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            <text>Experts differ on Wisconsin's economic future</text>
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            <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Experts differ on Wisconsin's&#13;
economic future&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
"Times are indeed exceedingly&#13;
hard," said Kenneth Hoover, a&#13;
political science professor at&#13;
Parkside, during the opening of&#13;
the forum, "Wisconsin's&#13;
Economic Future," at the Union&#13;
Cinema last Tuesday.&#13;
Participating in the forum were&#13;
leaders from the business,&#13;
government and academic&#13;
communities; each had a very&#13;
different interpretation of what&#13;
would be needed to spur economic&#13;
recovery here, and throughout the&#13;
nation. Each participant, in addition,&#13;
presented differing views&#13;
from a broad political spectrum.&#13;
"The cyclical demand increase&#13;
will see a strong increase in the&#13;
demand for consumer goods,"&#13;
said William Strang, head of the&#13;
UW Bureau of Business Research&#13;
in Madison. Strang said that while&#13;
Wisconsin was outside the U.S.&#13;
mainstream geographically, it&#13;
has the resources and quality of&#13;
life necessary to attract new&#13;
business to the state.&#13;
Strang said that Wisconsin has&#13;
many resources, most notably an&#13;
abundance of energy and water, to&#13;
attract business. In addition, the&#13;
state has an overall high quality of&#13;
life. He added that Wisconsin is&#13;
"one of the few states where&#13;
personal income went up faster&#13;
than taxes."&#13;
He recommended that future&#13;
development focus on the&#13;
development of land and human&#13;
capital, and that the state's&#13;
educational base should be&#13;
developed more fully. "The key&#13;
word for the 1980's is 'competition',"&#13;
Strang said, and added&#13;
that the need for economic&#13;
development is strongest now.&#13;
John Roelthe, also a member of&#13;
the business community, spoke on&#13;
the importance of marketing&#13;
Wisconsin to businesses seeking&#13;
relocation. Roelthe is a member of&#13;
Milwaukee's "Goals 2000"&#13;
commission and is president of&#13;
Anderson / Roelthe, Inc., a&#13;
management consulting firm. He&#13;
said that there has actually been a&#13;
.6 percent increase in employment&#13;
from the period 1972-82, but the&#13;
state's labor force has also grown&#13;
disproportionately.&#13;
The major change has been&#13;
demographic, as more people&#13;
born during the "Baby Boom" are&#13;
entering the workforce. Also,&#13;
more women have been taking&#13;
jobs. At the same time, Roelthe&#13;
said, the state has seen a slower&#13;
growth of manufacturing jobs.&#13;
"We just couldn't handle it," he&#13;
said.&#13;
During the 80's Roelthe sees an&#13;
increase in the financial, service&#13;
and high technology sectors of&#13;
industry. These new jobs,&#13;
especially in the service area,&#13;
tend to be lower paying and held&#13;
by a larger percentage of women.&#13;
In addition, the number of hours&#13;
worked by a worker are less than&#13;
in manufacturing.&#13;
Roelthe said that Wisconsin&#13;
needs to take steps to make the&#13;
state more attractive to&#13;
manufacturers if the economy is&#13;
to recover. He blamed the state's&#13;
poor business development on&#13;
excessive government regulation,&#13;
including tough "Blue Sky" laws.&#13;
Also, Wisconsin does not have the&#13;
marketing expertise to attract&#13;
manufacturers. The Wisconsin&#13;
business community is a closed&#13;
community, he said. "Anybody&#13;
who's real dynamic ... we run&#13;
them out of town," Roelthe said,&#13;
"but it is a marketing world."&#13;
Representative Henry Reuss,&#13;
has recently retired after serving&#13;
28 y ears as a congressman from&#13;
Wisconsin. Most of Reuss' talk&#13;
was on what he termed "adaptive&#13;
reuse" of assets. He cited the&#13;
construction of a high speed train&#13;
between Milwaukee and Chicago,&#13;
using existing, unused right - of -&#13;
way. The primary purpose of the&#13;
train would be to divert&#13;
passengers from Chicago's&#13;
O'Hare field, which suffers from&#13;
overcrowding, to Mitchell Field,&#13;
which is presently operating at&#13;
about one - third capacity.&#13;
He also noted several projects in&#13;
Milwaukee, one to locate condominiums&#13;
in the old Schlitz&#13;
brewery downtown, and the&#13;
conversion of an unused tannery&#13;
on Milwaukee's lakefront to a&#13;
state prison. He said that although&#13;
creativity is needed to spur&#13;
economic growth, "we don't have&#13;
much of an economic future&#13;
unless there's a change in the&#13;
stupid policies from Washington."&#13;
Later, Reuss said in an interview&#13;
that governor Earl had&#13;
"courageously" pushed through a&#13;
tax increase to help balance the&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Winter Carnival results: Great! by Terry Tunks&#13;
Winter Carnival Chair&#13;
UW - Parkside gathered&#13;
forces and struck back at&#13;
winter this past week with&#13;
success. Winter Carnival&#13;
ended last Friday, Feb. 11,&#13;
with the Beach Party in the&#13;
Gym and the announcement of&#13;
the grand prize winners.&#13;
The Winter Carnival Committee&#13;
would like to say a big&#13;
"Thank You" to all participants&#13;
in the week - long&#13;
event. The participation and&#13;
spirit was great. It made the&#13;
week enjoyable for the Committee&#13;
to be involved in such a&#13;
project.&#13;
There were eleven club /&#13;
organization events that&#13;
counted toward the Grand&#13;
Prize. The competition was&#13;
tough between the 28&#13;
organizations that were involved.&#13;
As Chancellor Guskin&#13;
announced on Friday, the first&#13;
place winners were the Girl's&#13;
Softball Club, with 1000 points.&#13;
Following close behind, with&#13;
975 points, was the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (PAB) in&#13;
second place, and in third with&#13;
575 points was the Computer&#13;
Club. The following is a list of&#13;
winners in each of the events.&#13;
Window Painting&#13;
1. Softball&#13;
2. UWP Dart Team&#13;
3. Cheerleaders&#13;
Float Competition&#13;
1. Computer&#13;
2. Cheerleaders&#13;
3. PAB&#13;
Outdoor Volleyball&#13;
1. Weightlifting&#13;
2. Cheerleaders&#13;
3. Accounting Club&#13;
Dog Sled Relays&#13;
1. Computer Club&#13;
2. Chemistry Club&#13;
3. Geology Club&#13;
Broomball Relays&#13;
1. Softball&#13;
2. PAB&#13;
3. No Entry&#13;
Banner Competition&#13;
1. Softball&#13;
2. PAB&#13;
3. Communications Club&#13;
Blood Drive&#13;
1. PAB&#13;
2. Softball&#13;
3. Accounting&#13;
Snow Sculpture&#13;
1. PAB&#13;
2. Geology&#13;
3. Softball&#13;
Family Fued&#13;
1. Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
2. Softball&#13;
3. PAB&#13;
Inner Tube Relays&#13;
1. PAB&#13;
2. Computer&#13;
3. Softball&#13;
Air Mattress Relays&#13;
1. Softball&#13;
2. Geology&#13;
3. Chemistry&#13;
The following are the winners&#13;
of t he individual contests.&#13;
M*A*S*H Trivia&#13;
1. Todd Herstest&#13;
2. Linda Harvath&#13;
3. Jerry Sisak&#13;
Baby Picture&#13;
1. Mark Hagen&#13;
2. Luis Valldejuli&#13;
3. Nick Thome&#13;
Jello Slurping&#13;
1. Natalie Haberman&#13;
2. Todd Herstest&#13;
3. John Peterson&#13;
Ice Block Sitting&#13;
1. Todd Murray&#13;
and John Monks&#13;
3. Jim Kreuser&#13;
Tacky Tourist&#13;
1. Bruce Preston &amp; Co.&#13;
2. T ina Sampler&#13;
3. Rick Gorton&#13;
Biggest Splash&#13;
1. Brent Podlogar&#13;
2. Dan Nyberg&#13;
3. Kevin Rogers&#13;
Dog Paddle&#13;
1. Dan Nyberg&#13;
2. Pete Martineau&#13;
3. Brent Dogloger&#13;
As the Winter Carnival&#13;
Committee Chair, I would like&#13;
to thank all those that participated&#13;
and assisted with the&#13;
many events. This list is too&#13;
long to print, but you all know&#13;
who you are. A sp ecial thanks&#13;
to the Committee for making&#13;
the whole project fun.&#13;
I hope that those clubs and&#13;
individuals who participated&#13;
keep the Carnival in mind for&#13;
next year. This year the&#13;
Carnival has experienced&#13;
growth because of the increased&#13;
involvement, a trend&#13;
which should continue. The&#13;
participants this year made&#13;
new friends, and rivals, who&#13;
will meet again next year. See&#13;
you then.&#13;
WITH FEBRUARY half over, the threat of a heavy winter&#13;
seems to be fading, but March may stomp on us as it enters.&#13;
Regents accept&#13;
gifts for Parkside&#13;
MADISON — S everal gifts for&#13;
the Parkside campus were accepted&#13;
by the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
They include three gifts - in -&#13;
kind of equipment: a computer&#13;
graphics system from Evans &amp;&#13;
Sutherland of Salt Lake City,&#13;
Utah; a televideo terminal&#13;
monitor and modem from Abbe&#13;
Insurance, Racine; and a TV&#13;
tower, antenna and pre - amp&#13;
system from Youngren Antenna&#13;
Service, Racine.&#13;
The regents also accepted a&#13;
grant from the Kenosha County&#13;
Deparment of Social Services,&#13;
funded by the National Institutes&#13;
of Health, of $3,000 for the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center.&#13;
Center director Maureen Budowle&#13;
said the funds will be used to&#13;
improve physical facilities for the&#13;
infant - toddle program and to&#13;
expand the center's capacity for&#13;
accepting infants.&#13;
Several donations of scholarship&#13;
funds also were accepted.&#13;
They are $1,205 f or the Lillian&#13;
James Scholarship, including a&#13;
$1,000 b equest from the estate of&#13;
the former UW - Parkside music&#13;
faculty member, to be used for an&#13;
annual scholarship for an outstanding&#13;
music student ; $500 for a&#13;
scholarship fund for students&#13;
majoring in labor and industrial&#13;
relations; and $88 in&#13;
miscellaneous scholarship funds.&#13;
Social Science Roundtable&#13;
The American Family'&#13;
"What Is Happening to the&#13;
American Family?" will be the&#13;
topic of a lecture by Pulitzer Prize&#13;
winning social psychiatrist and&#13;
physician Robert Coles at&#13;
Parkside from 12:30 to 2 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, Mar. 1 in Greenquist 103.&#13;
The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Coles is a research psychiatrist&#13;
for the Harvard University Health&#13;
Services as well as Professor of&#13;
Psychiatry and Medical&#13;
Humanities at the Harvard&#13;
Medical School.&#13;
He is the author of some 35&#13;
books including the five - volume&#13;
"Children of Crisis" on the&#13;
children of Appalachia, which&#13;
brought him a 1973 Pulitzer Prize.&#13;
Coles' current research centers&#13;
on questions of political&#13;
socialization — how children in&#13;
various nations, including Northern&#13;
Ireland and South Africa —&#13;
obtain their political convictions&#13;
and moral values.&#13;
Coles received his undergraduate&#13;
degree from Harvard&#13;
in 1950 and the M.D. degree&#13;
from Columbia University College&#13;
of Physicians and Surgeons in&#13;
1954. He held a variety of h ospital&#13;
staff and teaching positions before&#13;
returning to Harvard in his&#13;
present posts.&#13;
He also serves as a psychiatric&#13;
consultant to the Southern&#13;
Regional Council and the Appalachian&#13;
Volunteers, and is a&#13;
member of the National&#13;
Sharecroppers' Fund and a for-&#13;
ROBERT COLES&#13;
mer member of the National&#13;
Advisory Committee on Farm&#13;
Labor. He is contributing editor of&#13;
"The New Republic," "Aperture,"&#13;
"The American Poetry&#13;
Review" and "The New Oxford&#13;
Review."&#13;
The Parkside Public Forum&#13;
series is directed by Prof. Kenneth&#13;
Hoover and is sponsored by&#13;
UW-Parkside and the University&#13;
Extension Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs.&#13;
Inside . . .&#13;
• Letter to the Editor&#13;
• Teaching evaluations&#13;
• Ins and outs of fencing&#13;
• Cartoonist display&#13;
• New Music&#13;
Thursday, February 17,1983 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Bad dreams&#13;
One of the proposals being considered by the government for getting&#13;
people back to work directly addresses the problem of teenage employment.&#13;
Politicians must get nightmares thinking about millions of&#13;
teenagers roaming the streets with nothing better to do than rape,&#13;
murder and pillage. If a quarter of the white kids and over half of the&#13;
black teenagers are out of w ork, that makes for a lot of young unemployed&#13;
roaming the streets, the government believes, and it's easy to&#13;
imagine a rerun of 60's riots passing through lawmaker's minds.&#13;
The answer? Simple. Lower the minimum wage for all workers 22&#13;
years old and under, to $2.70 an hour. The simple laws of supply and&#13;
demand decree that the less an employer must pay workers, the more&#13;
workers he or she will hire. The more young people working, the less&#13;
that will be on the streets looking for random violence, and our elected&#13;
can breath easier.&#13;
Poor, misguided government. The same people who brought you the&#13;
simple, infallable principles of supply side economics are now telling&#13;
you that there is a solution to youth unemployment that could have been&#13;
dreamed up by any sophomore with a class in microeconomics under&#13;
his or her belt. It probably was, too.&#13;
It's difficult to believe that anyone could seriously offer a policy like&#13;
that, as Reagan has. Consider trying to fill out a job application under&#13;
the new program. Instead of o ne question: "Are you between 18 and&#13;
65?'' There would have to be two questions: "Are you between 16 and&#13;
22?" and "Are you between 23 and 65?" This clearly creates paperwork,&#13;
stifling their efficiency that our policymakers are so valiantly fighting&#13;
for.&#13;
And, of course, anyone over 23 who could be replaced by a young&#13;
worker would. No problem. Older workers don't riot in the streets.&#13;
They're too busy defending their homes and families from the other&#13;
rioters in the streets. And since they didn't have to hold jobs, they&#13;
wouldn't have to worry about their loved ones while they were away at&#13;
work.&#13;
Letter to the editor&#13;
More on Thinkpiece&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to Bruce Preston's&#13;
"Think Piece" of February 10&#13;
entitled "Defining the Final&#13;
Frontier", I have some thoughts&#13;
to share. Taking the first step to&#13;
say "hello" to a stranger in the&#13;
elevator or commenting to the guy&#13;
next to you on the progress of the&#13;
snow sculptures is not an easy&#13;
gesture. It is difficult to step&#13;
outside of ourselves and perhaps&#13;
reveal that we are concerned,&#13;
friendly, and even caring people.&#13;
It is difficult because that first&#13;
step involves a risk — the risk that&#13;
the stranger may not respond;&#13;
difficult because of the courage to&#13;
take that risk.&#13;
However, has anyone thought&#13;
about how much satisfaction&#13;
there is in making the first step?&#13;
Imagine giving a quick glance&#13;
with a smile and in return hearing&#13;
"Good - morning!". Or holding the&#13;
door for the person behind you and&#13;
hearing a heart - warming "Thank&#13;
you!". Believe it or not, its these&#13;
little gestures that make a person's&#13;
day. It's also these little&#13;
gestures that make our lives more&#13;
at ease around other people.&#13;
I speak personally on this issue&#13;
since I am the girl from New&#13;
PARKSIDE ENCOURAGES&#13;
INTERACTION BETWEEN&#13;
INSTRUCTORS AND THE&#13;
COMMUNITY...&#13;
Hampshire to whom Bruce&#13;
referred in his article. I have been&#13;
in Kenosha only four weeks,&#13;
today, and needless to say, am&#13;
quite homesick for family and&#13;
friends still in New Hampshire. It&#13;
has not been easy to wake each&#13;
morning and face coming to&#13;
school feeling like little "E.T.".&#13;
Some days I just want to scream&#13;
and run into the bushes to hide, yet&#13;
the risk and courage it takes to&#13;
make friends seem my only option.&#13;
It hurts to be alone, and it. is&#13;
heart - warming to know someone&#13;
remembered me, even after only&#13;
10 minutes of conversation in the&#13;
Union.&#13;
My new "frontier" to Wisconsin&#13;
and to Parkside can be a wonderful&#13;
experience, but I must&#13;
learn to step outside of myself and&#13;
say that first "hello". It isn't easy,&#13;
but it'll be worth making new&#13;
friends, making someone's day&#13;
brighter, and even showing that,&#13;
yes, I am a concerned, friendly,&#13;
and caring person.&#13;
Thank you, Bruce for&#13;
remembering me in your article,&#13;
but especially for your food - for -&#13;
thought. My next "hello" to a&#13;
stranger won't be so hard.&#13;
Leanne LaBelle&#13;
...SO WHEN PETER&#13;
SEYBOLDSHOWEDA&#13;
REAUNTERESTINTHE&#13;
AREAS BLUECOLLAR&#13;
WORKERS...&#13;
...TO PARTICIPATE&#13;
DIRECTLY IN THE&#13;
MOST PROFOUND&#13;
EXPERIENCE PRESENTLY.,&#13;
..TOUCHING THE LIVES&#13;
OF WORKING PEOPLE&#13;
IN RACINE AND&#13;
KENOSHA... k&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
What we live with&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
So the snow of winter begins to&#13;
melt, and Winter Carnival is over,&#13;
and Spring Break is another four&#13;
weeks away. Not to mention the&#13;
fact that break is only one week to&#13;
begin with, and when it gets here,&#13;
it really only seems like three&#13;
days. While we're busy waiting for&#13;
the grand arrival of spring, I&#13;
thought it might be fun to point out&#13;
a few things that we'll put up with&#13;
until the semester ends. We'll&#13;
probably even put up with it next&#13;
year, but we'll have to resocialize&#13;
ourselves into dealing with it all&#13;
over again.&#13;
The first problem comes in with&#13;
Molinaro 105. Beautiful lecture&#13;
hall. I have a class in there every&#13;
day. On Tuesdays and Thursdays&#13;
it's Lee Thayer. On Monday,&#13;
Wednesday and Friday, it's Dave&#13;
Habbel. Fun classes. Wouldn't&#13;
change my schedule for anything,&#13;
but this lecture hall is so cold that&#13;
I have at times brought a blanket&#13;
to class. More than that, I've even&#13;
used it. People do stare as if I'm&#13;
somewhat crazy, but I absolutely&#13;
refuse to get FROSTBITE. We&#13;
aging people who have poor circulation&#13;
need the rooms to be at&#13;
least 60 degrees, and most of the&#13;
.. PARKSIDE s&#13;
ADMINISTRATION&#13;
DECIDED TO AFFORD&#13;
HIM THE&#13;
OPPORTUNITY...&#13;
time this room is in the low 50's.&#13;
So, the dedicated Communication&#13;
majors suffer through cold,&#13;
miserable lecture halls just to&#13;
learn how to communicate. Bless&#13;
us.&#13;
On Tuesday nights a few of us&#13;
luckier students took Women's&#13;
Studies. Although it's only happened&#13;
once so far this semester, it&#13;
has in the past been a common&#13;
thing for the fire alarms to begin&#13;
sounding throughout the entire&#13;
Comm Arts building right after&#13;
the class comes back from break.&#13;
It is difficult to believe that a&#13;
professor would be asked to talk&#13;
over this outrageous sound, and to&#13;
expect students to listen to any&#13;
lecture over it is asking too much.&#13;
When this happens, the professor&#13;
moves us to a different room, at&#13;
the other end of the campus.&#13;
Then when we really start to&#13;
talk noise pollution, we have for&#13;
your listening entertainment the&#13;
famous "Men At Work" right&#13;
outside the coffee shop in the old&#13;
PSGA office. I'm sure the office is&#13;
five times bigger than it was. It&#13;
sounds as if they've moved every&#13;
wall in all of WLLC. Talking on the&#13;
phone is an entertaining experience&#13;
through all of this. The&#13;
other day I was talking to my poor&#13;
mother through all of this noise,&#13;
and I thought she said bring home&#13;
some steaks, when what she really&#13;
said was "Bring home some&#13;
tape." Lucky me, I went out and&#13;
bought steaks to feed six in my&#13;
family, and all she needed was&#13;
some tape to wrap a gift. $9.29 I&#13;
paid to have to go back to the store&#13;
to get TAPE.&#13;
All of these things seem quite&#13;
little, I know. I've often told&#13;
myself that. The frustrating thing&#13;
is watching them all pile up. First&#13;
the little noises, then the cold&#13;
rooms, the loud noises. I suppose&#13;
all in all it's just part of going to&#13;
school, and we have to learn to&#13;
live with it. We'll have to adjust.&#13;
Why, just the other day I heard&#13;
my mother say to my brother,&#13;
"Things don't get any easier,&#13;
dear."&#13;
.UNEMPLOYMENT!&#13;
I&#13;
Used by p ermission o f R acine Labor Pa per, No v. 9, 1 982.&#13;
Ranger General Membership&#13;
Meeting: Friday, February 25&#13;
at I p.m. in WLLC DI39 C&#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;
Maureen Burke,&#13;
Carra Cariello,&#13;
Dan Dowhower,&#13;
Carol Kortendick&#13;
ganger Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
Sport Reporter;&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Lei!ZB.y!?®: Jea?"e Buenker - Phillips, Patricia Cumbie,&#13;
d k J?hn Kova,ic' R'ck Luehr, Robb Luehr,&#13;
Katny Rayburn, Napoleon Scarbrough, Jennie Tunkiecz.&#13;
UW • ParkSide - ^ are so,,&#13;
°f wisconsir&#13;
paper with'one^inch marains^iUMMt 'f ,ypewri,,en' doublespaced on standard sizt&#13;
eluded tor verification letters must be signed and a telephone number in&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserves all ^Vt^a'|S privlfeqes3',3 ref?is|f°r publica,ion on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 17,1983&#13;
Academic Games&#13;
Teaching Evaluations likely to stay&#13;
by JJeeaannnnee BBuupennkkoeir* -. DPhki:luli:p s ' '&#13;
Teaching, it has been suggested&#13;
2 a ^aft which affects eternity'&#13;
Few howler, are willing to wait&#13;
until the Last Judgment to&#13;
evaluate the impact individual&#13;
college instructors have upon&#13;
their students.&#13;
Especially during the last two&#13;
decades, nearly every American&#13;
college and university has&#13;
mandated that the quality of&#13;
classroom teaching should be&#13;
measured systematically and that&#13;
the results should be used in&#13;
decisions regarding merit, tenure,&#13;
and promotion. Since the rewards&#13;
are temporal, the instruments of&#13;
evaluation must be also.&#13;
According to the UW - Parkside&#13;
Policies and Procedures Handbook,&#13;
teaching is evaluated as&#13;
follows:&#13;
"The primary source of information&#13;
regarding the quality of&#13;
teaching shall be student course&#13;
evaluations conducted each fall&#13;
and spring semester. A faculty&#13;
member shall be afforded opportunity&#13;
to present other&#13;
evidence regarding teaching&#13;
quality, such as reading lists,&#13;
course outlines, innovations,&#13;
samples of student work, reports&#13;
of colleague observers, participation&#13;
in teaching improvement&#13;
workshops, videotapes&#13;
of presentations and impact on&#13;
former students. Evidence from&#13;
all of the above sources shall be&#13;
considered in the evaluation of&#13;
teaching quality."&#13;
Probably the most important&#13;
pieces of evidence are the&#13;
teaching evaluations completed&#13;
by students at the end of each&#13;
semester. These evaluations are&#13;
looked over carefully by faculty&#13;
members and are used for merit&#13;
rating as well as for tenure&#13;
decision.&#13;
The issue of teaching&#13;
evaluations has been around as&#13;
long as Parkside has. Overall, just&#13;
about everyone agrees there is a&#13;
need for teaching evaluations, but&#13;
many questions arise as to what&#13;
form the evaluations should be in;&#13;
how often they should be&#13;
distributed; and what questions&#13;
should be asked. Presently, both&#13;
written and computerized answer&#13;
sheets are used. Some divisions&#13;
use the computerized form, others&#13;
the written form, and some a&#13;
combination of both. Since&#13;
nowhere is it specified what form&#13;
should be used, both are acceptable.&#13;
It is the belief of some that it is&#13;
unnecessary to evaluate a teacher&#13;
each and every time that she / he&#13;
teaches a course. Some believe&#13;
otherwise. It has been a common&#13;
practice at Parkside for a&#13;
teaching evaluation to be handed&#13;
out in every course at the end of&#13;
every semester. This practice will&#13;
continue indefinitely unless the&#13;
Faculty Senate is presented with&#13;
sufficient evidence to change it.&#13;
As mentioned above, there are&#13;
discrepancies found between the&#13;
teaching evaluations of each&#13;
division. This is true also for the&#13;
types of questions found on each&#13;
Economic Outlook: Dim Continuedi FFrroomm PPaaggee OOnnee magazine *\S HlfPlv to hnriAmA • a _ 4 .&#13;
state's budget. "He's done a great&#13;
deal by doing what he can. The&#13;
state by itself can't solve the&#13;
problems of the nation," Reuss&#13;
added, "but he's on the right&#13;
track."&#13;
In contrast to Reuss, an .&#13;
political hand, Gar Alperowitz&#13;
Racine native and head of Uv&#13;
center for economic alternatives&#13;
Washington, D.C., offered a&#13;
old&#13;
a&#13;
the&#13;
m&#13;
more pessimistic view of&#13;
Wisconsin's, and the nation's&#13;
economic future. A relative&#13;
newcomer to politicis, he was&#13;
recently cited by Newsweek&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
Chess Club&#13;
Are you a pawn in the game of&#13;
life? Fight back by joining the&#13;
Chess Club. Beginning through&#13;
advanced players are welcome.&#13;
We'll improve your game and&#13;
have a good time. Our next&#13;
meeting is Wednesday, Feb. 23 at&#13;
1 p.m. in MOLN D-133 to gather&#13;
forces and discuss the upcoming&#13;
tournament. Don't miss it.&#13;
SWEA&#13;
The Student Wisconsin&#13;
Education Association will be&#13;
showing the video "One Nation&#13;
Under God," on Monday, Feb. 21&#13;
from 1 to 2 p.m. in MOLN D-128.&#13;
The topic of the presentation is&#13;
censorship in today's school&#13;
system. The showing is open to all&#13;
faculty, staff and students.&#13;
magazine as likely to become&#13;
active in government should a&#13;
Democrat be elected president in&#13;
1984.&#13;
"Wisconsin may not recover,"&#13;
he said. The combination of a&#13;
drastic rise in oil prices and the&#13;
end of the Vietnam war acted to&#13;
decrease consumer and government&#13;
demand in the mid 70's,&#13;
leading to the recession. He said&#13;
the nation needed to adopt "a very&#13;
different form of political&#13;
economy," if it is to survive.&#13;
Immediate steps to be taken, he&#13;
said, would include loosening the&#13;
money supply by the Fed to bring&#13;
Club Events&#13;
MOLN 126 at 1 p. m. This meeting&#13;
is very important because we will&#13;
be electing a new representative&#13;
to SOC. Just as important as the&#13;
election is the announcement of&#13;
where and when the next party&#13;
will be held. Any member who&#13;
fails to attend or fails to give a&#13;
valid reason for their absence will&#13;
be held up for public humiliation.&#13;
Just kidding, guys and gals, but&#13;
please make an attempt to attend.&#13;
Just a reminder, the Very&#13;
Special Arts Festival is coming up&#13;
and we need to submit a list of&#13;
members who are willing to help a&#13;
handicapped child have a good&#13;
time. If you are not busy on&#13;
Tuesday, Mar. 15, volunteer or&#13;
feel guilty for the rest of the&#13;
semester.&#13;
down interest rates and encourage&#13;
investment. He said that high oil&#13;
prices would continue to be a&#13;
factor in the recession, but "it&#13;
would be very easy to cut imports&#13;
to zero percent."&#13;
Alperowitz criticised both&#13;
parties' jobs bills, saying, "they&#13;
are substitutes for a program to&#13;
move us into serious growth." The&#13;
jobs bill now under consideration&#13;
only accounts for .2 percent of t he&#13;
labor force and is inadequate&#13;
one percentage point gain&#13;
unemployment, he said,&#13;
add $30 million to the&#13;
National Product.&#13;
A&#13;
in&#13;
would&#13;
Gross&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
Minister, and Enrique Baldonia, a&#13;
Catholic Priest, will address these&#13;
subjects and America's involvement&#13;
in this highly controversial&#13;
region of the world.&#13;
There will also be time for a&#13;
question and answer period. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Geology&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
The Parkside Dart Team&#13;
recently held its Dart Board&#13;
Christening Ceremony in the&#13;
Recreation Center. After a brief&#13;
speech from the Almost Reverend&#13;
Nick, members of the team&#13;
opened the refreshments. The&#13;
Dart Board is available for use in&#13;
the ping pong room by any&#13;
Parkside student. To obtain the&#13;
board, surrender your validated&#13;
ID card at the Rec Center counter.&#13;
Students should bring their own&#13;
darts.&#13;
We are also having another Dart&#13;
Team meeting next Monday in&#13;
On Friday, Feb. 18, the Geology&#13;
Colloquium will hold the forum&#13;
"Uranium Mineralization and&#13;
Uranium Potential in Wisconsin,"&#13;
at 3p. m. in GRQ 113. The speaker&#13;
will be Dr. Gregory Mursky from&#13;
the UW - Milwaukee Department&#13;
of Geological and Geophysical&#13;
services.&#13;
Political ScienceMobe&#13;
On Wednesday, Mar. 2 at 1 p. m.&#13;
in MOLN 109 there will be a forum&#13;
on Central American political&#13;
movements. The program will&#13;
explore the present political and&#13;
living conditions in El Salvador&#13;
and Nicaragua.&#13;
Patricia Castro, a Baptist&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
The Art Addicts will be holding&#13;
their next meeting Monday&#13;
February 21, at 1 p. m. in CA 111.&#13;
Topics to be covered include the&#13;
nomination of club officers for the&#13;
1983-'84 school year, and a&#13;
progress report and evaluation of&#13;
our budget. We will also be formulating&#13;
student art show rules&#13;
and regulations. As always, we&#13;
welcome all newcomers. See you&#13;
there.&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
Dr. T.J. O'Donnell of Abott&#13;
Laboratories will be the guest of&#13;
the Parkside Computer Club on&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 23. Dr.&#13;
O'Donnell will give a presentation&#13;
on GRAMPS, a high - level&#13;
graphics language. The talk will&#13;
begin at 1 p.m. in MOLN 107. A&#13;
bag lunch get together with Dr.&#13;
O'Donnell will be held in MOLN&#13;
ill at noon. Everyone is invited.&#13;
The Computer Fair and the&#13;
induction into ACM will be the&#13;
topics for discussion at the&#13;
Monday, Feb. 21 meeting of the&#13;
Computer Club. The meeting will&#13;
be in MOLN 116 a t 1 p.m.&#13;
division's Evaluation. In the past it&#13;
has been suggested that a standardized&#13;
form be used. However,&#13;
this has been found to be virtually&#13;
impossible because each division&#13;
teaches somewhat differently and&#13;
has different objectives than the&#13;
others.&#13;
While not even their most enthusiastic&#13;
advocates would claim&#13;
that student evaluations of&#13;
teaching are perfect, nearly&#13;
everyone agrees they are&#13;
preferable, with all their faults, to&#13;
the most likely alternatives -&#13;
classroom visitations by administrators&#13;
and colleagues. The&#13;
latter would be enormously time&#13;
consuming and few faculty or&#13;
administrators would be willing to&#13;
sacrifice other activities to create&#13;
the necessary time. More importantly,&#13;
evaluations by administrators&#13;
and faculty could&#13;
easily be productive of a buses.&#13;
Faculty at institutions where&#13;
administrators do the evaluating,&#13;
frequently complain that they are&#13;
used as weapons to keep "trouble&#13;
makers in line." Peer evaluations&#13;
based upon classroom visitation&#13;
can easily lead to "logrolling,"&#13;
owning faculty, or to errors to&#13;
"reward friends and punish&#13;
enemies." Faculty evaluations&#13;
may be useful supplements to&#13;
student efforts but they are&#13;
generally not viewed as acceptable&#13;
substitutes. For all the&#13;
controversy surrounding student&#13;
measures of teaching, they seem&#13;
likely to remain a major part of&#13;
the faculty evaluation process.&#13;
Dawkins to lecture on&#13;
black mental health&#13;
Dr. Marva P. Dawkins, clinical&#13;
psychologist, and Helen P.&#13;
Ramey, psychiatric social&#13;
workers, will be the featured&#13;
speakers at an Activity Period&#13;
program on "Mental Health and&#13;
the Black Community," to be held&#13;
on Wednesday, Feb. 23,1 to 2 p. m.&#13;
in the Overlook Lounge, 2nd Floor,&#13;
Library / Learning Center.&#13;
Dr. Dawkins is Executive&#13;
Director of the Institute for&#13;
Community Mental Health in&#13;
Chicago. She has had extensive&#13;
experience in the field of community&#13;
mental health including&#13;
the planning, development, administration,&#13;
and evaluation of&#13;
community mental health services.&#13;
Dr. Dawkins was instrumental&#13;
in the development of&#13;
a major community mental health&#13;
center in Chicago which presently&#13;
serves a high risk poverty area of&#13;
more than thirty thousand&#13;
residents. Currently, Dr. Dawkins&#13;
is involved in the development of&#13;
treatment programs in the areas&#13;
of developmental disabilities,&#13;
alcoholism and chronic mental&#13;
illness.&#13;
Ms. Ramey is the Director of&#13;
General Affairs and Consultative&#13;
Services in the Institute for&#13;
Community Mental Health. She&#13;
specializes in treatment&#13;
strategies for the difficult - to -&#13;
manage client and comprehensive&#13;
planning for severe emotionally&#13;
disturbed adolescents. Ms.&#13;
Ramey has had extensive experience&#13;
in conducting community&#13;
- based workshops on the&#13;
mobilization of resources for the&#13;
effective treatment of difficult - to&#13;
- manage clients including individuals&#13;
who are confronted with&#13;
alcohol related problems.&#13;
There is a display on "Mental&#13;
Health and the Black Community"&#13;
on Level 1 of the Library.&#13;
The talk is being sponsored by&#13;
Parkside's Black Students&#13;
Organization and the Library /&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
Kummings authors&#13;
Whitman reference guide&#13;
Donald D. Kummings, a&#13;
Parkside English professor and a&#13;
published poet, is the author of a&#13;
new book, "Walt Whitman, 1940-&#13;
1975: A Reference Guide,"&#13;
recently issued by G.K. Hall as&#13;
part of The Reference Guides to&#13;
Literature series.&#13;
The product of five and a half&#13;
years of research and writing, the&#13;
book is a complete guide to the&#13;
"boom years" in Whitman&#13;
studies, when the author of "Out&#13;
of th e Cradle Endlessly Rocking,"&#13;
"Song of Myself" and other&#13;
uniquely American poetry&#13;
emerged as a writer of international&#13;
stature.&#13;
During the period surveyed by&#13;
the book, a total of 3,172&#13;
publications appeared dealing&#13;
with Whitman and his work. The&#13;
period also saw the beginning of&#13;
four new journals devoted exclusively&#13;
to Whitman.&#13;
This book's annotated listing&#13;
incorporates all materials from&#13;
previous bibliographies and cites&#13;
thousands of items — including&#13;
many never before referenced —&#13;
from contemporary newspapers,&#13;
journals and magazines.&#13;
Reviewer Hershel Parker,&#13;
Fletcher Brown Professor&#13;
English at the University&#13;
Delaware said, "It's awesome&#13;
what can be learned from this&#13;
book about innumerable aspects&#13;
of American life."&#13;
H.&#13;
of&#13;
of&#13;
In addition to his book, Kummings&#13;
has published five articles&#13;
and three reviews on Whitman. He&#13;
also has published articles on a&#13;
number of other writers including&#13;
Nathaniel Hawthorne, Alexis de&#13;
Tocqueville, Henry James, Philip&#13;
Freneau, Stephen Crane, Jack&#13;
London and Hart Crane.&#13;
Kummings currently is working&#13;
on a second book, a collection of&#13;
original poems. His poetry has&#13;
appeared in a number of journals&#13;
and anthologies.&#13;
Kummings joined the UW -&#13;
Parkside English faculty in 1970&#13;
and won a distinguished service&#13;
award for teaching excellence in&#13;
1977. He chaired the English&#13;
discipline from 1974-76. He earned&#13;
his PhD degree in English and&#13;
American Studies at Indiana&#13;
University and taught at IU,&#13;
Purdue University and Adrian&#13;
College before coming to UW-P.&#13;
Write&#13;
Ranger&#13;
A Letter!&#13;
RANGER needs an&#13;
advertising salesperson&#13;
now!&#13;
— Based on Campus.&#13;
— For Racine and surrounding area.&#13;
— To acquire and maintain new advertising&#13;
Previous experience not a requirement, but good&#13;
communication and business skills are desirable.&#13;
During initial trial period you will be paid $20 00 /&#13;
week for a return of one new 2 x 5" advertisement&#13;
each week. ~ " ~&#13;
After 6 weeks you can join our commission - plus -&#13;
bonus plan.&#13;
— Our Kenosha salesman has earned $900 this school&#13;
year to date — The opportunities are for real!&#13;
— Own transportation and mininum of 6 credits&#13;
required.&#13;
— C al! at Ranger Office for application form. (Next&#13;
TO L ottee Shop).&#13;
— We are an equal opportunity employer —&#13;
Thursday, February 17,1983&#13;
Paul Berge draws cartoons to make people think&#13;
The wfAorflkr of\Cf DPMau..1l BT&gt; erg— e- , . . _ .&#13;
Ranger's editorial cartoonist, is&#13;
the subject of an exhibit at the&#13;
Racine Public Library this month.&#13;
Berge, 23, has worked as an&#13;
editorial cartoonist for the St.&#13;
Olaf's college Manitou, the&#13;
M a d i s o n I n d e p e n d e n t ,&#13;
Mathematics Magazine and other&#13;
area publications" as well as&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
"I did a lot of doodling as a&#13;
child," Berge said. He first&#13;
started drawing topically when he&#13;
tried copying a Time magazine&#13;
illustration of Richard Nixon. "It&#13;
came out looking more like&#13;
George McGovern," he said,&#13;
Berge then began drawing&#13;
McGovern cartoons.&#13;
As a student at Washington&#13;
Park High School in Racine,&#13;
Berge drew cartoons to illustrate&#13;
stories in the Park Beacon. "They&#13;
actually let me draw 'tame' AN EXAMPLE of one of Paul's many works.&#13;
So it goes.&#13;
Blind bureaucrats cause class cuts&#13;
Satire&#13;
by John Kovalic&#13;
I was disturbed, nay, disgusted,&#13;
when I received the news of the&#13;
cancellation of one of t he eminent&#13;
Professor Peter Martin's courses&#13;
this semester. The short -&#13;
sightedness of some simplistic&#13;
bureaucrats left me stupified!&#13;
What person in his or her right&#13;
mind would ever cut a course so&#13;
obviously important to world&#13;
peace, economic recovery and&#13;
philosophical enlightenment as&#13;
"Studies in Cultural Patterns:&#13;
Literature and Culture of the&#13;
1950's."&#13;
When I stormed up to administration,&#13;
banners waving and&#13;
protest flags flying, I was given&#13;
the lame excuse that only five&#13;
people actually signed up for the&#13;
course. If class attendance were&#13;
the only criterion on which to&#13;
judge a lecture, then the only&#13;
course given at Parksi.de would be&#13;
"Nude Drawing and Drug Culture&#13;
101." Whatever happened to sheer&#13;
quality and excellence? Now&#13;
Professor Martin is condemned to&#13;
teaching English 101 for the rest of&#13;
the semester.&#13;
The cancellation of Dr. Martin's&#13;
class prompted me to do a bit of&#13;
investigative research. What&#13;
other fine courses had the&#13;
university, for one reason or&#13;
another, cancelled? What gems of&#13;
knowledge would be lost to the&#13;
student body forever, cut by an&#13;
unfeeling and heartless&#13;
bureaucracy trying to suppress&#13;
the freedom of expression and&#13;
enrichment in a ruthless bid for&#13;
absolute power?&#13;
The number of quality classes&#13;
cut amazed me.&#13;
History 116 - The Life and Times&#13;
of Millard Fillmore.&#13;
(9 credits, three semesters) The&#13;
life, loves and laughs of one of&#13;
America's most influential and&#13;
respected leaders, highlighting&#13;
the 'Cocktail Party,' the 'long&#13;
sleep' and the infamous 'acc&#13;
o u n t a n t s u p r i s i n g . '&#13;
(Prerequisite: History 115 - Accountants&#13;
in the Nineteenth&#13;
Century)&#13;
Sociology 308 - Richard Simmons&#13;
- Man or Myth?&#13;
(3 credits - 10 a .m., weekdays)&#13;
The spectacular rise to fame of&#13;
one of television's best known&#13;
homosexuals. Learn the history of&#13;
aerobics and its effects on Jane&#13;
Fonda, Raquel Welch and Mickey&#13;
Mouse. (Cross - listed as Communications&#13;
308 - Richard Simmons:&#13;
Man or Mythith?)&#13;
Physics 429 - Electricity and&#13;
Electromagnetism for Jocks&#13;
(6 credits, 2 semester) How to&#13;
plug and unplug toasters and&#13;
replace lightbulbs. Prerequisite&#13;
for Physics 430 - Our Friend the&#13;
Atom. Wrestlers, Basketball and&#13;
Baseball players only.&#13;
Women's Studies 300 - Women in&#13;
History - Men Didn't Have All The&#13;
Fun&#13;
Proving that women are truly&#13;
equal, even in genocide. Portrays&#13;
the lives of the greatest female&#13;
mass - murderers in history, including&#13;
Catherine The Great,&#13;
Queen Mary the First, etc. Plus&#13;
special lectures on Lizzie Bordon&#13;
New Music - Sound Diggings&#13;
Looking for treasure&#13;
in&#13;
by Napoleon Scarbrough&#13;
Greetings, fellow music lovers&#13;
I am a nomad who wanders&#13;
search of true, great, and entertaining&#13;
music. Music that will&#13;
cause one to relax the mental and&#13;
emotional strains of everyday&#13;
coping with this madness we call&#13;
living, and, instead, allow your&#13;
mind and your very soul to be&#13;
taken on an excursion by the&#13;
melifiuous sounds that will&#13;
prevail.&#13;
As some of you are undoubtedly&#13;
aware, it takes a very special&#13;
style of music to accomplish this&#13;
feat. No doubt most of you have&#13;
experienced an absence of g reat&#13;
music as you scan the length and&#13;
breadth of your radio dial. Personally,&#13;
I haven't heard any great&#13;
music on the radio since the fall of&#13;
'69. (Of course, I was a child at the&#13;
time). Consequently, this unnatural&#13;
phenomenon has "had an&#13;
adverse effect on music lovers in&#13;
general and die - hard fanatics in&#13;
particular.&#13;
Through my faithful assistants,&#13;
who have been paramount in&#13;
helping me monitor your&#13;
behavior, I have learned that you,&#13;
the public at large, (or small)&#13;
have, a.) rocked when you should&#13;
have rolled, b.) beeped when you&#13;
should have bopped, and c.) I have&#13;
personally seen some of you&#13;
geeing up when you should have&#13;
been getting down. Tsk. Tsk. Tsk.&#13;
Realizing that this kind of&#13;
behavior contradicts everything I&#13;
learned in psychology 101, as well&#13;
as being detrimental to a groovy&#13;
society, I quickly decided to set&#13;
out on an expedition in an effort to&#13;
uncover the lost sound that will&#13;
bring: "Heavy, man, heavy,"&#13;
"Too mucking fuch," and "Ain't&#13;
that a groove?" back into our&#13;
conscience and attitude.&#13;
You have an open invitation to&#13;
join me through this column as I&#13;
dig for the lost treasure of sound. I&#13;
want you to be there when I find&#13;
"the" music that will turn&#13;
America and the world on again.&#13;
Come, join me in my quest for&#13;
"Sound Diggings," you dig?&#13;
and Mrs. Brown, whose cow&#13;
started the fire of Chicago.&#13;
English 203 - Herpes in&#13;
Shakespeare&#13;
(Course description deleted by&#13;
ed.) Prerequisite for English 204 -&#13;
Herpes and Nihilism in&#13;
Dostoyevsky, and Sociology 400 -&#13;
Why are English Majors Obsessed&#13;
with Herpes?&#13;
Political Philosophy 390 - The&#13;
American Way&#13;
How to shoot truck drivers,&#13;
poison Tylenol capsules and run&#13;
for Mayor of Chicago while&#13;
making a million big ones. Cross -&#13;
listed as Sociology 390 - How to&#13;
Screw Your Neighbor and Modern&#13;
Culture 390 - Ho w to Screw Your&#13;
Neighbor's Spouse.&#13;
Philosophy 311 - How to Confuse&#13;
Laymen&#13;
Take familiar lines of thought&#13;
and confuse your friends. For true&#13;
pseudo - intellectuals only. "All&#13;
men are mortal, Socrates is a&#13;
man, therefore all men are&#13;
Socrates, etc."&#13;
Philosophy 362 - The Great&#13;
Thinkers - A Comparison&#13;
Socrates, Plato, Rosseau,&#13;
Descartes, John Stuart Mill and&#13;
Nietsche. What brands of wine did&#13;
they drink, what were their shirt&#13;
sizes, who could belch loudest and&#13;
who was best in bed?&#13;
Art and Culture 306&#13;
Learn long, meaningless words&#13;
to impress your girlfriend.&#13;
Religious Studies 201 - The Ten&#13;
Commandments&#13;
A few useful loopholes.&#13;
The list goes on. I think I have&#13;
made my point. I demand a&#13;
written explanation of this mindless&#13;
hacking of courses from&#13;
Chancellor Guskin. If I have no&#13;
reply by Monday, I will have to&#13;
demand his immediate impeachment,&#13;
slander, and any&#13;
other nasty things I can think of. I&#13;
will petition the Supreme Court.&#13;
Justice will prevail!&#13;
editorial cartoons," he added.&#13;
Berge was only censored once, he&#13;
said, when he drew a cartoon&#13;
about remedial education. During&#13;
the Racine teacher's strike in 1977&#13;
when, Berge submitted several&#13;
cartoons to the Racine Journal -&#13;
Times.&#13;
At St. Olaf's College, in Minnesota,&#13;
Berge majored in political&#13;
science because, "I've never been&#13;
very thrilled with art classes." He&#13;
has taken one art class each in&#13;
high school and college. He added&#13;
he felt he was never in tune with&#13;
what art teachers were teaching.&#13;
Berge said that he "never, got&#13;
any hate notices from the administration,"&#13;
at St. Olaf's. He&#13;
believes that it is an editorial&#13;
cartoonist's role to cause people to&#13;
think. Because of that he&#13;
welcomes feedback to his work&#13;
both as a criticism of his work and&#13;
an indication that he is being read.&#13;
"I don't mind the occasional&#13;
complaint," he added.&#13;
At this time Berge is seeking&#13;
syndication, or as he puts it,&#13;
"Trying to get a paying job."&#13;
There is not a large market for&#13;
cartoonists, due to a large influx&#13;
of young artists during Vietnam&#13;
and the Nixon administration.&#13;
"If they don't have a cartoonist&#13;
they can't afford one, and if they&#13;
can afford one, they have one," he&#13;
concluded.&#13;
'Sound of Music'&#13;
to open in Kenosha&#13;
The Sound of Music is the&#13;
eleventh and last of the beloved&#13;
Rodgers and Hammerstein&#13;
musical comedies that delighted&#13;
American theater goers from&#13;
Oklahoma onward. This musical&#13;
celebrates the adventures of the&#13;
famous TRAPP FAMILY&#13;
SINGERS. It will be presented at&#13;
the Reuther High School&#13;
Auditorium, starting March 5th&#13;
and continuing for six performances,&#13;
ending March 13th.&#13;
Gail Ann Martin will star as&#13;
Maria Rainer, the courageous&#13;
postulant who became a governess&#13;
to seven motherless children.&#13;
Martin portrayed "Anna" in The&#13;
King and I last year, the first&#13;
production of the Miss Kenosha&#13;
Scholarship Pageant, and the&#13;
Lioness of greater Kenosha,&#13;
jointly produced together. Miss&#13;
Martin was Miss Kenosha 1980&#13;
and the first runner - up to Miss&#13;
Wisconsin that year. She is a&#13;
graduate of the Lawrence Conservatory&#13;
of Music, where she&#13;
appeared as the lead in several&#13;
opera productions there.&#13;
Jon Marschall, a senior at&#13;
Carthage college, is featured as&#13;
the aristocratic Austrian father of&#13;
the Von Trapp children. Jon is&#13;
majoring in both music and&#13;
psychology. He has been a&#13;
member of the Carthage college&#13;
choir for four years and has&#13;
toured parts of the U. S. and&#13;
Europe with the choir. He has&#13;
appeared in several dramatic and&#13;
musical productions, including&#13;
Damn Yankees, Scapino and The&#13;
Fiddler on the Roof.&#13;
Tickets for the March 5,6,10,11,&#13;
12 and 13th performance dates are&#13;
now on sale. General admission&#13;
tickets are $5.00 and reserved&#13;
seating tickets are $6.00. L ioness&#13;
Ticket Chairman, Faith Pffiefer,&#13;
announces that Thursday, March&#13;
10, will be Family Night and that&#13;
• FIGHT&#13;
rfr\ against&#13;
uy BIRTH&#13;
DEFECTS&#13;
MARCH OF DIMES&#13;
THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER&#13;
- WANTED -&#13;
Ladies &amp; Gents to be on&#13;
Parkside Rangers new&#13;
Honey Bear Pom-Pom Team.&#13;
Tryouts Fri. 18th&#13;
at 1:00 pm in Gym.&#13;
Any questions call Shirley, 553-2320&#13;
all tickets for this performance&#13;
will be $3.50. S enior citizens and&#13;
children under 12 will pay $4.00 for&#13;
a ticket, except for reserved&#13;
seating.&#13;
The ticket outlets are Ace&#13;
Hardware, Flowers With Love,&#13;
The Barden Store, or The Leader&#13;
Store at the Regency Mall -&#13;
Racine.&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10.00 am - 4:00 pm&#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;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK O F FE B. 2 1&#13;
MALTED&#13;
MILK BA LLS&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
Thursday, February 17,1983 RANGER&#13;
Forget prep, the collegiate look is IT, and for cheap&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
So you want to dress collegiate?&#13;
And you don't want to spend a lot&#13;
of money? Read on.&#13;
You'll notice that I said&#13;
collegiate and not preppy. Preppy&#13;
and collegiate are definitely two&#13;
different things, and I wouldn't&#13;
dress preppy if my life depended&#13;
on it. I would and do dress&#13;
collegiate however, and if yo u are&#13;
stylish, you will too. Let me first&#13;
clarify what collegiate is and what&#13;
preppy is.&#13;
Collegiate is a classic look,&#13;
traditional, even conservative,&#13;
but classic nonetheless. It is&#13;
basically a layered look of button -&#13;
down shirts, v - neck and crew -&#13;
neck sweaters, corduroy and solid&#13;
colored slacks, and tweed and&#13;
corduroy blazers. Collegiate&#13;
colors include brown, navy blue,&#13;
light blue, burgundy, gray, wheat,&#13;
and similarly subdued and conservative&#13;
colors. Preppy, on the&#13;
other hand, is a trendy, faddish,&#13;
cheap and obnoxious look that was&#13;
invented by Calvin Klein. It is also&#13;
a somewhat layered look, but it&#13;
includes such colors as pink,&#13;
purple, light green, bright red,&#13;
flourescent yellow, peuce and&#13;
mauve, usually mixed in various&#13;
disturbing combinations. It also&#13;
encompasses clothing with labels&#13;
— alligators, foxes, Calvin Klein,&#13;
etc.&#13;
So, you say you want to dress&#13;
collegiate, but you haven't got&#13;
much money. No problem. It is&#13;
possible to build a good collegiate&#13;
COMim ¥ 0 RACME&#13;
FEB. 25*&#13;
Tony Brown Bond&#13;
wardrobe for under fifty dollars. A&#13;
few basic tips to begin with,&#13;
however.&#13;
First, and most important, don't&#13;
ever, ever, ever, buy designer&#13;
clothes. Don't buy anything with a&#13;
AT LEFT, John Kovalic&#13;
models the sloppy, non -&#13;
collegiate look, while Michael&#13;
Kailas exhibits collegiate&#13;
class at right.&#13;
label. Designer clothes are much&#13;
more expensive than no - name&#13;
clothes, and are often of inferior&#13;
quality. Case in point: I was&#13;
recently in a local clothing store,&#13;
looking at tweed jackets. I spied&#13;
two identical brown tweed&#13;
jackets, one a no - name and one a&#13;
Calvin Klein. The Calvin Klein&#13;
jacket was priced at $190.00 a nd&#13;
was only 80 percent wool. The no -&#13;
name jacket was priced at only&#13;
$90.00, and was 100 percent wool.&#13;
I'm not kidding. Don't buy&#13;
designer clothes. They are not&#13;
worth it.&#13;
Secondly, don't shop at&#13;
specialty shops for clothes. Go to a&#13;
large department store where&#13;
prices are lower. Boston Store is&#13;
fairly inexpensive - Kohl's&#13;
department store and Shopko,&#13;
Target and the like are very&#13;
cheap.&#13;
Okay, down to business. One of&#13;
the most important things about a&#13;
collegiate wardrobe is that it is&#13;
interchangeable - a shirt matches&#13;
a sweater, sweater with slacks,&#13;
and so on. You want to be able to&#13;
switch these combinations&#13;
around, so whenever possible you&#13;
should buy clothes of neutral&#13;
color. Brown and gray sweaters&#13;
go with many different things, and&#13;
as a rule sweaters should usually&#13;
be solid colors. Get wool sweaters&#13;
whenever possible — they are&#13;
warmer and more durable. They&#13;
are also slightly more expensive&#13;
than acrylic sweaters, but usually&#13;
worth it. Jantzen is an especially&#13;
good brand for wool sweaters, and&#13;
is fairly inexpensive. V - neck&#13;
sweaters are good if you are&#13;
wearing a nice shirt and tie with&#13;
the sweater. Crew - necks are&#13;
good if yo u wear your collars out.&#13;
The problem with some crew -&#13;
neck sweaters is that they tend to&#13;
cover up whatever shirts are worn&#13;
underneath.&#13;
While sweaters should be&#13;
darker, solid colors, shirts&#13;
should be lighter colors, with plaid&#13;
and striped patterns, thereby&#13;
providing a contrast. Button down&#13;
collar shirts are good if you are&#13;
going to wear a tie. When buying&#13;
shirts, check that the buttons are&#13;
firmly sewn in, and that the cloth&#13;
is sturdy. There are a lot of ch eap&#13;
brands of shirts that fall apart&#13;
after the first washing. Some&#13;
combinations: Blue and white&#13;
ANOTHER EXAMPLE of&#13;
collegiate wear.&#13;
striped shirt and gray sweater -&#13;
Wheat colored sweater with blue&#13;
shirt and brown tie - White shirt&#13;
and light or dark blue sweater -&#13;
any plaid colored shirt with solid&#13;
colored sweater of matching&#13;
color. Botany 500 is a very good&#13;
brand for shirts.&#13;
Jackets are not necessary, but&#13;
are nice if you have the extra&#13;
bucks to spend. You can get a nice&#13;
tweed jacket for less than one -&#13;
hundred dollars. Make sure it is&#13;
mostly wool, make sure it is a&#13;
color which will match with many&#13;
of y our other sweaters and shirts,&#13;
and make sure it is the right size.&#13;
A jacket that is too small will be&#13;
miserable to wear, and too large a&#13;
jacket will look too bulky.&#13;
Slacks are in, jeans are out.&#13;
Navy blue, beige, and khaki green&#13;
slacks are all a vital part of a&#13;
collegiate wardrobe. Corduroy is&#13;
also excellent, in similar colors.&#13;
McGregor is a good brand for&#13;
slacks, Lee is a good brand for&#13;
corduroy.&#13;
Leather shoes, preferably&#13;
brown.&#13;
Finally, I want to stress that a&#13;
collegiate wardrobe is bought in&#13;
stages, not all' at once. A shirt&#13;
here, a sweater there, a pair of&#13;
slacks, and so on. When you buy&#13;
something, consider how it will fit&#13;
with the rest of your clothes, what&#13;
you can wear it with, and how&#13;
easily it will match with clothes&#13;
you buy in the future. Consider the&#13;
wardrobe as a whole, not as a&#13;
collection of separate pieces. Buy&#13;
clothes that look and feel sturdy&#13;
and durable - don't buy clothes&#13;
made from cheap or inferior&#13;
materials - they may be less expensive,&#13;
but in the end not as good&#13;
a buy. It is possible to look good&#13;
for cheap, but one has to shop&#13;
carefully. Impulse buying is not&#13;
the way to buy clothes - shop&#13;
around, look for sales, and you&#13;
should do well.&#13;
Wustum Museum Happenings&#13;
t&#13;
The Racine Art Association&#13;
announces the Artist - of - the -&#13;
Month in the Art Sales and Rental&#13;
Gallery, the Mini Gallery at the&#13;
Wustum Museum in Racine.&#13;
Continuing through March 20 will&#13;
be a display of th e work of Gisela&#13;
Magdalena Moyer of Green Bay.&#13;
Moyer received her B.A. degree&#13;
in Art from the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Green Bay. She has&#13;
exhibited in: Wisconsin '80 at UW -&#13;
Stevens Point, winning an award,&#13;
and Wisconsin '81, Rahr - West&#13;
Museum, Manitowoc, winning an&#13;
award. Her pieces have been&#13;
displayed at the Wustum in&#13;
Watercolor Wisconsin '80 and '82,&#13;
Wisconsin Fibers 1981 and Fishing&#13;
Lure / Fishing Lore summer 1982.&#13;
Moyer will display handmade&#13;
paper constructions that include&#13;
folding, dying and painting. All&#13;
works can be purchased or rented. HEY PARKSIDE..&#13;
Wednesday* Ladies Night at f Nei0 Musfc&#13;
the Legion Bar, with Mixed Drinks 25 G* n (&#13;
LIVE MUSIC is BACK! J Buzzcock's 'Going Steady' is punk at it's best&#13;
EXCALIBER 1&#13;
Fri.-Sat. Feb. 18 &lt;5c 1 9 ^&#13;
•&#13;
Enjoy God's Country&#13;
with Style.&#13;
d;&#13;
On Tap&#13;
at Union Square&#13;
by John Kovalic&#13;
As I take up pen once more for&#13;
the New Music column, I am indebted&#13;
to Professor Wayne&#13;
Johnson for his invaluable help in&#13;
screwing up my whole concept of&#13;
beauty and asthetic judgement.&#13;
Though I cannot recommend his&#13;
class (Philosophy 101) to o highly,&#13;
if h e fails to clear up the issue by&#13;
Wednesday I'm thinking of&#13;
becoming a monk and moving to&#13;
Tibet.&#13;
Enough of introductions, and&#13;
back to the philosophy lecture.&#13;
Taking a private subjectivist point&#13;
of view, if you like this sort of&#13;
thing, this is the sort of thing you'll&#13;
like. From an objectivist or&#13;
asthetic intuitionist point of view,&#13;
they probably don't possess the&#13;
simple, indefinable non - natural&#13;
quality called beauty, but they are&#13;
damn good at what they do.&#13;
Finally, from the cultivated taste&#13;
standpoint, if you don't like them&#13;
now, give it a shot anyway, so you&#13;
can at least try to gain some&#13;
breadth of exposure in this particular&#13;
area of perceptive experience.&#13;
(All long sentences @ 1983&#13;
Wayne Johnson)&#13;
The Buzzcocks&#13;
Singles - Going Steady&#13;
This is the first true punk - rock&#13;
group I've reviewed in this&#13;
column. At the moment, back in&#13;
the U.K., there is great debate as&#13;
to whether punk is dead or not. (If&#13;
it isn't dead, it is certainly very&#13;
ill.) While listening to "Going&#13;
Steady," you can see what made&#13;
the punk rock movement so attractive&#13;
in the first place. The&#13;
album is an amazing collection of&#13;
singles which the Buzzcocks,&#13;
headed by lead singer - frequent&#13;
songwriter Pete Shelly, released&#13;
during the heyday of Britain's new&#13;
musical revolution.&#13;
Be warned. This is not the&#13;
prissy, cute 'New Wave' of The&#13;
Human League, The Police, or&#13;
The Culture Club. This is Punk at&#13;
its most violent anarchist best.&#13;
This is short, nasty, and brutish.&#13;
This is not a record you would&#13;
want to play at your sister's&#13;
confirmation party.&#13;
and numerous other songs of&#13;
theirs stand now as highlights of&#13;
the whole movement.&#13;
However, the best on the album&#13;
is without a doubt, the near&#13;
masterpiece, "Ever Fallen in&#13;
Love?" If you really want to&#13;
annoy your neighbors or just be&#13;
Side one opens with "Orgasm&#13;
Addict." This was, of course, their&#13;
first single in the U.K. and&#13;
possesses all the subtlety of Frank&#13;
Zappa on a bad day. "You're&#13;
sneaking in the back door with&#13;
your dirty magazines / and your&#13;
mother wants to know what all&#13;
those stains are on your jeans /&#13;
you're an orgasm addict." Etc.&#13;
etc. Accompanied by appropriate&#13;
grunts and groans.&#13;
However, Shelly soon learned&#13;
that to reach even a punk&#13;
eudience one has to be a tad more&#13;
subtle. From this philosophy,&#13;
some of the best power punk of the&#13;
late seventies and early eighties&#13;
emerged.&#13;
"Promises," "I Don't Mind,"&#13;
generally obnoxious, crank&#13;
sucker up. You'll blow them au&#13;
The album, though marrec&#13;
places and ultimal&#13;
monotonous, is great for&#13;
casional listening and for dam&#13;
at a new wave / punk party. H&#13;
with "Going Steady," is a con&#13;
history of punk rock in a sii&#13;
album. So, for those of you&#13;
want something which is not c&#13;
not overproduced, is ma&#13;
violent, and extremely powei&#13;
pick up a copy. An added boni&#13;
its' size (sixteen singles) and&#13;
price (less than five doll;&#13;
making it excellent value for&#13;
money.&#13;
Overall then, three out of 1&#13;
***&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 17,1983 7&#13;
Men's Wrestling&#13;
Muckerheide Brains plus Brawn&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
Mike Muckerheide is a 20 year&#13;
old junior with a double major of&#13;
Computer Science and Business.&#13;
He came to Parkside from West&#13;
Bend, and has several major,&#13;
achievements in his wrestling&#13;
career, including being a two -&#13;
time All American. He also holds&#13;
the school records for most&#13;
reverals and most near falls in a&#13;
career, with a career record of 78-&#13;
30. His season record thus far is&#13;
29-8, with 9 pins.&#13;
Mike, in his 9th year of&#13;
wrestling, said, "I started&#13;
wrestling because in 7th grade,&#13;
guys are always fighting and a lot&#13;
of m y buddies went out for it too.&#13;
Plus, I was a little guy back then."&#13;
At Kimberly High School, Mike&#13;
went to the State Championships&#13;
in his junior year, but didn't place.&#13;
In his senior year he fared much&#13;
better. Going to State with a&#13;
record of 29-0, he placed 3rd. He&#13;
finished that season with a record&#13;
of 32-1.&#13;
"I really wanted to take State&#13;
that year," Mike said. "I wanted&#13;
that really bad." Mike felt that&#13;
was the major disappointment of&#13;
his career.&#13;
After high school, Mike came to&#13;
Parkside and wrestled at 158 his&#13;
freshman year. He dislocated his&#13;
shoulder one month prior to&#13;
Nationals. "I thought I was gonna&#13;
get killed at Nationals because I&#13;
could hardly move it," he said. He&#13;
made All American though,&#13;
taking 6th.&#13;
In his sophomore year, Mike&#13;
was an All Amerccan once again,&#13;
this time he took 7th.&#13;
Mike feels that there isn't just&#13;
one person who has helped him the&#13;
most during his wrestling career.&#13;
"It's really hard to say," he said.&#13;
"My high school coach, Mr. Jerry&#13;
Zieger, helped a lot. If it wasn't for&#13;
him, I probably would have gone&#13;
out. He and Coach Koch both&#13;
helped a lot. They're both really&#13;
good guys."&#13;
This year, Mike has spent most&#13;
of th e season wrestling at 158 lbs.&#13;
35 of his matches have been at that&#13;
weight, while he's wrestled 1&#13;
match at 167 an d another at 150.&#13;
Now he has gone down to the&#13;
next weight class, which is 150 and&#13;
will probably finish out the season&#13;
there. To keep in shape during the&#13;
off - season, Mike works on a&#13;
construction crew with his father.&#13;
"I've been doing that since I was&#13;
about 13, and I used to think that&#13;
was all I needed to do to stay in&#13;
shape for wrestling, but it wasn't,&#13;
so I started lifting weights too."&#13;
Mike doesn't let his wrestling&#13;
take a toll on his schooling. As&#13;
Head Coach Jim Koch says,&#13;
"Mike is not only a good wrestler,&#13;
but he is an excellent student as&#13;
well. He's the classic example of&#13;
the student - athlete. He takes both&#13;
his wrestling as well as his&#13;
studying equally serious."&#13;
but an outstanding athlete as well.&#13;
Coach Koch feels that Mike meets&#13;
both criteria. "He is 100%&#13;
dedicated and just a pleasure to&#13;
coach."&#13;
Another trait that Koch says&#13;
impressed him about&#13;
Muckerheide is his personality.&#13;
"When the team travels to meets&#13;
or tournaments," Koch said,&#13;
"Mike kind of acts as an 'Ambassador&#13;
of Goodwill.' He's very&#13;
friendly and he will go up to and&#13;
talk to everyone."&#13;
Mike is easy to get to know and&#13;
is very easy going. He was voted&#13;
co - captain along with teammate&#13;
Mike Vania, and while Vania&#13;
leads vocally, Muckerheide does&#13;
most of his leading by example.&#13;
He has high character and is intelligent&#13;
as well as very&#13;
dedicated.&#13;
"One thing that I really enjoy&#13;
about Mike," says Koch, "is his&#13;
loyalty. He speaks well of his past&#13;
associates, and is very positive&#13;
about everything. As a coach I can&#13;
appreciate that he will speak well&#13;
of our school and our program.&#13;
"Mike seems to have everything&#13;
going for him and I'm certain that&#13;
he'll be a big success in whatever&#13;
he chooses to do in the future."&#13;
"THE EPITOME of student -&#13;
athlete."&#13;
Muckerheide, who has a&#13;
cumulative GPA of 3.5, has been&#13;
nominated by Coach Koch for the&#13;
NAIA Academic All American. To&#13;
be nominated, a student - athlete&#13;
must have at least a 3.0 GPA,&#13;
written statements from faculty,&#13;
coaches, and counselors, and be&#13;
not only an outstanding student,&#13;
The Fascination of f encing&#13;
by Carol Kortendick&#13;
"On guard," yelled the fencing&#13;
director. The fencers prepared&#13;
themselves for yet another bout as&#13;
I, a curious spectator, walked in.&#13;
Like many, I was baffled by the&#13;
men and women cavorting around&#13;
the floor waving swords about, yet&#13;
captivated by their grace and&#13;
agility.&#13;
I watched fascinated but still&#13;
puzzled when suddenly I&#13;
recognized a familiar face who I&#13;
secretly hoped would divulge the&#13;
many facets of the game to me.&#13;
The information given proved that&#13;
fencing is a well diversified sport&#13;
demanding quick wits, speed, and&#13;
endurance.&#13;
There are three different fencing&#13;
weapons, the epee, the sabre&#13;
and the foil. Each requires&#13;
specific skills and rules to defeat&#13;
the opponent. The weapons are&#13;
chosen by the player's build and&#13;
ability, plus they must use only&#13;
one weapon per match. Basically&#13;
the object of all three is to jab the&#13;
opponent in their designated&#13;
targets. Rest assured, the fencers&#13;
don't play for blood and guts, only&#13;
for points.&#13;
The foil appeared the least&#13;
demanding with its medium&#13;
ranged target and overall&#13;
required skill. The game is&#13;
electrically monitored with a&#13;
button at the tip of th e blade. The&#13;
fencer must thrust his sword in&#13;
the opponent's torso area, though&#13;
it's not quite that easy.&#13;
While the fencer is trying to&#13;
attack the other player, he must&#13;
also contend with the whims of his&#13;
opponent. Thus while trying to&#13;
score himself, he must also ward&#13;
or parry off the defending sword&#13;
of his opponent. He must be&#13;
careful not to hit the areas other&#13;
than the torso, or a foul will be&#13;
called. To further complicate the&#13;
game, the fencer must press the&#13;
sword with enough pressure to&#13;
score. There are two male and two&#13;
female foilists on the Parkside&#13;
team and they are holding their&#13;
own fairly well.&#13;
The epeeist is quite similar to&#13;
the foil yet slight differences&#13;
change the game completely. This&#13;
game is also electrically&#13;
monitored for scoring purposes,&#13;
but the pressure needed for&#13;
scoring is far greater for the epee.&#13;
The target is the entire body,&#13;
which might lead you to believe it&#13;
would be easier to gain points. The&#13;
opposite, however, is true, making&#13;
the game more intense and difficult&#13;
because the fencer has to&#13;
ward off a ttacks coming from all&#13;
areas looking for loopholes to&#13;
score.&#13;
Coach Loren Hein said that he&#13;
tries to pick taller persons for the&#13;
epee knowing they have a greater&#13;
advantage over their opponents.&#13;
This sport not only calls for&#13;
quickness but also for good&#13;
physical attributions.&#13;
The sabre is unlike the other two&#13;
in many respects, almost placing&#13;
it in quite another category of&#13;
fencing. It doesn't use electrical&#13;
hook-ups, calling for the need for&#13;
five different judges. The game is&#13;
more aggressive. The other two&#13;
weapons have specific boundaries&#13;
while the sabre has none; thus it&#13;
covers more territory.&#13;
The game is not timed (as with&#13;
the other two) but lasts approximately&#13;
a minute and a half.&#13;
It's a fast paced match and as&#13;
aspiring freshman fencer Greg&#13;
Sharpe said, "It's a highly intellectual&#13;
game."&#13;
Fencing is a very single minded&#13;
game concentrating solely on&#13;
individual work, yet every fencer&#13;
frequently hears these four words&#13;
— mobility, timing, quickness,&#13;
and endurance. With these words&#13;
in mind, fencing can only be&#13;
referred to as a complicated and&#13;
invigorating game. Parkside's&#13;
team has proved its skill by&#13;
placing in the NCAA leagues,&#13;
competing only against top -&#13;
notched teams such as Notre&#13;
Dame and Wayne State.&#13;
THIS THURSDAY&#13;
following the&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
vs&#13;
Lewis University&#13;
basketball game&#13;
-ccccccccoooocco:&#13;
STONE OAK&#13;
^SOOOSOCOSCOOSO&amp;SCCQOSOSr&#13;
Bluegrass, Newgrass Western Swing&#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;
J&amp;'' C3'1&#13;
RANG ~D£Z/M:£S~&#13;
collegiate crossword (Solution on Page 4)&#13;
1 2 3 4&#13;
5 1 18&#13;
6 7 8 9 1 19&#13;
10 11 12 13&#13;
14 15 16&#13;
17 20 'h 22 | 23 24 25 ' III 26 27 28 29 30 31 l 32 33&#13;
1&#13;
34&#13;
35&#13;
36 • 37 38 40 41&#13;
42&#13;
43 44 • 45&#13;
46&#13;
47 • 48&#13;
49 50 ffl 52 53 54&#13;
55 1 56 57 1 58&#13;
59 60 62 63 16 4&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 M*A*S*H cha racter&#13;
6 Biblical brother&#13;
10 Nothing else than&#13;
14 Greek marketplace&#13;
15 Marceau, for one&#13;
16 Item used by Tom&#13;
Watson&#13;
17 Beautiful&#13;
20 Another item used&#13;
by Tom Watson&#13;
21 Remuneration&#13;
22 Do housework&#13;
23 Actress Virginia&#13;
24 Raconteur's forte&#13;
26 S .E. Asians&#13;
29 From th e world's&#13;
highest country&#13;
32 General Bradley&#13;
33 Tanks, etc.&#13;
34 Actress Charlotte&#13;
36 Strict attention to&#13;
details&#13;
40 Compass point&#13;
41 Appraiser&#13;
42 Me d school course&#13;
(abbr.)&#13;
43 Subject of "Nanook&#13;
of the North"&#13;
45 Tampico f are&#13;
47 Israeli VIP&#13;
48 Cross out&#13;
49 Pons or Peters&#13;
51 Christmas&#13;
52 Suffix meaning&#13;
footed&#13;
55 In a cowardly way&#13;
59 Neat as&#13;
60 Excited&#13;
61 Wall street event&#13;
62 Suffix meaning&#13;
without&#13;
63 Chess piece&#13;
64 Locations&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Lost in delight&#13;
2 Chills and fever&#13;
3 Ford's running mate&#13;
4 de Triomphe&#13;
5 City in New Jer sey&#13;
6 Friend, in another&#13;
language&#13;
7 Occlusion of one's&#13;
teeth&#13;
8 Flightless bird&#13;
9 Conducted&#13;
10 " in G"&#13;
11 Greek Cupid&#13;
12 Defeat soundly&#13;
13 Pulver's rank&#13;
(abbr.)&#13;
18 Slangy sunshine&#13;
19 Loafers&#13;
23 Painter Chagall&#13;
24 Indonesian isle&#13;
25 Leigh Hunt hero&#13;
26 Be sa d&#13;
27 Entertain&#13;
28 Bowling establishment&#13;
29 Assays&#13;
30 Emile Griffith's&#13;
domain&#13;
31 Like Fred Allen's&#13;
speaking voice&#13;
33 Illinois city&#13;
35 This: Sp.&#13;
37 Of a social unit&#13;
38 Nureyev movie,&#13;
" Dancer"&#13;
39 Questionnaire&#13;
item&#13;
44 Actors Tighe and&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
45 Ball club&#13;
46 Metes&#13;
48 Condescend&#13;
49 Swindle&#13;
50 Goddess of&#13;
fertility&#13;
51 Weather outlook&#13;
52 Pre-college entrance&#13;
exam&#13;
53 Kind o f shoppe&#13;
54 Works with hair&#13;
55 " Joey"&#13;
56 Sports distance&#13;
57 Turkish title&#13;
58 Psychic Geller&#13;
Thursday, February 17,1983 RANGER&#13;
SPORT NEWS&#13;
Men's Wrestling&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
The Men's Wrestling team had a&#13;
very good weekend in Wheaton,&#13;
111. They participated in the&#13;
Wheaton Invitational on Feb. 11 &amp;&#13;
12, and placed 2nd out of 26 teams.&#13;
The Rangers wereoutscored by&#13;
only 8 points.&#13;
Six of the Ranger wrestlers&#13;
placed at the tournament. They&#13;
were: Todd Yde (167) - 2nd, Mike&#13;
Winter (142) - 3rd, Ted Keyes&#13;
(177) - 3rd, Mike Muckerheide&#13;
(150) - 4th, Brian Irek (190) - 5t h,&#13;
and Mike Vania (126) took 1st and&#13;
was also named "Outstanding&#13;
Wrestler" of the tournament. This&#13;
was Vania's 41st victory.&#13;
Coach Jim Koch commented,&#13;
"It was a good team performance.&#13;
It shows we have a very well&#13;
balanced team."&#13;
On Tuesday, Feb. 15, the team&#13;
went ^gainst the Marquette&#13;
Warriors. According to Coach Jim&#13;
Koch, "It's a really interesting&#13;
rivalry. We are 7-4 against the&#13;
Warriors (going into this meet). It&#13;
promises to be very interesting&#13;
and I look for the score to be&#13;
pretty close."&#13;
Coming up on Friday, Feb. 18,&#13;
Parkside will host the Midwest&#13;
Sport Shots&#13;
Regionals. There will be some&#13;
really good competition from the&#13;
nine schools competing which&#13;
include four schools from&#13;
Missouri, two from Minnesota,&#13;
and two from Illinois. Said Coach&#13;
Koch, "This will be one of the&#13;
most important ones that we've&#13;
wrestled, because it will determine&#13;
who'll have chances of going&#13;
to Nationals. I would realistically&#13;
have to say that we have 4-6 guys&#13;
who have a very good c hance of&#13;
qualifying."&#13;
Soccer School&#13;
Parkside will be the site for one&#13;
of eight National Coaching&#13;
Schools sponsored by the U.S.&#13;
Soccer Federation.&#13;
The school will run July 3-9 and&#13;
will offer courses leading to A, B,&#13;
and C national licenses. The&#13;
courses will be under the direction&#13;
of Karl - Heinz Heddergott, the&#13;
USSF's recently appointed&#13;
director of coaching.&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
The Women's Track team&#13;
traveled to La Crosse to compete&#13;
in what Coach DeWitt knew would&#13;
be a tough meet. Two of the best&#13;
distance teams in the state were&#13;
also competing. La Crosse's team&#13;
size was enough to put Parkside&#13;
behind in points. They have 80&#13;
members compared to Parkside's&#13;
13 members.&#13;
Dona Driscoll was second in the&#13;
880 yard run (2:24.0). Jane&#13;
Roszykowski finished fourth&#13;
(2:28.1). Driscoll fell in the 600&#13;
yard run when an opponent fell&#13;
also.&#13;
Deb Spino showed her usual&#13;
form and no signs of the knee&#13;
problems that plagued her earlier&#13;
in the season. She finished third in&#13;
the mile (5:06.3). Michelle Gross&#13;
recorded a personal record in the&#13;
mile (5:40.6).&#13;
Sue Meyer ran even splits in the&#13;
two miles and finished in 11:22.5.&#13;
Shirley Gunther scored 2230&#13;
points in the pentathon, which&#13;
consists of the high jump, shot put,&#13;
hurdles, long jump and 880 y ard&#13;
run.&#13;
Vicki Stacy high jumped 4'10".&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
by Carra Carielfo&#13;
The Rangers pulled through this&#13;
week when they played a non -&#13;
conference game against Cardinal&#13;
Strich. They won with a score of&#13;
Luehr lets his mind wander by Robb Luehr&#13;
Hi again, sports fans. This&#13;
week's column is coming to me as&#13;
I type. Forgive me if I ramble.&#13;
As I have been following the&#13;
college basketball season, I have&#13;
noticed that having a top 20&#13;
ranking one week doesn't&#13;
guarantee that you'll be there next&#13;
week. Almost every day, a top 20&#13;
team gets knocked off. The latest&#13;
example of this happened on&#13;
Sunday night when number one&#13;
North Carolina was beaten by&#13;
number twelve Villanova in the&#13;
last seconds. This has been typical&#13;
of this year in college basketball.&#13;
No less than four teams have been&#13;
number one this year, including&#13;
Virginia and North Carolina. The&#13;
teams in the center of the top 20&#13;
have been changing so much, you&#13;
need two weeks to catch up.&#13;
The NBA All - Star game was&#13;
played last Sunday. The East All -&#13;
Stars led by Julius (Dr. J) Erving&#13;
and the Bucks' Sidney Moncrief,&#13;
beat the West All - Stars, 132-123.&#13;
Dr. J was named the MVP of the&#13;
game, an award he also won in&#13;
1977. It had to be hard to pick any&#13;
one player to win, because of the&#13;
caliber of players in the game.&#13;
I consider the NBA fans the&#13;
most objective in their voting for&#13;
the players to be in the game.&#13;
They seem able to forget&#13;
hometown loyalties and vote for&#13;
the best players available. When&#13;
baseball fans pick their all - star&#13;
teams, they stuff the ballot boxes&#13;
with the local team's members,&#13;
not caring if they're the best, just&#13;
so they can see their own team&#13;
there. Every year, better players&#13;
are slighted in favor of someone&#13;
who had maybe one good season,&#13;
but the rest of the time is&#13;
mediocre, at best.&#13;
The Marvelous One did it again.&#13;
Marvin Hagler cruised through&#13;
another fight defeating Tony&#13;
Sibson of Great Britain on a TKO&#13;
in the 6th round, last Friday night.&#13;
This sets up a title match in May&#13;
between Hagler and Wilford&#13;
Scypion, who earned a shot by&#13;
beating Frank (The Animal)&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY KAREN!! DC&#13;
GIRL who pinched me Monday night —&#13;
PLEASE REPEAT. Poor Tom&#13;
TORI: The rabbit died. Better stock up on&#13;
Pampers!&#13;
UNCLE CHARLIE — smile, I love you.&#13;
Gomer Pyle&#13;
PSGA INC: Thanks for the feud, the blood,&#13;
and the volleyball. PAB&#13;
JEANNIE, TERRY AND INGRID: I'll bring&#13;
you back some sailors from Baltimore.&#13;
RED, KREUSER, CHAZ, LOU &amp; STEVE&#13;
MERTZ: I'll bring you back crabs. Miss&#13;
Mel! Hugs and Kisses, Chrissie&#13;
CHRIS H. Happy Valentines Day — I love&#13;
you!!&#13;
CNH — My place, 7:00 Saturday. The prime&#13;
rib and Asti Spumante are waiting!! The&#13;
future JMH&#13;
FELIZ CUNPLEANO JUAN .. . Happy Birth&#13;
day John . . . Heureux Anniversaire Jon!!&#13;
TONY BROWN BAND — Back in town again,&#13;
Fri., Feb. 25th. Don't miss them. Maxa J.P.&#13;
Bar and Lounge, 2148 R acine Street.&#13;
DO J A — I hope you're feeling better soon!&#13;
Your Friend Karen&#13;
KAREN . . . Happy birthday to an old friend,&#13;
happy birthday to a good friend. Lunch next&#13;
week. Pat&#13;
MOLLY: Hi from Polly, Dolly's sister from&#13;
Pinkerston. Been trying to run into you here&#13;
on campus, but you've been running too&#13;
fast. Polly&#13;
— The meatballs and sauce always&#13;
make the day. Pat&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY to a friend who is always&#13;
fun to be with. Happy Birthday Molly!!&#13;
ED: I miss you and love you. Red&#13;
ED: I'm insanely jealous. Lou&#13;
MOLLY: Psych of PA can surely prove to be&#13;
an "A" investment for you. You're pretty&#13;
adjusted. Ed&#13;
MOLLY: I'm watching you. Ed&#13;
MOLLY: Blanche was in to say hello, but you&#13;
weren't in, so I left. Blanche&#13;
MARCI AND CHRISSIE: I still miss you&#13;
down in Ranger. Hope you had fun in&#13;
Baltimore. What did you bring me?&#13;
Sports Trivia&#13;
Baseball card collecting was a&#13;
national pasttime in the '50s.&#13;
Although its popularity has&#13;
diminished somewhat, the value&#13;
of some cards has risen greatly in&#13;
recent years. The five most&#13;
valuable cards are:&#13;
1. Shortstop Homus Wagner. His&#13;
card is worth $1,500. It was issued&#13;
in 1910 by Sweet Caporal, a&#13;
tobacco company. The card was&#13;
printed without Wagners' permission&#13;
and he requested that it&#13;
be withdrawn. Only 96 got in&#13;
circulation; 30 still remain.&#13;
2. Pitcher Eddie Plank's card is&#13;
worth $1,000. It was issued in 1910&#13;
by Sweet Gaporal. 30 s till exist.&#13;
3. Second baseman Nap Lajoie's&#13;
is worth $800. Issued in 1933 b y&#13;
Goudey Gum Company, 50 still&#13;
exist.&#13;
4. Pitcher Grover Lowdermilk's&#13;
card is worth $200. Issued in 1910&#13;
by the Bradley Tobacco Company,&#13;
100 still exist.&#13;
5. Pitcher Art Houteman's card&#13;
is worth $100. I ssued in the mid&#13;
'50s by the Dormand Company,&#13;
the precise year is disputed. Only&#13;
one is known to exist.&#13;
— Taken from The Book of Lists&#13;
by D. Wallechinsky, Irving&#13;
Wallence and Amy Wallence&#13;
105-63. The three top scorers this&#13;
game were Chuck Burrell with 16&#13;
points, Vince Hall with 15, and&#13;
Brian Diggins with 11.&#13;
The Rangers will be very busy&#13;
again this week. On Tuesday, Feb.&#13;
17, they will take on Milwaukee&#13;
(at Milwaukee). Thursday, Feb.&#13;
19 they will play against Lewis&#13;
University here at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Saturday they will go against&#13;
Northern Michigan in an away&#13;
game.&#13;
Guard Vince Hall commented,&#13;
"These next three schools are&#13;
tough teams, and Coach Johnson&#13;
will be really disappointed if we&#13;
lost."&#13;
The Rangers can win all three&#13;
games, because they do have the&#13;
skills and drive needed. It's just a&#13;
matter of pulling it all off.&#13;
Women's Basketball&#13;
The Women's Basketball team&#13;
won last Saturday over Silver&#13;
Lake College of Manitowoc, 80-79.&#13;
Although the score is close, it is&#13;
deceiving, as every member on&#13;
the squad was able to score.&#13;
Jeanne Jacobs was the high&#13;
scorer with 19 points. Laurie Pope&#13;
and Cindy Ruffert both scored 17&#13;
points.&#13;
The victory improved the&#13;
women's record to 11-10.&#13;
The team plays games head - to&#13;
- head this weekend. Friday night&#13;
the team will play Green Bay, and&#13;
Saturday afternoon the team&#13;
faces Oshkosh. Both games are&#13;
away.&#13;
The next home game is&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 22. The team goes&#13;
against Milwaukee at 7 p.m.&#13;
Fletcher on a 12 round unanimous&#13;
decision. Fletcher was supposed&#13;
to meet Hagler later, but Bob&#13;
Arum, the fight's promoter,&#13;
promised that Scypion could fight&#13;
in May if he beat Fletcher. It&#13;
should be a good battle but I don't&#13;
think anyone, including Scypion,&#13;
has a chance to beat Hagler. He is&#13;
probably the best boxer in any&#13;
weight class at the present time.&#13;
In golf news, Isao Aoki became&#13;
the first Japanese player to win a&#13;
PGA tour event as he won the&#13;
Hawaiian Open Tournament by&#13;
one shot over Jack Renner. Aoki&#13;
holed a 128 yard shot for an eagle&#13;
to avert a playoff with Renner.&#13;
The victory was worth $58,500 to&#13;
Aoki. His final score was a 20 -&#13;
under - par 268.&#13;
Sports Shots Spots: Billy Martin&#13;
is still manager of the Yankees&#13;
.. .S hergar, the kidnapped horse,&#13;
is still missing as of this writing.&#13;
The horse, winner of the English&#13;
and Irish derbies, is worth $18&#13;
million. The owners have offered&#13;
a 5 - figure reward for the return&#13;
of the horse ... Pete Peeters,&#13;
Boston Bruin and former&#13;
Milwaukee Admirals goalie, is one&#13;
game shy of the NHL record for&#13;
the longest unbeaten streak . . .&#13;
Shirley Muldowney won the Top&#13;
Fuel Dragster event at the NHRA&#13;
Winternationals in Los Angeles;&#13;
she now has won 16 NHRA titles,&#13;
second only to Don Garlits' 21&#13;
victories.&#13;
Sports Calendar&#13;
WOMEN'S TRACK&#13;
Feb. 19, Saturday. Milwaukee.&#13;
Away.&#13;
MEN'S TRACK&#13;
Feb. 19, Saturday. Oshkosh.&#13;
Away.&#13;
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
Feb. 18, Friday. Green Bay.&#13;
Away, 7 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 19, Saturday. Oshkosh&#13;
Away, 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 22, Tuesday. Milwaukee.&#13;
Here, 7 p.m.&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL&#13;
Feb. 17, Thursday. Milwaukee.&#13;
Lewis University. Here, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 19, Saturday. N. Michigan.&#13;
Away, 2 p.m.&#13;
MEN'S WRESTLING&#13;
Feb. 18, Friday. NCAA II&#13;
Midwest Regionals. Here.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Feb. 19, Saturday. Detroit.&#13;
Away.&#13;
^/^Universify of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
IYTQNA BEACH SPRING BREAK&#13;
'83&#13;
MARCH&#13;
11-20 FtOR 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 M.CHIGAN • INDIANA UNIV.&#13;
. S0UTHERN ILLINOIS&#13;
• MIAMI OF OHIO • NORTHERN ILLINOIS&#13;
Signup Deadline Temporarily Extended!&#13;
HURRY!&#13;
FOR APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION, ROOM209 — 553-2200&#13;
• • • • •&#13;
Thursday, February 17, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Job Hunting&#13;
Motivation:&#13;
Your best weapon&#13;
Dart Team loses first match&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: College&#13;
students rarely get a chance to&#13;
hear the employer's side of the&#13;
hiring story. Many employers, in&#13;
fact, feel that college graduates as&#13;
a whole are not adequately&#13;
prepared to enter the job market.&#13;
In this series Ranger staffer&#13;
Kathy Rayburn will be talking&#13;
with area employees, employers&#13;
and job counselors, to find out&#13;
what they" expect from college&#13;
graduates. She begins her series&#13;
by talking about goals and&#13;
motivation.&#13;
by Kathy Rayburn&#13;
Have you ever had the opportunity&#13;
to talk to the president&#13;
of the company you some day&#13;
hope to work for? Do you realize&#13;
the advantage of knowing what he&#13;
is looking for in potential employees?&#13;
While it is true that the&#13;
hiring is rarely done by the&#13;
president, it is true that his goals&#13;
and expectations are known by&#13;
those who do have this responsibility.&#13;
These expectations&#13;
provide the guidelines for the&#13;
personnel in charge of hiring.&#13;
Fortune 500 companies rarely&#13;
consider anyone for employment&#13;
unless they are in the top 10&#13;
percent of their graduating class.&#13;
(I am not refering to janitors, they&#13;
are exempt.) Obviously not&#13;
everyone can be in the top 10&#13;
percent of their class, unless I&#13;
missed some kind of new math&#13;
along the way. You need more&#13;
than a degree to get the position&#13;
you desire.&#13;
How is your attitude fairing?&#13;
What is your concept of self?&#13;
Pat Moran, with the Kenosha&#13;
Manufacturers and Employers&#13;
Association, puts it this way:&#13;
"... an employer can't motivate&#13;
a person to be self disciplined.&#13;
You must discipline yourself to&#13;
be motivated."&#13;
You must show an employer&#13;
that you are already capable of&#13;
attaining specific goals that you&#13;
set for yourself. Employers&#13;
choose college graduates because&#13;
they, hopefully, are well educated.&#13;
They are supposed to know more&#13;
because they have studied the&#13;
"subject" in greater depth. But&#13;
it's also true that by spending all&#13;
of this time and money to pursue&#13;
higher education students display&#13;
their ability to set goals. It is in&#13;
graduating that we show that we&#13;
can reach our goals. You see, it is&#13;
not just what you know, but how&#13;
you know it.&#13;
Have you taken on tasks that&#13;
weren't necessary? Do you&#13;
volunteer your time and talents to&#13;
civic organizations? Do you spend&#13;
your free time learning more&#13;
about your future profession? In&#13;
general, do you spend your time&#13;
wisely? These are questions that&#13;
you should ask yourself. The&#13;
answers will help you to determine&#13;
your level of self - discipline&#13;
and motivation.&#13;
Let's assume you have answered&#13;
the question of discipline.&#13;
Are you also a highly motivated&#13;
individual? Perhaps more importantly,&#13;
are you satisfied with&#13;
your present level of motivation?&#13;
If you aren't, then you had better&#13;
be content with whatever success&#13;
you manage to run across, or train&#13;
your brain to reach higher.&#13;
Because unless you are lucky,&#13;
only those of you who are&#13;
motivated to reach goals will be&#13;
assured of success.&#13;
If you set your goals too low you&#13;
won't really be content with the&#13;
results. If you set your goals high&#13;
and fail to reach the standards you&#13;
aspired to, perhaps you are still&#13;
better off for having stretched.&#13;
For heavens sake, don't spend&#13;
your time collecting college&#13;
credits, assuming a job will be&#13;
their waiting for you. If you read&#13;
or watch the tube you must know&#13;
that it takes more than a sheepskin&#13;
to make it nowadays.&#13;
Close your eyes and ask yourself&#13;
— am I working towards a specific&#13;
goal? Have I made a plan and am&#13;
I working my plan? Can I learn to&#13;
hone my skills of self - discipline&#13;
and motivation, thereby&#13;
capitalizing upon my assets and&#13;
reaching for full potential?&#13;
Basically, learn to know&#13;
yourself. Can you change what&#13;
you don't like and live with the&#13;
rest? You are a success if you are&#13;
happy. And happiness is knowing&#13;
what you want in your life and how&#13;
you go about getting it.&#13;
Through this series of interviews&#13;
with local business&#13;
persons it is hoped you will be&#13;
more in tune with the expectations&#13;
of future employers.&#13;
Whether you intend to stay in&#13;
your area after graduation is&#13;
irrelevant. What is important is&#13;
that you gain some insight as to&#13;
how the employer thinks.&#13;
What is the business community&#13;
looking for in you, the college&#13;
graduate?&#13;
CRACKING&#13;
A&#13;
TOUGH&#13;
JOB $ MARKET&#13;
A workshop sponsored by&#13;
Career Planning &amp;&#13;
Placement Office&#13;
Wed., Feb. 23&#13;
1:00 - 2:00&#13;
MOLN D-137&#13;
Leader&#13;
Mr. Rodger DeRose&#13;
Manager, US New Business,&#13;
S.C. Johnson Company&#13;
by Nick Thome&#13;
The Parkside Dart Team versus&#13;
the La Crosse Dart Team.&#13;
On Feb. 12 at 6 p.m., the&#13;
Parkside Dart Team did battle&#13;
with the La Crosse Dart Team.&#13;
Both teams entered nine players.&#13;
The competition was run in three&#13;
stages, the preliminary, the individual,&#13;
and the team events. In&#13;
the preliminary, each team entered&#13;
four players. In the individual&#13;
event, each team entered&#13;
its five best players.&#13;
The team round was played by&#13;
the same five people from the&#13;
individual round, except now the&#13;
five had to play as if they were one&#13;
and the number of points required&#13;
to go out had been raised from 301&#13;
to 1001.&#13;
Parkside did not fair well in the&#13;
preliminary round. Three out of&#13;
four Parkside players lost their&#13;
matches. Parkside's only win was&#13;
registered by John Kovalic in a&#13;
very tight match. The score at this&#13;
point was UWLDT 3 - UWPDT 1.&#13;
The individual match saw a turn&#13;
of events. Parkside's lead - off&#13;
player, Pete Martineau, beat his&#13;
opponent two games straight. The&#13;
second Parkside dart slinger,&#13;
Nick Thome, did the same to his&#13;
opponent. The third and fourth&#13;
Parkside players, Amy McCarthy&#13;
and Todd J. DeMint, were&#13;
defeated in matches that went&#13;
three games. The Parkside anchor&#13;
player, Mark Santkuyl, won&#13;
his first game on a double bullseye&#13;
and went on to win his match two&#13;
out of three. The score at the end&#13;
of the second stage was Parkside&#13;
13 - UWL 11.&#13;
The team event was the turning&#13;
point of the match. La Crosse&#13;
doubled in first with a double 6.&#13;
Parkside's Nick Thome was next&#13;
up and doubled in, on his second&#13;
dart, on a double 11, the race was&#13;
on. Parkside got to 38 before La&#13;
Crosse broke 100. In the end,&#13;
however, La Crosse came from&#13;
far behind and got out on a 20&#13;
followed by a double 12.&#13;
In a post shot statement to all&#13;
around, the La Crosse player&#13;
stated "That was luck." Luck or&#13;
not the final score was La Crosse&#13;
26, Parkside 13. Sometime this&#13;
spring, La Crosse is coming to&#13;
play in the UW - Parkside Open&#13;
Invitational Dart Tournament. We&#13;
hope the students of Parkside will&#13;
turn out to see their Dart Team&#13;
seek revenge.&#13;
1RI A I DI A I R&#13;
F1RF1QH&#13;
oooscooscooossoeoe&amp;scoe&#13;
Help Prevent&#13;
Birth Defects -&#13;
The Nation's&#13;
Number One&#13;
Child Health&#13;
Problem.&#13;
Support the&#13;
Match of&#13;
imes BIRTH DEFECTS&#13;
FOUNDATION&#13;
This space contributed&#13;
by the publisher&#13;
di&gt;D * BUT&#13;
THE PARKSIDE DART TEAM competed in the UW - System's&#13;
first - ever dart match. Parkside lost, but the team expects to do&#13;
better at a rematch this semester.&#13;
How's the semester going?&#13;
Peer Support will present an&#13;
open forum "How's the Semester&#13;
Going?" on Thursday, Feb. 17 at 1&#13;
p. m. and again in the evening at 7&#13;
p. m. in MOLN 111. The program&#13;
is an opportunity for students to&#13;
get together and discuss their&#13;
experiences this semester at&#13;
Parkside. It is designed primarily&#13;
for new students, but anyone is&#13;
welcome to attend.&#13;
The film, "The Time of Your&#13;
Life," will be shown during the&#13;
program. Dealing with the&#13;
problems of managing time, the&#13;
film shows how to make the most&#13;
of a busy schedule.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 17&#13;
BREAKFAST SEMINAR at 7:45 a.m. in Union 106. Prof Russell&#13;
Fenske of UW - Milwaukee will talk on "Using Computers in&#13;
Managing Human Services." Call ext. 2518 for reservations&#13;
"2iC?,ard P^°r: "f..0" Sunset StriP" wiI1 shown at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission at the door is $1 for a Parkside&#13;
student and $1 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB. Parkside&#13;
Friday, Feb. 18&#13;
MOVIE "Richard Pryor: Live on Sunset Strip'&#13;
p.m. and at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
CONCERT MENC student compositions at 8 p.m in CA D-11R The&#13;
concert is free and open to the public. U U8" lhe&#13;
will be repeated at 1&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 20&#13;
Xfo™aUonY ^ ^ StarUng a' " a m' CaU 6Xt 2446 for i".&#13;
WINE TASTING starts at 7 p.m. in Main Place. Proceeds will benefit&#13;
the Alumni Annual Scholarship Fund Tickets and&#13;
available at the Union Information Center rese™tions are&#13;
MOVIE "Richard Pryor: Live on Sunset Strip" will be reneated at 7-m&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema. repeated at 7.30&#13;
Monday, Feb. 21&#13;
MAd^S!^on^s $HoaIshldenK^rrf°rivii^ 7 P"m" in the Uni°"&#13;
stSSSS by PAB and Chlldren undCT 13 and $2 for others.&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 p.m. in Union ina a j&#13;
Lillian Trager will talk on "ContemDorarv Prnhip ^mParJ?. .*).&#13;
pines." The program is free and open to the public. P"&#13;
Wednesday, Feb 21&#13;
SEMINAR "Readings From a NovpI in p™ » u ^ ,&#13;
• s s s a s s rKrt a f i -*—1 "Pen to the public.Call ext. 2452 for moreiLrmXr3"1 'S """</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 11, issue 19, February 17, 1983</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text> Student publications</text>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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      <name>schlitz brewery</name>
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