
performed in the United States.&#13;
18th century Italian comic opera&#13;
has long been a specialty at the&#13;
Skylight. This delightful piece is&#13;
based on an English play, "The&#13;
Clandestine Marriage" by George&#13;
Colman, the elder and David&#13;
Garrick who took their inspiration&#13;
from the famous series of satirical&#13;
pictures by Hogarth entitled&#13;
"Marriage A' La Mode."&#13;
The story concerns a wealthy&#13;
merchant, Geronimo, who hopes&#13;
Ranger N eeds&#13;
Writers!!!&#13;
to secure a place in society by&#13;
marrying off his elder daughter,&#13;
Elisetta, to a member of the&#13;
English aristocracy, Count&#13;
Robinson. When the Count&#13;
arrives, however, he is very taken&#13;
with the younger daughter,&#13;
Carolina, who just happens to be&#13;
secret y married to Paulino, her&#13;
father s clerk. The girls' widowed&#13;
aunt, Fidalma, enters this comic&#13;
web when she tries to maneuver&#13;
her family so she will be able to&#13;
marry Paulino herself. The&#13;
complicated turns of plot finally&#13;
resolve themselves to provide a&#13;
happy ending in time for the&#13;
finale.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
Skylight Theatre Box Office, 271-&#13;
8815, 813 N. Jefferson St. between&#13;
12 and 6 Monday thru Friday. Call&#13;
the Skylight for information&#13;
concerning group rates, student&#13;
and senior discounts, reservations,&#13;
curtain times and phone&#13;
charges.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 16,7:30- $8 25*&#13;
Fridays, Feb. 11, is, 8:3Q - $9 75&#13;
Saturdays, Feb. 12, 19, 8:30 -&#13;
$9.75&#13;
Sundays, Feb. 13, 20, 2 30 -&#13;
$8.25*&#13;
* - Student/senior discount $1 00&#13;
off with I.D.&#13;
We fSSL \wlr&#13;
friendshiP blooms. We follow this wonderful trio from&#13;
Island? e x ploi ts in Coney&#13;
darkest c&#13;
t0 deepest *nd SffSJF*8 entrapped within&#13;
oMtefHm tu ?&#13;
ny&#13;
°&#13;
ne 3Spect&#13;
cess it hf • t CFedlt for its SUCbe&#13;
sad tf is w acting&#13;
-&#13;
11 wiU&#13;
oe sad if, as i fear, Peter MacNicol&#13;
is overlooked for an Oscar&#13;
Nomination for Best Actor He is&#13;
wonderfidly innocent as the young&#13;
this?rtquepa™StlyimpreSSedby&#13;
th^e&#13;
snmi?ine ise(&#13;
J&#13;
ually ^eat as&#13;
but ofEn insanely Jealous,&#13;
H?s tlZeTy gentle eccentric. His shifting moods, unpredictability&#13;
and charm added&#13;
wonderful dimension to a&#13;
character that I wish the script&#13;
mo^ deaUh WHh 3 little b*&#13;
1&#13;
* Ah yes, and there is the flawless&#13;
performance of Meryl Streep. The&#13;
woman commands all scenes. Her&#13;
foreign accent with the broken&#13;
English, and her seemingly&#13;
flawless German were only the&#13;
smallest parts of the wonderful&#13;
performance she gave. I was&#13;
spellbound as the camera focused&#13;
on her face. It was fascinating to&#13;
watch her search for the right&#13;
English word to fit her meaning,&#13;
to tell her story of how she was&#13;
saved by Nathan, and to reveal&#13;
her terrible secret.&#13;
This is a long movie, (2 hours, 45&#13;
minutes) but who noticed. Never&#13;
have I seen a movie with such a&#13;
variety of subtle emotions brought&#13;
out in such an artful way. Each&#13;
moment of the film is filled with&#13;
art, from the poetic nature of the&#13;
narration, to the wonderful use of&#13;
the camera, to the costumes and&#13;
set, to the subtle music, to the&#13;
exquisite acting.&#13;
I was also very impressed with&#13;
the handling of the love scenes.&#13;
For the first time in recent years,&#13;
I have seen true love scenes, not&#13;
just sex scenes. That is really&#13;
what a love scene should be like.&#13;
This is one of the finest, if not&#13;
the finest, picture of the year, and&#13;
must be experienced by anyone&#13;
who wants to see the true art of the&#13;
motion picture. Four stars for&#13;
Sophie's Choice. ****&#13;
Miles Davis highlights PAC performances&#13;
Several performances have&#13;
recently been added to the Performing&#13;
Arts Center's February&#13;
schedule of events, according to&#13;
Archie A. Sarazin, managing&#13;
director. 6&#13;
On Thursday, Feb. 17, Stardate&#13;
Productions presents jazz artist&#13;
Miles Davis in Uihlein Hall at 8:00&#13;
p. m. Tickets to the concert are&#13;
$15.00 and $12.50.&#13;
Popular singer Bobby Vinton&#13;
performs on Friday, Feb. 18 at&#13;
7:00 p. m. in Uihlein Hall. Tickets&#13;
are $12.50, $11.00 and $8.50.&#13;
A concert by Kenny Loggins&#13;
originally scheduled for January&#13;
27 has been rescheduled for&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 22 at 8:30 p. m. in&#13;
Uihlein Hall. Loggins was unable&#13;
to appear in January due to an&#13;
injury. Tickets already purchased&#13;
for the January concert, which&#13;
was sold - out, will be honored for&#13;
the Feb. 22 p erformance.&#13;
Comedian Rodney Dangerfield&#13;
appears in Uihlein Hall on Friday,&#13;
Feb. 25 fo r two performances at&#13;
7:00 and 10:00 p. m. Tickets are&#13;
$15.00 and $12.50. All PAC tickets&#13;
are sold at the PAC Box Office or&#13;
through PHONECHARGE, (414)&#13;
273-7206.&#13;
UIlDlife.&#13;
Winter Carnival 1983&#13;
'Joky] KdjtLl&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
6:00 p.m.&#13;
6:30- p.m.&#13;
7:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
8:30 p.m.&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
Beach Party&#13;
Doors Open&#13;
Open Swim&#13;
Air Mattress Relay&#13;
Inner Tube Relay&#13;
"Dog" Paddle Race&#13;
Biggest Splash Contest&#13;
Pool Closes&#13;
Dance Featuring "Datillo"&#13;
$1.50admission with UWP I.D. $2.00guests&#13;
50&lt;t discount if you wear beach attire&#13;
Food &amp; beverages will be available for purchase&#13;
All E vents in Physical E ducation Building &#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983 RANGER&#13;
Fun with Dirt?&#13;
Garbage Fund Raiser!&#13;
New Music-Pop&#13;
ABBA's 'First Ten Years' is perky pop collectioi&#13;
bv Terrv Rvmp four an(j platinum singles percussion and soaring melodii&#13;
in the U.S. These figures are Benny Anderson and Bjorn Ulvc&#13;
by Dick Oberbruner&#13;
The response has been overwhelming.&#13;
Bottles, cans and&#13;
paper have been coming in from&#13;
all over. The Parkside Garbage&#13;
Fund Raiser is on! And this&#13;
campus is already answering the&#13;
call.&#13;
Revolving around the theme,&#13;
"At Parkside, Garbage is King,"&#13;
people from every corner of the&#13;
university are pledging their&#13;
support. Remember, we must live&#13;
up to our nickname: PU.&#13;
What snow there is leaves&#13;
the ground wide open for more&#13;
than just leaves. It's up to you to&#13;
clean out your pockets and your&#13;
cars. Many have already contributed.&#13;
Just walk around&#13;
campus and see for yourselves.&#13;
What place could be more appropriate&#13;
to hold such an event?&#13;
Right here, near the armpit of&#13;
Lake Michigan, we see the best in&#13;
small college filth. We can meet,&#13;
and beat, any school of our size in&#13;
pounds per acre and total weekly&#13;
tonnage.&#13;
Trash is as natural as all outdoors.&#13;
A clean campus assures us&#13;
of being called "tidy." We can't&#13;
have this. Parkside is full of&#13;
sloppy, unintelligent people who&#13;
want to give their fair share.&#13;
Some garbage blends in&#13;
naturally, like a Mickey's bottle.&#13;
Unnoticed garbage is the best&#13;
garbage, I always say. Other&#13;
rubbish, like aluminum cans, is&#13;
actually saved and recycled.&#13;
C'mon, if it's garbage throw it out.&#13;
What are we, pack rats?&#13;
Windy days are excellent for&#13;
watching paper fly around.&#13;
Wrappers wave as patriotically as&#13;
the flags.&#13;
And don't let the litter - bugs on&#13;
the parking lot containers intimidate&#13;
you. We the people pay&#13;
for this institution and have the&#13;
right to throw our garbage&#13;
wherever we please. Certain&#13;
places are allowed to make a&#13;
mess, anyway, like the Union and&#13;
Phy Ed buildings. They're always&#13;
hold trash conventions.&#13;
Along with the fund raiser, a&#13;
petition is circulating to change&#13;
the school colors to Doublement&#13;
Green, McDonaldland white and&#13;
comb black.&#13;
Also, some creative things, not&#13;
considered to be garbage, are on&#13;
display. In the parking lots are&#13;
cigarette butt mounds, built to&#13;
worship the tobacco gods. Indoors,&#13;
there are wall posters and&#13;
graffiti.&#13;
Advertisments for coming attractions&#13;
stick to the bricks all&#13;
along the hallways. This gives the&#13;
impression of walking by one&#13;
continuous billboard.&#13;
The wealth of graffiti is&#13;
astounding. Bathroom art is a&#13;
national treasure, be it informative&#13;
poetry on what to do&#13;
with such - and - such, or elaborate&#13;
diagrams. Originating in the&#13;
minds of future leaders, expression&#13;
is preserved on tile for&#13;
even the least constipated to&#13;
witness. Low mentality art is so&#13;
refreshing. (Better visit your local&#13;
stall before the janitors get at&#13;
them).&#13;
Once again I urge you to donate&#13;
to the Parkside Garbage Fund&#13;
Raiser. We want everybody's&#13;
contribution to be seen. Let's&#13;
show our pride by living up to&#13;
the name UW - Dumpster.&#13;
L/L Center grant&#13;
The Library / Learning Center&#13;
has received a grant of $13,550 for&#13;
continued conversion of its card&#13;
catalog to a machine - readable&#13;
format through the Online&#13;
Computer Library Catalog&#13;
(OCLC). 8&#13;
The grant is federally funded&#13;
under the Library Services and&#13;
Construction Act Title I and&#13;
awarded through the Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Public Instruction.&#13;
The grant runs through Sept. 30,&#13;
1983, and will be used to hire a&#13;
team of students to complete the&#13;
initial phase of the conversion.&#13;
« HEY PARKSIDE...&#13;
• Wednesday is Ladies Night at 4&#13;
• the Legion Bar, with Mixed Drinks 250•&#13;
LIVE MUSIC IS BACK! *&#13;
/' V GRABB FEB 11 8,12 •&#13;
• EXCALIBER r E B H &amp; „ •&#13;
1 I Vi P Don and Mike's •&#13;
1 Legion Ban •&#13;
t&#13;
tllPntSI THEATRE GUIDE&#13;
MATINKL^TIMS|3^^QN FAMILY NITE All SEAT*;&#13;
LAKE 1 • 2 514 - 5 6TH STREET&#13;
654-0633&#13;
• i i&#13;
i i&#13;
n&#13;
n&#13;
STARTS FRI., FEB. 11 n&#13;
by Terry Byrne&#13;
"ABBA —The Singles&#13;
The First Ten Years"&#13;
Anyone who listens to this&#13;
album anti doesn't find himself&#13;
haiTJ3i£g&#13;
°&#13;
r whistling to at least&#13;
nait of the songs on this album has&#13;
to be an android!&#13;
is *5? ePitome of pristine&#13;
perky pop The album is a standing&#13;
ovation to 21 previously&#13;
tracks £&#13;
lngles and the two new&#13;
J Every°ne likes ABBA&#13;
whether they admit it or not (even&#13;
fclMPUnkerS)&#13;
'&#13;
and it's not difficult to see why. ABBA's&#13;
Their *&#13;
SVerywe&#13;
" calculated fun&#13;
internTf ? 3 f&#13;
ort of congenial international language unbfna&#13;
by 311 nations and all&#13;
languages as being downright&#13;
enjoyable Their gfft of m2&#13;
woHMorr8™^ ta ^&#13;
For some reason, ABBA's&#13;
hnv[^S wr eluded the American buying public. Domestically they&#13;
have released many catchy&#13;
-Sol ,&#13;
S,&#13;
U&lt;&#13;
* 38 "Waterloo,"&#13;
XT A' Fernando," "The&#13;
Name Of The Game," ''Knowing&#13;
Me, Knowing You," "Take A&#13;
v » Rn Me&#13;
'" and "Voulez -&#13;
nnmko ' WH° C3n f&#13;
°&#13;
rg&#13;
e&#13;
t the&#13;
number one singles "Dancing&#13;
Am-?" an ''The Winner Takes It&#13;
AIV-I °f these cuts are included&#13;
on this album. If I didn't&#13;
mention your favorite song, it's&#13;
probably on "The Singles."&#13;
ABBA has had three or four gold&#13;
albums, two platinum albums,&#13;
in the U.S. These figures are&#13;
something American artists&#13;
would like to have, and there&#13;
aren't many who do. But compared&#13;
to their success in other&#13;
countries, it's nothing.&#13;
This album could well be the&#13;
missing ingredient of success&#13;
America has been hungry for&#13;
since 1974. That year, ABBA won&#13;
the Eurovision Song Contest, and&#13;
"Waterloo" was a hit in the U.S.&#13;
The soon - to - be - released&#13;
single "Under Attack" could be&#13;
the catalyst ABBA needs to create&#13;
public awareness of this album. It&#13;
is the best single release since&#13;
"The Winner Takes It All," and&#13;
could possibly top the charts.&#13;
"I Have A Dream," with its&#13;
straight - to - the - heart lyrics,&#13;
folk melody and back - up on the&#13;
last verses by the International&#13;
School of Stockholm Choir, is as&#13;
seductive as the old Coke theme&#13;
song, "I'd Like To Teach The&#13;
World To Sing." The Coke theme&#13;
song sold lots of Coke. "I Have A&#13;
Dream" sold lots of ABBA with&#13;
such optimistic lyrics as: "I have&#13;
a dream, a song to sing, to help me&#13;
through reality, and my&#13;
destination, makes it worth the&#13;
while, pushing through the&#13;
darkness, still another mile "&#13;
This is just one reason why ABBA&#13;
has sold more records than&#13;
anyone, any group, ever. Thev&#13;
sing about life.&#13;
With their top - notch production,&#13;
catchy hooks, punched - up&#13;
not only shine, they gliste&#13;
'Agneta and Frida, wheth&#13;
together or solo, provii&#13;
refreshing, rich singing. The&#13;
four Swedes provide some of tl&#13;
best entertainment one could evi&#13;
receive from one a lbum.&#13;
Four songs from their last tv&#13;
albums ("Super Trouper" ar&#13;
"The Visitors"), which shou&#13;
definitely have been included ar&lt;&#13;
"When All Is Said And Done&#13;
"The Visitors," subtitle&#13;
"Crackin - Up," "On &amp; On &amp; On&#13;
and "Lay All Your Love On Me&#13;
All of these songs were released:&#13;
the U.S. except "Lay All Yoi&#13;
Love On Me." America dance&#13;
these songs to the top of the danc&#13;
charts; these cuts remained o&#13;
"Billboard's" dance charts for u&#13;
to 30 weeks. Didn't "Gloria,&#13;
"Don't You Want Me?,&#13;
"Mickey," "I Ran," "Maneater,&#13;
and so on, also top these sam&#13;
charts before crossing over t&#13;
"Top Forty" charts? The point i&#13;
that ABBA was ahead of the danc&#13;
- oriented rock groups of today&#13;
The genius of Quincy Jones,&#13;
mass appeal of "Don't You W,&#13;
Me" and "Gloria" are dir&#13;
influences of ABBA's catc&#13;
hooks, danceable beat, hi&#13;
harmonies and synthesization.&#13;
Despite my criticism, I he&#13;
American buyers will positive&#13;
respond to the quality a&#13;
originality of this unique albu:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
***£ £&#13;
FOLLOW THE CROWD&#13;
TO PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE'S&#13;
5th ANNUAL INDOOR PICNIC&#13;
THIS FRIDAY - FEBRUARY 11&#13;
UNION DINING RM. 11 :G0am-2:00 pm&#13;
featuring:&#13;
CHAR B ROILED CHICKEN&#13;
BRATWU.RST &amp; SAUERKRAU"&#13;
FRANKFURTERS&#13;
HOT GERMAN POTATO SALA1&#13;
BAKED BEANS&#13;
CORN ON THE COB&#13;
FRESH SALADS&#13;
WATERMELON SLICES&#13;
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE&#13;
BROWNIES&#13;
cup CAKES&#13;
LEMONADE&#13;
• • • a nd more&#13;
- PLUS -&#13;
* ALARM CLOCK GIV E-AWAY SPECIALS&#13;
• MUDAERSHORTf CUTAnpY&#13;
C&#13;
0NE WEARII&#13;
PURCHASE OF $1.50 OR^AOR'E -&#13;
TFRIda &#13;
Student fights to&#13;
save open primary&#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Last Saturday the Democratic&#13;
National Committee announced&#13;
that Wisconsin may no longer&#13;
continue to have its traditional&#13;
open primary for selection of&#13;
convention delegates. Instead, the&#13;
state must conform to party rules&#13;
and choose its delegates in&#13;
REGINA RADEMACHER&#13;
caucuses where only declared&#13;
Democrats would be allowed to&#13;
attend. As a political science&#13;
major and President of the Pre -&#13;
Law Club here at Parkside,&#13;
Regine Rademacher campaigned&#13;
against the change. It an interview&#13;
conducted last week,&#13;
before the announcement was&#13;
made, Rademacher explained the&#13;
pros and cons of the open primary,&#13;
and why she supported it.'&#13;
"Ever since they (the&#13;
Democratic National Committee)&#13;
formed the Hunt Commission,&#13;
which was a commission designed&#13;
to change and verify party rules,&#13;
they have decided they don't want&#13;
open primaries," stated&#13;
Rademacher. "The reasoning is&#13;
that with an open primary,&#13;
"Republican voters could conceivably&#13;
cross party lines and&#13;
vote for a weak Democratic&#13;
candidate, thereby helping&#13;
Republican candidates. Their&#13;
reasoning here is valid, but there&#13;
is so much to this issue that should&#13;
be taken into account. First of all,&#13;
Kidera exhibits&#13;
paintings&#13;
Betty Kidera, Spanish instructor&#13;
here at Parkside&#13;
currently has an exhibition of her&#13;
paintings on display in the audio -&#13;
visual section of th e D -1 level of&#13;
the library. Kidera is also an art&#13;
student at Parkside, and says her&#13;
paintings are interpretative&#13;
landscapes of her home The&#13;
display should continue for about&#13;
two more weeks.&#13;
the open primary is part of&#13;
Wisconsin's progressive, liberal&#13;
tradition. That may not seem&#13;
important, but we are the only&#13;
open primary left. The alternative&#13;
to an open primary is to hold&#13;
caucuses. The problem with&#13;
caucuses is that you get a much&#13;
smaller percentage of voters&#13;
contributing and participating in&#13;
the nomination of delegates.&#13;
We re talking about maybe a one -&#13;
percent participation rate.&#13;
Another alternative would be to&#13;
hold a closed primary, in which&#13;
case you would have to declare&#13;
your party, either Democrat or&#13;
Republican."&#13;
Rademacher believes that&#13;
support for the open primary is&#13;
quite strong. "Channel twelve&#13;
conducted a poll where viewers&#13;
could phone in whether they were&#13;
for or against the primary. The&#13;
response was overwhelmingly in&#13;
favor of the primary. I don't think&#13;
they (the Democratic National&#13;
Committee) realize how important&#13;
the primary is to us and&#13;
how Wisconsin will fight to save it.&#13;
It was relatively easy for the&#13;
party to get the other states to&#13;
give up the open primary," she&#13;
stated.&#13;
Though quite enthusiastic about&#13;
the campaign to save the primary,&#13;
Rademacher saw that it was a last&#13;
- ditch effort. "When we started&#13;
organizing, our first approach was&#13;
to put a referendum on the April&#13;
ballot that would address the&#13;
question of the primary.&#13;
Hopefully, a positive response&#13;
would show support for an open&#13;
primary. But, if it does not go well&#13;
in Washington Saturday, it may&#13;
not be worth it to have a&#13;
referendum, because it may be&#13;
too late already," she stated.&#13;
'Yarns of Yesteryear' contest to be held&#13;
Wisconsin residents who&#13;
remember the hard work, happy&#13;
times, and challenging experiences&#13;
of th e "olden days" are&#13;
invited to enter their&#13;
reminiscences in the tenth annual&#13;
YARNS OF YESTERYEAR&#13;
Contest.&#13;
Sponsored by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Extension Arts&#13;
Development Unit and the&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Writers&#13;
Association, the contest is open to&#13;
all Wisconsin residents, age 60 and&#13;
oyer. Entries may tell of family,&#13;
friends, or activities of bygone&#13;
days or they may be historical&#13;
stories with a personal slant.&#13;
Entries must be postmarked no&#13;
later than March 1, 1983. Only one&#13;
manuscript, original and unpublished,&#13;
may be submitted. It&#13;
may be typed or neatly handwritten;&#13;
the word limits are 500 to&#13;
1500 words. Since manuscripts&#13;
will not be returned, contestants&#13;
are advised to make and keep a&#13;
Faculty evaluations&#13;
personal copy.&#13;
Entrants are also asked to&#13;
prepare a separate cover page&#13;
with the title of their manuscript,&#13;
their name, address (including&#13;
county), telephone number, age&#13;
(optional), the name and address&#13;
of t heir local newspaper, and the&#13;
number of words in their entry.&#13;
Prizes ranging from $25 to $5&#13;
will be awarded the top ten winners&#13;
at the Wisconsin Regional&#13;
Writers Association Spring&#13;
conference in May. Ten memberships&#13;
in the association and&#13;
twenty honorable mention certificates&#13;
will also be awarded.&#13;
Additional cash awards will be&#13;
given by Stanton and Lee&#13;
Publishers for the best entries in&#13;
the "Winners' Circle," a special&#13;
competition for those who have&#13;
previously won contest prizes. A&#13;
new prize, The Alice Converse&#13;
Award of $10, will be given to the&#13;
oldest contestant submitting an&#13;
entry this year.&#13;
Judges for the contest will be:&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
and research are intertwined" on&#13;
this campus, and that "most&#13;
faculty take teaching very&#13;
seriously." It is very important&#13;
that in the future they remain&#13;
intertwined so that we will be able&#13;
to avoid the stereotype of the&#13;
research oriented professor who&#13;
can't communicate to students&#13;
and who ignores them will not be&#13;
matched by the stereotype of the&#13;
person who "retires" intellectually&#13;
upon gaining tenure&#13;
and "dies."&#13;
Creative Activity, or research&#13;
as it is often referred to, encompasses&#13;
a lot. It is measured by&#13;
the Executive Committee and by&#13;
Personnel Review Committee&#13;
(PRC) into five categories. First&#13;
of these is the measurement of&#13;
publication. The quality of&#13;
publisher or journal as well as the&#13;
circulation must pass peer&#13;
review. Secondly, the citation of&#13;
the published information in indexes&#13;
and works of others is&#13;
looked for. The third and probably&#13;
most important measurement is&#13;
that of the outside evaluations that&#13;
are necessary in all reviews of&#13;
faculty. These committees will&#13;
fourtlily look to see if the faculty&#13;
member's books, etc. have been&#13;
adopted in other universities.&#13;
Lastly, it will be checked to see if&#13;
the faculty member has been a&#13;
winner of fellowships, scholarships,&#13;
honors or rewards.&#13;
In addition to teaching and&#13;
creative activity, some emphasis&#13;
is put on service. Service, as&#13;
defined in Policies and&#13;
Procedures, means more than&#13;
being a teacher. A faculty&#13;
member must be involved with&#13;
both the University and the&#13;
community. Guskin believes that&#13;
m order for a faculty member to&#13;
be "a University citizen, he must&#13;
contribute to the life of the&#13;
University by sitting on committees,&#13;
etc."&#13;
After the evaluation of al l three&#13;
areas is complete, the peer review&#13;
is done. This means that the&#13;
faculty member up for tenure is&#13;
evaluated by his colleagues who&#13;
choose his destiny. When asked if&#13;
there was a better system Guskin&#13;
replied, "I don't know of a better&#13;
one." He continued by saying that&#13;
students only can base their&#13;
evaluations on the perspective of&#13;
one course in one point of time&#13;
"Student rating could be a&#13;
popularity contest, and God only&#13;
knows what would happen if&#13;
administration evaluated them "&#13;
Colleagues have the advantage of&#13;
working together on a day - to -&#13;
day basis and can look at things in&#13;
long term. Actually this process of&#13;
evaluation should be "terribly&#13;
encouraging for students because&#13;
their own faculty members, not&#13;
administrators, are making the&#13;
decisions," according to Chancellor&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
"Tenure is enormously difficult,"&#13;
Guskin said. "The most&#13;
painful decisions are personnel&#13;
decisions." He believes that the&#13;
tenured faculty should make these&#13;
judgements and is glad that this is&#13;
happening at Parkside. "Our&#13;
faculty makes tough decisions.&#13;
This indicates that faculty really&#13;
feel a sense of ownership in this&#13;
university. I'm proud — overwhelmed."&#13;
&#13;
Howard Kanetzke, School&#13;
Publications Editor, Wisconsin&#13;
State Historical Society; Frank&#13;
Custer, local history buff and&#13;
feature writer for several&#13;
Madison publications; Elizabeth&#13;
Durbin, former editor of the&#13;
Ocooch Mountain News and&#13;
Wisconsin Academy Review;&#13;
Clarice Dunn, free lance writer&#13;
and first YARNS OF&#13;
YESTERYEAR Contest Director;&#13;
and Mark Lefebrvre, Editor - in -&#13;
Chief, and Doug Bradley, Editor,&#13;
of Stanton and Lee Publishers,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Entries, or requests for further&#13;
information about the contest may&#13;
be sent to Gen Lewis, Director,&#13;
YARNS OF YESTERYEAR&#13;
CONTEST, 610 Langdon, Room&#13;
722, Ma dison, WI 5370 6.&#13;
For ideas and suggestions as to&#13;
the types of stories to write,&#13;
contestants may wish to read&#13;
selections in WE WERE&#13;
CHILDREN THEN, volumes I&#13;
and II, the anologies of previous&#13;
YARNS OF YESTERYEAR&#13;
Contest entries, available at&#13;
bookstores and libraries&#13;
throughout the state.&#13;
Women's studies&#13;
spring program&#13;
The Women's Studies Program&#13;
Faculty cordially invites interested&#13;
faculty and students to a&#13;
series of noon - time seminars.&#13;
The seminars cover a wide range&#13;
of topics which examine and&#13;
illustrate the diversity of wo men's&#13;
experience in contemporary&#13;
society. The seminars are offered&#13;
on the following Wednesdays in&#13;
Union 106 at 12:00:&#13;
• February 16, The Plight of&#13;
the Woman Playwright, by Rhoda&#13;
- Gale Pollack, Associate&#13;
Professor, Dramatic Arts.&#13;
• February 23, Readings from&#13;
a Novel - in - Progress, by Carole&#13;
Vopat, Associate Professor,&#13;
English.&#13;
• March 2, Explaining&#13;
Women's Adulthood Experience,&#13;
by Teresa Peck, Associate&#13;
Professor, Educational&#13;
Psychology.&#13;
• March 23, Women and&#13;
Migration in the Philippines, by&#13;
Lillian Trager, Assistant&#13;
Professor, Anthropology.&#13;
• March 30, I mages of Women&#13;
in Films of the Forties, by&#13;
Frances Kavenik, Lecturer,&#13;
Humanities.&#13;
Please plan on attending and&#13;
participating.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
5&#13;
l&#13;
/«% Interest Iff Your Daily&#13;
Balance Is $500.DD or Mere! LENDER&#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;
10 HELP YOU CROW!&#13;
CALL O R S TOP IN FOR D ETAILS &#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
Mike Vania is a 21 year old&#13;
Junior at Parkside, majoring in&#13;
marketing. He is also an outstanding&#13;
UW-P wrestler with a&#13;
season record of 34-5. He has a&#13;
career record of 114-15 , is a two -&#13;
time All - American, and has been&#13;
named "Outstanding Wrestler" at&#13;
five different tournaments.&#13;
Mike hails from Anchorage,&#13;
Alaska, coming from what he&#13;
calls a "good Catholic family" of&#13;
five kids. He has been wrestling&#13;
since he was in third grade, when&#13;
he participated in a city program&#13;
sponsored by the Kiwanis in&#13;
Anchorage. He became interested&#13;
m wrestling because his brother&#13;
had a friend who's brother&#13;
wrestled in high school. Also,&#13;
Mike says, "I was small all&#13;
through junior high and high&#13;
school and wrestling was the only&#13;
sport that I participated in. That&#13;
and baseball."&#13;
He was an outstanding wrestler&#13;
back in high school, going to the&#13;
btate Championships three years&#13;
in a row. In his sophomore year he&#13;
took third place and was second&#13;
his junior and senior seasons.&#13;
After high school, Mike attended&#13;
Pacific University in&#13;
Forest Grove, Oregon for two&#13;
years where he was a two - time&#13;
All - American at 118 po unds. He&#13;
took second his freshman year&#13;
and fourth his sophomore year&#13;
Leaving Pacific U., he transfered&#13;
to Parkside last year. Mike&#13;
chose Parkside because he had&#13;
been here before and also had a&#13;
brother whom attended UW-P. His&#13;
father then retired and his parents&#13;
also moved to Algoma, Wisconsin.&#13;
One of the biggest drawbacks&#13;
about wrestling for Mike is the&#13;
dieting that he has to do to make&#13;
weight. He has to lose close to 22&#13;
pounds going from his normal&#13;
weight of 152 to his wrestling&#13;
weight of 126. He says, "dieting&#13;
Wrestler Mike Vania: a professional amateur&#13;
a 21 year old make wJpht ^oHege it's worse. If I didn't win, it loses. "He's got a lot of class," fishes back in An takes a toll on your mind." To&#13;
make weight Vania tries not to eat&#13;
or drink too much when matches&#13;
are coming up. He also tries to&#13;
lose 3-4 lbs. at every practice&#13;
although after weigh-ins, he&#13;
usually gains 8-9 lbs. back again.&#13;
Even though he is doing very&#13;
VANIA outstanding&#13;
wrestler.&#13;
well at 126, Mike says he'd like to&#13;
go even lower to wrestle at 118 lb.&#13;
"I'll see if I can get to 118 for the&#13;
Wheaton Invitational (Feb. 11, 12)&#13;
and see how my body feels. Then&#13;
I'll see how I feel for Nationals."&#13;
One of the things that Mike&#13;
enjoys most about wrestling is the&#13;
competition.. "When you go out&#13;
there on the mat and you wrestle&#13;
it's just you and the guy," he said!&#13;
"When you go one - on - one like&#13;
that, everything is up to you and if&#13;
you win, you know that you did it&#13;
all and it was you from the very&#13;
beginning . . . from the dieting to&#13;
the end."&#13;
"In high school most guys&#13;
wrestle just for the sport and if&#13;
they lose, it isn't that bad. But in&#13;
§&gt;£ H 50A 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 B RANDS OF BEER&#13;
ON TAP&#13;
Old Style, Michelob, Stroh's, Budweiser, Bud Light&#13;
Regular 10 oz. Glass 50&lt;&#13;
Frosty Schooners 55&lt; — Mugs 75&lt;&#13;
32 oz. Beers and 32 oz. Wine Coolers only $1.00&#13;
Wednesday Night Is Pitcher Night&#13;
Kamikazes, Alabama Slammers, Watermelons&#13;
32 oz. Pitcher Only *4.00&#13;
Food Available 8 am to 11 pm&#13;
Quarter or Half Pound&#13;
Cheeseburgers &amp; H amburgers&#13;
Homemade Chili&#13;
"YOU'VE TRIED THE REST&#13;
NOW TRY THE BEST"&#13;
Come and enjoy the most current jukebox in town!&#13;
college it's worse. If I didn't win, it&#13;
(the dieting) wouldn't be worth&#13;
it, ' Mike said.&#13;
Mike feels that Dr. Mike Clock,&#13;
his coach at Pacific, has been the&#13;
most influential person in his&#13;
wrestling career. "He's probably&#13;
the best coach that I could have&#13;
had as a freshman. He had me&#13;
start from scratch and learn the&#13;
basics again, so when I came here&#13;
to Parkside with coach Koch, I&#13;
had already been taught the&#13;
basics. So they didn't have to&#13;
teach me a lot."&#13;
"He and asst. Coach Winters&#13;
just helped me polish my moves&#13;
and my style of wrestling. When&#13;
guys come out of high s chool, they&#13;
have a lot of fancy moves that&#13;
they used. But when they get to&#13;
college the competition is a lot&#13;
tougher, especially if they are&#13;
wrestling juniors and seniors. You&#13;
win with basics, and I'm best as a&#13;
mat wrestler," Mike added.&#13;
Head Coach Jim Koch agrees.&#13;
'Mike has a lot of good moves&#13;
down on the mat. He has improved&#13;
himself working really hard. He is&#13;
an exceptional wrestler and gets&#13;
more points faster than most&#13;
wrestlers. That's why when he&#13;
doesn't win by a pin he wins by a&#13;
lot of points." Mike averages 20&#13;
points a match.&#13;
"I enjoy watching Mike&#13;
wrestle," says Koch. "He never&#13;
slows down and never gives up. He&#13;
keeps moving and that's how he&#13;
scores so many points. He's a very&#13;
exciting wrestler to watch," he&#13;
added. Koch has nothing but&#13;
praise for Vania's attitude&#13;
towards wrestling describing him&#13;
as "fiery, popular, influential, and&#13;
probably the best leader we've&#13;
ever had."&#13;
"It's been several years since&#13;
we've had a guy who can pick up&#13;
the team like Mike," coach Koch&#13;
said. He is impressed by Mike's&#13;
dedication to the sport. "He just&#13;
loves to wrestle."&#13;
Vania, the co - captain of the&#13;
team is modest, conducts himself&#13;
well, and is gracious even when he&#13;
Sport Shots&#13;
Wisconsin:&#13;
loses.&#13;
says Koch.&#13;
And Koch isn't the only one who&#13;
is impressed by M ike's hard work&#13;
and dedication. Last year, even&#13;
though he was out most of the&#13;
season after knee surgery, Mike&#13;
was voted 'Most Inspirational&#13;
Wrestler'.&#13;
In the off season Mike enjoys&#13;
waterskiing. He is also a commercial&#13;
fisherman. He usually&#13;
fishes back in Anchorage where&#13;
he plans to make his residence&#13;
after he graduates. He also does&#13;
some amateur boxing at a local&#13;
bar there.&#13;
Mike's goal is to become a&#13;
National Champion. He hopes to&#13;
reach that goal this season, and&#13;
with the way things look so far, he&#13;
may just do that. As Coach Koch&#13;
put it, "Pacific's loss is our gain."&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
The mere mention of t hat name&#13;
conjures up visions of tons of snow&#13;
and bitter cold in winter, and heat&#13;
and humidity in summer; but that&#13;
could be changing. Our state is all&#13;
of a sudden becoming known as&#13;
one of the sports capitals of the&#13;
U.S.A. At least I think so. Let's&#13;
take a look at the last two years in&#13;
the Wisconsin sports scene.&#13;
Starting back in 1981, the attention&#13;
given to our state started&#13;
to rise as the Milwaukee Bucks&#13;
were blowing away every other&#13;
team in its division. They eventually&#13;
lost in the playoffs in one of&#13;
the best playoff series ever seen.&#13;
Attention wasn't drawn again&#13;
until the end of t he summer, with&#13;
one of the biggest wins in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin's history.&#13;
That, of c ourse, was the Badger's&#13;
victory over Michigan in their 1981&#13;
season opener. The Badgers&#13;
finished the season 7-4, and gained&#13;
a berth in the now - defunct&#13;
Garden State Bowl, where they&#13;
lost to Tennessee. But the football&#13;
program at Wisconsin received a&#13;
boost that carried into the next&#13;
year.&#13;
In the winter of 1981-82, the&#13;
Bucks again got attention. Once&#13;
again they won their division by a&#13;
large margin only to lose in the&#13;
playoffs. Another attention&#13;
grabber was the Wisconsin&#13;
Badger basketball team — but for&#13;
a different reason. They couldn't&#13;
win to save their lives, and the&#13;
coach of that team, Bill Cofield&#13;
was gone at the end of the year'&#13;
Then the Badgers hired the coach&#13;
of Eau Claire (his name escapes&#13;
me); but he resigned just a few&#13;
days after he was hired for personal&#13;
reasons.&#13;
Spring of 1982 brought us&#13;
baseball season. The Brewers had&#13;
CINDY RUFFERT gets the rebound in last Saturday's game.&#13;
a sports capital?&#13;
a&#13;
A.L.&#13;
This&#13;
to&#13;
high hopes and little did they know&#13;
that those hopes would be&#13;
realized. As we all know our&#13;
Brewers made it all the way to the&#13;
World Series after a thriller of a&#13;
finish against Baltimore and&#13;
great comeback in the&#13;
championship series,&#13;
brought the most attention io&#13;
Wisconsin since the Packer glory&#13;
years of the mid - 60's; but the&#13;
attention didn't stop there.&#13;
In the fall of '82, the Wisconsin&#13;
football team had its second&#13;
winning season in a row, and its&#13;
second berth in two years They&#13;
had better luck this time, as they&#13;
beat Kansas State in the&#13;
dependence Bowl for their&#13;
bowl victory in many moons&#13;
* f^rise team (at least for&#13;
me) this winter is the Milwaukee&#13;
H^pv i °&#13;
f the Interna&#13;
tional&#13;
f League&#13;
- They have the&#13;
fourth best record in the IHL, and&#13;
are leading their division.&#13;
pI?lmos&#13;
J f&#13;
°&#13;
rgot The Green Bav&#13;
Packers had a good season too&#13;
wattfTh ^&#13;
astrikeg&#13;
°t?nthe&#13;
way of a better one. Still the&#13;
P&#13;
!f°ffs&#13;
everyone.') and made it through&#13;
the first round against St. Louis&#13;
Infirst&#13;
&#13;
r%^Tr&#13;
;&#13;
d&#13;
P&#13;
G^&#13;
had ZX *^2 |and&#13;
We've won " Rejoice!&#13;
and fell dead. C0&#13;
"&#13;
apsed&#13;
SPORTS TRIVIA&#13;
(revenge, perhaps?). Then the&#13;
had to take on America's teaix&#13;
the Dallas Cowboys. They did&#13;
pretty good job handling Ton&#13;
Dorsett and Company, but in th&#13;
end the Packers were out&#13;
tricked on trick plays. Next yea&#13;
should be their best since '72&#13;
Back to the Bucks. They'r&#13;
leading their division agair&#13;
despite injuries to key people.&#13;
Wisconsin sports have com&#13;
quite a ways in the last two year&#13;
and we can look forward to goo&#13;
seasons from the Bucks, Brewer*&#13;
and Packers m the coming yeai&#13;
Its about time we got som&#13;
sU^n?1 a sports' mind*&#13;
state, and not just be known fo&#13;
snow and cows. On Wisconsin!&#13;
Spots: Bil&#13;
'y Marti]&#13;
seconds left The NFr 1&#13;
that tte Npr I* tte first&#13;
once LaIf n&lt;7' 3nd ^member&#13;
tr«5 1116 mara&#13;
thor ^uced into the moderr&#13;
games in Athens and it&#13;
ran Same course that th&#13;
In 1908, during the&#13;
Olympics, the race dist,&#13;
vanisfS ? 26 mUes&#13;
vtt avor t 0&#13;
VII and Queen Alexandi&#13;
— Taken from Mai &#13;
RANGER&#13;
Womens track circles competition I Coach Profile: Mike DeWitt&#13;
Incredible as it may seem, the&#13;
Women's Track season is well&#13;
under way and the team has been&#13;
faring well in the early season&#13;
meets (see sport news).&#13;
Last Saturday, the team was in&#13;
Oshkosh. Coach Mike DeWitt felt&#13;
that Oshkosh and Stevens Point&#13;
were good teams and if Deb Spino&#13;
would've run and if there would&#13;
have been a distance medley relay&#13;
event, the team may have finished&#13;
with more points. "They may&#13;
have still beat us, but we would&#13;
have been right up with them,"&#13;
commented DeWitt.&#13;
Spino is recovering from a knee&#13;
flare up and although she is&#13;
feeling better, DeWitt decided to&#13;
not let her compete.&#13;
This Saturday the team will&#13;
travel to LaCrosse. DeWitt expects&#13;
to face some tough competition&#13;
as Marquette and&#13;
LaCrosse are two of the best&#13;
distance teams in the state. "Stout&#13;
has some fairly good distance&#13;
runners too. It should be a good&#13;
meet," he said.&#13;
Sue M eyer, Parkside's top 2 -&#13;
miler, will be challenged by Tori&#13;
Neaubauer of LaCrosse and Katie&#13;
Womens Basketball&#13;
Webb of Marquette, both National&#13;
champions. "If Sue runs tough&#13;
against these girls, she should be&#13;
under ll minutes," stated DeWitt.&#13;
Meyer, who set a personal&#13;
record in the 2 - mile last week of&#13;
11:11.8 as well as qualifying for&#13;
nationals, did so with some difficulty.&#13;
An Oshkosh opponent&#13;
followed too closely on Meyer's&#13;
heels and stepped on the backs of&#13;
Meyer's shoes five times during&#13;
the course of the race. "The first&#13;
two times I didn't say anything.&#13;
After that, I turned around and&#13;
told her to knock it off. I'm happy&#13;
with my race though. It's a good&#13;
time for this early in the season&#13;
and I'm really glad to have&#13;
qualified for the nationals. I really&#13;
wanted that," Meyer said.&#13;
Spino will be competing in the&#13;
mile and DeWitt feels she will be&#13;
challenged by Hottinger from&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
Another top Parkside runner,&#13;
Dona Driscoll is looking forward&#13;
to the upcoming meet. "I wasn't&#13;
all that pleased with my race last&#13;
Saturday. I'm happy that I won,&#13;
but I know I can run faster. I'm&#13;
looking forward to the meet&#13;
of my&#13;
comes&#13;
stiffest&#13;
from&#13;
because some&#13;
competition&#13;
LaCrosse."&#13;
Driscoll feels at this point of the&#13;
season, she is right on schedule&#13;
training wise. "I'm 2-3 seconds&#13;
faster than last year, but it's to be&#13;
expected -1 wouldn't want to be at&#13;
the same level as I was last year,"&#13;
she stated.&#13;
Sprinter Carling Thurman is&#13;
competing after a few years&#13;
layoff. DeWitt expects her to be&#13;
one of the top sprinters in the state&#13;
as well as do well nationally.&#13;
Indoor Nationals are coming up&#13;
at the end of the month. Comparing&#13;
times from last year&#13;
DeWitt noted that Spino, who won&#13;
the mile last year in 5:11 has&#13;
already run a 5:02. Meyer's time&#13;
of 11:11 would be good for a sixth&#13;
place finish last year. DeWitt&#13;
expects her to lower her time in&#13;
the next few weeks. Driscoll&#13;
finished fifth in the 600 yard run&#13;
last year and is improving. The&#13;
time that the Distance medley&#13;
team ran in an exhibition race on&#13;
Saturday without any competition&#13;
should have been good for a third&#13;
place finish.&#13;
Pope scores 1000 points&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
Laurie Pope is one of Parkside's&#13;
best women athletes. She plays on&#13;
the basketball and volleyball&#13;
teams. Her hometown is Omro, a&#13;
small town west of Oskhosh. She is&#13;
a senior majoring in Psychology&#13;
and will be graduating next&#13;
semester. She is also working on&#13;
getting a basic coaching certificate.&#13;
&#13;
Pope really likes Parkside a lot&#13;
and commented, "I like the small&#13;
town atmosphere, because of my&#13;
own hometown, you don't lose&#13;
your identity and the people here&#13;
are friendly."&#13;
She began her athletic career in&#13;
seventh grade, and has always&#13;
performed well. Her high school&#13;
basketball team went to the state&#13;
tournament three years in a row.&#13;
Her team only lost 10 game s in&#13;
that time span. "It was really&#13;
exciting when you go to state, or&#13;
do well, it gets more publicity for&#13;
the team, our games had many&#13;
spectators."&#13;
Pope is having an outstanding&#13;
basketball season thus far. She&#13;
has scored over a thousand points,&#13;
the first woman in Parkside to&#13;
manage that feat. Now one of her&#13;
goals is 1000 rebound points. The&#13;
women practice for two and one -&#13;
half hours every day. They do a lot&#13;
of running and their level of&#13;
conditioning is high.&#13;
According to Pope, the women&#13;
Sports Calendar&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
Feb. 12, Saturday. St.&#13;
Scholastic. Away&#13;
Feb. 15, Tuesday. UW -&#13;
Milwaukee. Away&#13;
Feb. 17, Thursday, Lewis&#13;
University. HERE, 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Women's Basketball&#13;
Feb. 10, T hursday. Marquette.&#13;
Away&#13;
Feb. 12, Sa turday, Silver Lake&#13;
College. HERE 3:30 p. m.&#13;
Men's Wrestling&#13;
Feb. 11 -12, Fri. - Sat. Wheaton&#13;
Invitational. Away&#13;
Feb. 15, Tuesday. Marquette.&#13;
Away&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Feb. 12, Saturday. Wisconsin,&#13;
Michigan State. HERE.&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
Feb. 12, Saturday. LaCrosse.&#13;
Away&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
Feb. 12, Saturday. Illinois&#13;
Benedictine. Away&#13;
get along well and they function&#13;
well as a team. They play on a 30&#13;
second clock and being in good&#13;
POPE is first woman to score&#13;
1000 points.&#13;
shape is very important. Her&#13;
ultimate goal for the season is to&#13;
go to the National tournaments.&#13;
Laurie finds the basketball&#13;
competition to be much more&#13;
stringent than volleyball. They&#13;
play some out of state division I&#13;
teams, and Marquette, Milwaukee&#13;
and Green Bay are very competitive&#13;
teams within Wisconsin&#13;
In volleyball, Pope has had the&#13;
opportunity to travel to Europe.&#13;
She spent two weeks in Sweden&#13;
and when she was in Stockholm,&#13;
she got to see the Stockholm&#13;
Castle. She traveled by train and&#13;
was in six different cities. "The&#13;
opportunity to travel is one of the&#13;
greatest things about participating&#13;
in sports. It was great."&#13;
Coach Goggin commented on&#13;
Laurie's performance, "She's a&#13;
good player, and has much ability.&#13;
She's a good person to have&#13;
around and it will be hard&#13;
replacing her next year. Laurie&#13;
has matured into a good player."&#13;
Getting ready for a game or&#13;
match is something everyone&#13;
prepares in their own way,&#13;
mentally and physically. Laurie&#13;
said, "I just try to relax, taking&#13;
deep breaths. Getting nervous just&#13;
inhibits what you're trying to do.&#13;
Just going in there and playing is&#13;
'what takes the nervousness away.&#13;
I just think back to about eight or&#13;
nine years ago, and if it wasn't for&#13;
that stupid round ball I never&#13;
would have done the things I've&#13;
been able to do."&#13;
THIS THURSDAY&#13;
following the&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
vs&#13;
Cardinal Stritch&#13;
basketball game&#13;
THE&#13;
MILLER&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
9:00 p.m. - Union Square&#13;
Free with exchange of&#13;
basketball ticket at halftime&#13;
— OR —&#13;
$3.00 at the door&#13;
by Carol Kortendick&#13;
The name Mike DeWitt spurs&#13;
one thought, which is sports. A&#13;
former Parkside student himself,&#13;
DeWitt now coaches the women's&#13;
cross country and track teams. He&#13;
graduated from Parkside in 1972&#13;
with a B.A. in geography, and then&#13;
went to attain his M.A. in&#13;
elementary education from&#13;
Arizona State.&#13;
Besides Parkside, DeWitt has&#13;
also coached the teams from&#13;
Gateway Technical School and&#13;
Horlick High School (Racine).&#13;
Although many assume a&#13;
coach's sole job is coaching,&#13;
DeWitt's principle occupation is&#13;
teaching fourth graders at Jefferson&#13;
Lighthouse School in&#13;
Racine. DeWitt enjoys working&#13;
with all kids in general, and&#13;
reveals it by his fine coaching&#13;
ability.&#13;
DeWitt's philosophy of coaching&#13;
doesn't strive on winning but&#13;
stresses hard work for team&#13;
members to reach their fullest&#13;
potential. DeWitt also firmly&#13;
believes that track and cross&#13;
country demands discipline to&#13;
organize between school and&#13;
sports.&#13;
In all his years here at&#13;
Parkside, both as a student and&#13;
coach, Mike DeWitt has found the&#13;
people friendly and the school an&#13;
excellent opportunity to obtain an&#13;
education. Parkside is also well -&#13;
established in the field of sports,&#13;
and DeWitt hopes it continues in&#13;
that direction.&#13;
Teaching and coaching consumes&#13;
most of his time yet Mike&#13;
enjoys playing with his four young&#13;
children, and sometimes "just&#13;
spending time watching other&#13;
sports," as he is an avid baseball&#13;
watcher.&#13;
When he's not coaching,&#13;
teaching, playing or watching,&#13;
DeWitt race walks, and hopes to&#13;
place in next year's Olympic time&#13;
trials.&#13;
Other future plans? Not at the&#13;
present moment with his full&#13;
schedule. He, however, said of his&#13;
future, "I do plan to race walk for&#13;
another 50 years!" So DeWitt will&#13;
be coming on strong for a long&#13;
time.&#13;
Ranger needs writers,&#13;
photographers, e tc. . .&#13;
"/^University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
IYTONA BEACH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
'83&#13;
J / \J MARCH / y i 11-20&#13;
FiOR&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• TRANSPORTATION VIA AIR CONDITIONED&#13;
BATHROOM EQUIPPED MOTORCOACH&#13;
• 7 NIGHTS LODGING AT THE OCEANSIDE&#13;
TEXAN HOTEL&#13;
• FREE PARTIES &amp; EXTRAS&#13;
• FULLY ESCORTED THROUGHOUT&#13;
• ALL HOTEL TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
ONLY&#13;
JOIN THE FOLLOWING&#13;
SCHOOLS PARTICIPATING IN&#13;
THISTRIP:&#13;
• NOTRE DAME • WESTERN ILLINOIS&#13;
• CENTRAL MICHIGAN • INDIANA UNIV.&#13;
• DRAKE • SOUTHERN ILLINOIS&#13;
• MIAMI OF OHIO • NORTHERN ILLINOIS&#13;
SIGNUP DEADLINE THIS FRIDAY, FEB. 11&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION, ROOM209 — 553-2200 &#13;
Thursday, February 10,1983 RANGER&#13;
MEN'S TRACK&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
The Men's track season is&#13;
coming along fairly well, and&#13;
Coach Rosa has three men, in&#13;
three events, signed up for the&#13;
National competition. "The team&#13;
is small this season but we have&#13;
been doing good," Rosa added.&#13;
The last meet the team competed&#13;
in was the St. Norbert Invitational.&#13;
It was a triangular&#13;
meet, against Marquette and St.&#13;
Norbert. Parkside scored 34&#13;
points. John Anderson took first in&#13;
the pole vault. In the shot put, Rod&#13;
Hebrindon took third. Glenn&#13;
Schultz placed second in the mile.&#13;
The 600 yard run yielded a first for&#13;
A1 Correa. The 1000 yard run was&#13;
won by Rich Miller and in second&#13;
place was Glenn Schultz. The two&#13;
mile run also had Parkside taking&#13;
the first two places. Andy Serrano&#13;
in first and John Brewer taking&#13;
second. The Parkside men also&#13;
took first in the mile relay. The&#13;
relay team consists of Short,&#13;
Correa, Miller and Brewer.&#13;
WOMEN'S TRACK&#13;
On Saturday, the Women's&#13;
Track team competed in Oshkosh.&#13;
The team finished third with 57&#13;
points. Oshkosh won the meet with&#13;
130 points. Stevens Point was&#13;
second with 122 points. St. Norbert's&#13;
was fourth with 46 points.&#13;
Ripon finished fifth with 13 points.&#13;
Carling Thurman won the 60&#13;
yard dash in 7.9 seconds. She also&#13;
finished third in the 300 yard dash&#13;
with a time of 40.7 seconds.&#13;
Thurman was also a member of&#13;
the 800 yard relay team which&#13;
finished third. The relay team&#13;
composed of Lynda Pfeilstiffer,&#13;
Judvida Hopkins and Sanday&#13;
Pelegrino finished in 1:58.7.&#13;
Sue M eyer had a PR in the 2&#13;
mile run. She won in 11:11.8.&#13;
Dona Driscoll is back in top&#13;
form after a short bout with the&#13;
flu. She w on the 600 yard run in&#13;
1:29.6. Teammate Jane&#13;
Roszykowski finished fifth in 1:33.&#13;
Freshman Michelle Gross&#13;
showed potential for a good first&#13;
collegiate track season. She&#13;
finished sixth in the mile with&#13;
5:46.0. H er time of 3:06.0 i n the&#13;
1000 yard run was good for a&#13;
fourth place finish.&#13;
The mile relay team of&#13;
Pfeilstiffer, Karen Jacobsen,&#13;
Carol Romano, and Hopkins&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CHURCH, 11&#13;
a.m., Sunday, 625 College Ave., "Musical&#13;
Panorama."&#13;
RHONDA BRAOLY is 152 with RRC (190).&#13;
P.S. BWMIS&#13;
ROSES ARE RED, violets are blue, sugar is&#13;
sweet, JAM is too! P.S. Be my valentine.&#13;
WANTED: Sexy blond heterofemale tor&#13;
cheap, meaningless relationship. Contact&#13;
'Desperate'.&#13;
OOH-AH, OOH-AH HEY MARLENE! Tell us&#13;
'bout the boy from Racine!&#13;
NORM: We will miss you, even if you are&#13;
disgustingly perverted. The girl with the&#13;
red panties.&#13;
BETH CALLAHAN: Congratulations on your&#13;
engagement to Mr. Marshall Piatt, Oct. 29,&#13;
1983. (152) Love, Rhonda BMWIS&#13;
CAROL &amp; WILLY: When's the blessed&#13;
event??? Good luck women's track team in&#13;
La Crosse!! Stay tuff!!!&#13;
PAT: Thanks for the warning. The new kid on&#13;
the block.&#13;
MOLLY: Keep up the thumb exercises!&#13;
Valerie&#13;
ROD: I had a wonderful time Saturday&#13;
Night!! Toni&#13;
TON I: The movie was alright, but the company&#13;
was better!! Rod&#13;
ED: Just because your name is at the very&#13;
top and mine is at the very bottom, doesn't&#13;
mean thafl must take this constant abuse!!&#13;
IE not Y.&#13;
IT IS SO WONDERFUL to have a Winter&#13;
Carnival that promotes cooperation between&#13;
student organizations.&#13;
THANK YOU to all of the Ranger Staff who&#13;
participated in the Winter Carnival.&#13;
MOLLY: If only you knew. Ed&#13;
ED: Someday we'll be married, and the other&#13;
two P's will have to start a different "P"&#13;
club. Love and Kisses, RED.&#13;
RED: I'll be waiting. Ed (Love and Kisses).&#13;
MOLLY: AAaybe you do know. I hope you do.&#13;
Ed&#13;
LOU: Don't be so jealous. And don't be mad&#13;
atnobody showing up at your meetings. It's&#13;
nothing personal. At least I don't think it is.&#13;
VALERIE: Congratulations!! I'm glad&#13;
you're one of us. I've always known you are&#13;
Pat&#13;
STACEY: Hope you're having fun. I'm trying&#13;
my best. See you soon!!!&#13;
PAT: If some people's door swings both ways,&#13;
your's is revolving!!! That's O.K. though&#13;
Pat&#13;
WANTED&#13;
PIANO ACCOMPANIST for young aspiring&#13;
singer wishing to enter competition Sat,&#13;
March 5, 1983 at Bradford H.S. At least 4&#13;
rehearsals previous to competition date.&#13;
Have own sheet music. Fees negotiable.&#13;
Call 652-5820 after 3 p.m., M-F.&#13;
SPORT NEWS&#13;
finished third in 4:31.8.&#13;
In the field events, Vicki Stacy&#13;
finished fifth in the high jump with&#13;
4-8 and Shirley Gunther finished&#13;
sixth in the shot put with a throw&#13;
of 9.44 meters.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Last Saturday, the Parkside&#13;
men and women's fencing teams&#13;
hosted the invitational against&#13;
Notre Dame, Purdue, Tri - State,&#13;
and St. Mary's. Unfortunately&#13;
though, the teams lost with the&#13;
exception of a woman's tie with&#13;
Tri - State. Overall results for the&#13;
teams were:&#13;
MEN'S&#13;
Parkside 10 — Purdue 17&#13;
Parkside 8—Tri-State 19&#13;
Parkside 1 — Notre Dame 7&#13;
WOMEN'S&#13;
Parkside 3 — Purdue 4&#13;
Parkside 6—Tri-State 6&#13;
Parkside 1 — Notre Dame 15&#13;
Parkside 4 — St. Mary's 12&#13;
Next week's Ranger will feature&#13;
an in-depth report on the fencing&#13;
team.&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
by Carra Cariello&#13;
The Parkside Basketball team&#13;
was very busy this last week. On&#13;
Tuesday, they took on the Chicago&#13;
State Cougars. The Rangers lost&#13;
this game with a final score of 65-&#13;
64. T his occured when a 25 foot&#13;
jump shot by Brian Diggins&#13;
bounced off the back of the rim.&#13;
Diggins made the most points this&#13;
game, totaling 17. Bob Hallberg,&#13;
coach for the Cougars, was quoted&#13;
saying "There was no pressure on&#13;
Parkside tonight. All the pressure&#13;
was on us." But there is always&#13;
pressure because of the dreams of&#13;
every player.&#13;
On Thursday, the Rangers&#13;
played against MSOE. The&#13;
Rangers won with a 23 point&#13;
spread. The ending score was 89-&#13;
66. Erik Womeldorf, a sophomore&#13;
at Parkside, made the most points&#13;
with 21 points.&#13;
Saturday, the Rangers took on&#13;
NE Illinois. The Rangers lost 67-&#13;
68. The Rangers gave this game&#13;
away. At first the Rangers were&#13;
leading by 18 points. Then it came&#13;
down to 6:28 left in the game and&#13;
the Rangers had an opportunity at&#13;
the free throw line, but unfortunately&#13;
the outcome wasn't&#13;
positive. Then the Rangers were&#13;
only leading by 14 points. This is&#13;
when the tables turned and Illinois&#13;
went on to win this game.&#13;
On Saturday, February 12, t he&#13;
Rangers will take on St.&#13;
Scholastica. Darrell Jackson&#13;
sustained an ankle injury, but&#13;
hopefully he will be ready to play&#13;
in this next game. Tim Opps is still&#13;
out with a dislocated shoulder.&#13;
According to Coach Johnson, the&#13;
Rangers still have a chance at&#13;
state, if everyone can finish out&#13;
the season injury free.&#13;
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
This past week the women's&#13;
basketball team competed in&#13;
three games. Tuesday against&#13;
Chicago State the women were&#13;
victorious, the score being 74-58.&#13;
The Whitewater game was cancelled&#13;
due to snow, and Friday&#13;
against UW-Green Bay they were&#13;
defeated 72-62.&#13;
The team will be playing&#13;
Marquette Thursday, and they&#13;
will have to win to be seeded in the&#13;
NAIA. The other two games are&#13;
against Silver Lake and Carthage&#13;
College. "We should be able to&#13;
bqat them both," Coach Goggin&#13;
commented.&#13;
EVE MARATHON&#13;
EVE's Third Annual Old Style&#13;
Bald Eagle Marathon will be held&#13;
at Eagle Valley Nature Preserve,&#13;
just two miles south of this&#13;
Mississippi river town at 8:00&#13;
a.m., April 30. Both the start and&#13;
finish of the. marathon will be&#13;
located at the nature center.&#13;
This annual event is sponsored&#13;
by EVE and Heileman's, Int.&#13;
Proceeds generated from&#13;
registration fees of $10 per runner&#13;
($8 in advance) will be used to&#13;
help preserve bald eagle habitat&#13;
along the Mississippi River.&#13;
The marathon route passes&#13;
through spectacular scenery&#13;
along the Mississippi River north&#13;
of Glen Haven, Wisconsin, and&#13;
then swings out over rolling hills&#13;
and wooded valleys. This&#13;
marathon is one of the most scenic&#13;
and rugged of any marathon in the&#13;
nation. The 26 mile route is approximately&#13;
60 percent paved and&#13;
40 percent gravel.&#13;
The marathon starts at 8 a.m.&#13;
and a 10 km run will start at 9 a.m.&#13;
Trophies will be awarded to&#13;
winners in both the men and&#13;
women's divisions. All marathon&#13;
finishers will receive a T-shirt and&#13;
all 10 km finishers will receive an&#13;
EVE arm patch.&#13;
Anyone wishing to observe the&#13;
marathon is welcome to the&#13;
nature preserve. Limited overnight&#13;
accommodations (room and&#13;
board) are available by advance&#13;
registration.&#13;
Reservation forms and more&#13;
information may be obtained by&#13;
writing to: EVE, Box 155, Apple&#13;
River, IL 61001 or phone (815) 594-&#13;
2259.&#13;
MEN'S WRESTLING&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
On Feb. 2, the Men's Wrestling&#13;
team was to have wrestled&#13;
Oshkosh, but due to the heavy&#13;
snows it was cancelled. The team&#13;
did, however, compete against&#13;
Northern Michigan University&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Parkside won 29 - 20, wi nning 6&#13;
out of the 10 matches. Mike Winter&#13;
(142) and Mike Muckerheide&#13;
(150), both pinned their opponents.&#13;
Winter's pin was in 1:51,&#13;
while Muckerheide's came in 4:29.&#13;
On Tuesday Parkside hosted the&#13;
Carthage and Carroll Double&#13;
Dual. According to Heach Coach&#13;
Jim Kosh, "It looks really good for&#13;
us. None of the other three teams&#13;
we will be competing against will&#13;
have full teams, because they all&#13;
have had a lot of injuries. They&#13;
will each be forfeiting at least 2 - 3&#13;
matches apiece."&#13;
Then, on Feb. 11 and 12, the&#13;
team will travel to Wheaton, IL&#13;
for the Wheaton Invitational.&#13;
There will be 29 teams competing&#13;
including Marquette University,&#13;
Notre Dame, and Drake.&#13;
Good times offer:&#13;
ctuR'am&#13;
• • • •&#13;
F&#13;
°&#13;
ur&#13;
t&#13;
te®n oz. glass mug for sale. It's the two-fisted&#13;
way to drink to good times and salute vour oreat taste&#13;
in drinks. Why not start a collection? Please send this&#13;
coupon, along with a check or money order for $4.95&#13;
ffpnS C a L&#13;
h o&#13;
P '&#13;
e&#13;
f ? e&#13;
)&#13;
t0: S e a 9ram's 7 Crown Mug Offer, P.O. Box 1622, New York, N.Y. 10152&#13;
Name&#13;
Specify quantity. -Amount enclosed $_&#13;
Offer expires January 31,1984. No purchase necessary&#13;
New York residents add 8.25% sales tax.&#13;
Please allow 4 to 6 weeks for shipment.&#13;
WPKC14&#13;
Seaarams&#13;
© 1982 SEAGRAM DETOURS CO.. N.Y.C. AMERICAN WHSKEY-A BLEND. 80 PROOF "SewvUp" and "7(JP" are trademarks of the Sewn Up Compar,. </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70508">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 11, issue 18, February 10, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70509">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70510">
              <text>1983-02-10</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70513">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="70514">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="70515">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70516">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70517">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70518">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70519">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70520">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70521">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1652">
      <name>energy conservation</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="422">
      <name>greenquist hall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1657">
      <name>laboratories</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
