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            <text>Demonstration gathers support for Seybold</text>
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            <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Teaching evaluations valuable&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee&#13;
of the faculty Senate is&#13;
currently studying the results of a&#13;
survey begun last fall to determine&#13;
student and faculty opinion&#13;
for reducing the frequency of&#13;
teaching evaluations to once&#13;
every three years. The survey&#13;
indicates that while most favor&#13;
maintaining the frequency of&#13;
evaluations, there is a desire to&#13;
reduce the amount of p aper work&#13;
the evaluations create. In addition,&#13;
the subject of peer&#13;
evaluation is under study.&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
Donald Kummings, head of the&#13;
Committee, said, "The survey&#13;
revealed that there is more&#13;
sentiment for keeping teaching&#13;
evaluations every semester." He&#13;
said, though, that the results were&#13;
difficult to assess, because some&#13;
were filled out by divisions, and&#13;
some by individuals.&#13;
"There was some interest in&#13;
cutting down the number of&#13;
forms," he added. The teaching&#13;
evaluations create thousands of&#13;
documents every semester, which&#13;
must be tabulated, and most&#13;
people recognize the need to&#13;
reduce the amount of p aper work&#13;
involved.&#13;
The PSGA Senate passed a&#13;
resolution several weeks ago&#13;
supporting the practice of&#13;
evaluating faculty members each&#13;
semester. The resolution, introduced&#13;
by David Schroeder,&#13;
states that the concept of shared&#13;
governance requires that students&#13;
have as much input into the&#13;
faculty selection as possible.&#13;
Schroeder is the Senate's&#13;
representative on the Committee.&#13;
Schroeder said that the&#13;
response was "overwhelming" for&#13;
the maintenance of the present&#13;
practice. "The need for student&#13;
evaluations is much stronger than&#13;
the need to reduce paperwork," he&#13;
said.&#13;
The survey asked, in addition,&#13;
what form the teaching&#13;
evaluations should take, and if&#13;
there was any support for a&#13;
system of peer evaluation for&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
Dwayne Olsen, an associate&#13;
professor of teaching, said that&#13;
the problem was "a two - edged&#13;
sword," because of the need to&#13;
decrease paperwork, and the need&#13;
to maintain current teaching&#13;
evaluations, which are the&#13;
primary source of information&#13;
regarding teaching used in faculty&#13;
selection decisions.&#13;
"It's something we have to&#13;
come to grips with," he said, and&#13;
added that it was very important&#13;
to have information on a teacher,&#13;
especially when the instructor&#13;
was coming up for tenure. Student&#13;
evaluations of professors are very&#13;
important, he said, but "student's&#13;
responses may not be accurate,"&#13;
due to conditioning from taking&#13;
tests.&#13;
Kummings agreed, saying that&#13;
he found in his classes that the&#13;
later in the semester an&#13;
evaluation is administered, the&#13;
lower the scores tend to be. He&#13;
said the students get tired of&#13;
filling out evaluations.&#13;
In evaluating the survey, the&#13;
committee found that most of&#13;
those questioned favored each&#13;
division having their own&#13;
evaluation format, but that it was&#13;
desirable to have two or three&#13;
standard questions on each for&#13;
every division.&#13;
Peer evaluation of t eaching is a&#13;
Demonstration gathers&#13;
support for Seybold&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Last Tuesday afternoon a group&#13;
of students and community&#13;
members held a demonstration to&#13;
protest the Behavioral Science&#13;
Division Executive Committee's&#13;
decision to deny a one year contract&#13;
extension to associate&#13;
professor of sociology Peter&#13;
Seybold.&#13;
Roger Bybee, editor of the&#13;
Racine Labor, spoke briefly&#13;
during the demonstration. He said&#13;
that while he was not well versed&#13;
in Seybold's performance as a&#13;
teacher and researcher, he "was&#13;
really moved by what I heard&#13;
down here in terms of testimony,"&#13;
from other persons testifying at&#13;
the renewal hearings.&#13;
Marie Marten, a research&#13;
assistant of Seybold's, said, "I feel&#13;
we've been totally ignored. The&#13;
people here are our employees."&#13;
She said it was wrong for Parkside&#13;
to consider research more important&#13;
than teaching.&#13;
When asked, Seybold said that&#13;
he didn't believe the student's&#13;
protest would have any effect on&#13;
the administration, but he was&#13;
encouraged by their concern. "I&#13;
feel that it is good to the extent&#13;
that students are participating in&#13;
the process as much as they can."&#13;
particularly sensitive area,&#13;
Kummings said. "Peer evaluation&#13;
is called for," he said, "but it's not&#13;
done." UW-System guidelines call&#13;
for teaching evaluation by peers,&#13;
but Parkside has not made a&#13;
practice of i t in the past.&#13;
Peer evaluation is a controversial&#13;
area, because of&#13;
possible abuses of the system.&#13;
Many instructors are against&#13;
having other faculty members&#13;
attending their classes. Also,&#13;
there is the possibility of&#13;
favoritism playing a role in the&#13;
evaluation process.&#13;
"People tended to favor the&#13;
present practice," Kummings&#13;
said. More investigation is needed&#13;
before any guidelines are implemented.&#13;
The Committee, he&#13;
said, is not prepared to make a&#13;
decision at this time, because of&#13;
the complications involved. "The&#13;
more it was tossed around, the&#13;
less it seemed like a good idea,"&#13;
he added.&#13;
The survey was originated last&#13;
summer. Kummings said that it&#13;
has been several years since&#13;
teaching evaluation practices&#13;
have been reviewed, and the&#13;
committee wished to get an idea of&#13;
opinion before it made any&#13;
proposals.&#13;
A SHOWING of creations by Sidney Murphy, on display In Main&#13;
Place: Imminent Conceptions In Black Art: The Mind's Eye —&#13;
An Exercise in Balance. "The Business of Black Survival" Is the&#13;
theme of Black History Month, being observed during February&#13;
Fine arts festival&#13;
entries available&#13;
Entry forms are available for&#13;
an outdoor summer Fine Art&#13;
Festival at Parkside to be held&#13;
August 28 under sponsorship of the&#13;
UW-Parkside Alumni Association.&#13;
Entry forms and slides for the&#13;
juried show, which will accept&#13;
entries in 12 different categories&#13;
of fine art, are due April 1. Artists&#13;
will be notified of acceptance by&#13;
May 1. More than $600 in prizes&#13;
will be awarded.&#13;
Jurors will be Douglas DeVinny&#13;
and David Holmes of th e Parkside&#13;
art faculty and two art alumni,&#13;
Vicki Kalcic of Kenosha and Rita&#13;
Van Alkemade of Racine. Judges&#13;
will be Bruce Pepich, director of&#13;
Wustum Museum of Fine Arts in&#13;
Racine, and Lisa Englander,&#13;
Racine painter and printmaker.&#13;
A similar show last year at&#13;
Parkside had 110 artists participating&#13;
and drew an attendance&#13;
of about 6,000. Sp onsors say the&#13;
space available can accommodate&#13;
additional artists meeting jurors'&#13;
standards.&#13;
Artists are invited to submit&#13;
entries in the following&#13;
categories: painting, sculpture,&#13;
fiber, clay, metal, glass, printmaking,&#13;
photography, leather,&#13;
wood, paper and drawing.&#13;
Application forms are available&#13;
from the Parkside Alumni&#13;
Association, WLLC D-173, or by&#13;
phoning 553-2452.&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan up and coming&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan a la Carte,&#13;
a touring troupe of six lyric artists&#13;
serving up song and satire from&#13;
such G &amp; S favorites as "Pirates of&#13;
Penzance" and "H.M.S.&#13;
Pinafore" will present the final&#13;
program in the 1982-83 Accent on&#13;
Enrichment series at Parkside at&#13;
8 p.m. on Tuesday, March 8, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Tickets are $8 each ($5 for UW-P&#13;
students) and are available in&#13;
person or by mail from the&#13;
Campus Union Information&#13;
Center. Master charge is&#13;
available (Phone 553-2345).&#13;
Established in 1967 by p roducer&#13;
- director Allan Lokos, Gilbert and&#13;
Sullivan a la Carte has won&#13;
consistent praise for its acting,&#13;
dancing, comic timing and singing&#13;
as a series of the nation's most&#13;
promising young artists have won&#13;
rave reviews for their staged and&#13;
costumed production.&#13;
The repertoire for their current&#13;
tour includes more than 16&#13;
numbers and draws on 42 roles&#13;
from 13 G &amp; S operettas: "Trial by&#13;
Jury," "The Mikado," "Ruddigore,"&#13;
"Yeomen of th e Guard,"&#13;
"Pirates of Penzance,"&#13;
" Pa t i en c e , " " I o l a n t h e , "&#13;
"Pinafore," "Princess Ida," "The&#13;
Grand Duke," "Utopia&#13;
Unlimited," "Pineapple Poll" and&#13;
"The Gondoliers."&#13;
Long the symbol of things&#13;
British, Gilbert and Sullivan&#13;
productions are enjoying a&#13;
Renaissance in the U.S.&#13;
Universal Studios has just&#13;
released a $10 million film version&#13;
of Joseph Papp's Broadway hit&#13;
musical "Pirates of Penzance"&#13;
with Linda Ronstadt as Mable, the&#13;
role she played on Broadway, and&#13;
Kevin Kline repeating his role as&#13;
the Pirate King. The movie&#13;
version opened in theaters across&#13;
the country on Friday (Feb. 18).&#13;
In the van of the movement,&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan a la Carte&#13;
(with Lokos as its later day&#13;
D'Oyly Carte) has been delighting&#13;
audiences of dedicated Savoyards&#13;
and G &amp; S novices alike across the&#13;
country. They have appeared with&#13;
a number of U.S. and Canadian&#13;
symphony orchestras, at major&#13;
art and music festivals and in&#13;
university and civic music series.&#13;
Critics' notices have consistently&#13;
praised both their SQIO&#13;
and ensemble work, frequently&#13;
noting their precision of dic tion in&#13;
the patter songs, G &amp; S's ultimate&#13;
challenge to the artist.&#13;
A New York critic saluted the&#13;
ensemble as "a troupe perfectly&#13;
matched to the miracles of Gilbert&#13;
and Sullivan." "A veritable love&#13;
feast of song and satire with every&#13;
word clear and true," said the&#13;
Nashville Banner. The Columbus&#13;
(Ohio) Citizen - Journal called it&#13;
"two hours of sheer enjoyment by&#13;
six incredibly talented and extraordinarily&#13;
polished performers."&#13;
And the Augusta&#13;
(Georgia) Herald extolled: "One&#13;
of th e most enjoyable evenings of&#13;
music and theater that this city&#13;
has ever experienced."&#13;
SUPPORTERS OF SEYBOLD rallied in Main Place.&#13;
Inside . . .&#13;
• Letters to the editor&#13;
• Nine candidates for PSGA seats&#13;
• New Music&#13;
• Ghandi review&#13;
• Weight loss&#13;
Thursday, February 24,1983 RANGER&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Analysis of 'Social interaction' inaccurate&#13;
To the ET7» dJ:i tor:. .. .&#13;
This is in response to the&#13;
recently published article in the&#13;
Think Piece column entitled&#13;
"Defining the 'Final Frontier,' "&#13;
authored by Mr. B.R. Preston.&#13;
Mr. Preston's analysis of social&#13;
interaction among the different&#13;
segments of society does accurately&#13;
depict the current status&#13;
of many of us. All we need to do is&#13;
to look at the situations in areas&#13;
such as Ireland, Central and South&#13;
America, Poland, Asia, and our&#13;
own nation to find examples of&#13;
ignorance based on non - understanding.&#13;
People do prejudge&#13;
others; people do disclaim others'&#13;
beliefs and ideas when those ideas&#13;
and beliefs are dissonant with&#13;
their own; and people CAN be&#13;
"God - awful" cold — IF THEY&#13;
WANT TO BE.&#13;
Your international experience&#13;
sounds commendable, Mr.&#13;
Preston, but your domestic interactions&#13;
lack desirability. Who&#13;
is to blame because you do not&#13;
know your neighbors and your&#13;
associates in academia? Are&#13;
"they" to blame, Mr. Preston?&#13;
NO, they aren't. Not all of us "go&#13;
through each day looking the&#13;
other way when a stranger&#13;
(passes by)." Some of us do make&#13;
a concerted effort to smile and&#13;
acknowledge those strangers, and&#13;
some of us do try to make&#13;
another's day just a little bit&#13;
better.&#13;
Strike up a conversation with&#13;
your neighbor or with your&#13;
classmates Mr. Preston, and your&#13;
pessimistic view of the "Final&#13;
Frontier" will quickly dissipate. If&#13;
you do not know your associates,&#13;
then how can you know if y ou'll be&#13;
able to live with them, moreover,&#13;
you might find that you cannot&#13;
live without them. This kind of&#13;
effort does not require a large&#13;
expenditure of energy and its&#13;
rewards are priceless. After all,&#13;
Mr. Preston, a friend is a stranger&#13;
you have not met yet.&#13;
Mark H. Elliott&#13;
P.O.Box 236&#13;
Bates College&#13;
Lewiston, Maine 04240&#13;
X-rated film inappropriate&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I wish to make it clear at once&#13;
that I am writing as a private&#13;
individual and not as a&#13;
spokesperson for any group.&#13;
I am dismayed at the decision of&#13;
PAB to include an x-rated film in&#13;
the film series this spring. Since I&#13;
am not a student, you may well&#13;
tell me that it is none of my&#13;
business what PAB does with the&#13;
portion of student segregated fees&#13;
allotted to the film series. True!&#13;
But I have been a teacher for a&#13;
long time and I still feel the urge&#13;
to speak out when I believe&#13;
mistakes have been made or injustice&#13;
done.&#13;
I do not consider my objection to&#13;
the showing of x-rated films on&#13;
campus a matter of censorship.&#13;
Neither I nor any other person&#13;
here has the authority to forbid&#13;
PAB to show an x-rated film. To&#13;
me, the decision of PAB to offer&#13;
such a film is basically a matter of&#13;
poor judgment, and I urge a more&#13;
thoughtful evaluation of films to&#13;
be presented. About half the&#13;
student population of UWP is&#13;
female. Is it appropriate to show&#13;
films which degrade, humiliate,&#13;
and insult half the population,&#13;
which perpetuate the myth of the&#13;
female as a mindless seductive&#13;
body to be the plaything of the&#13;
male?&#13;
Those supporting the PAB&#13;
selection will surely say that those&#13;
who don't want to see an x-rated&#13;
film don't need to attend. But I can&#13;
respond just as quickly that since&#13;
such films are readily available&#13;
off campus, those who want to see&#13;
them can do so any day of the&#13;
week. Student fees do not need to&#13;
be spent providing what is immediately&#13;
available elsewhere.&#13;
Three members of PAB attended&#13;
a meeting of a committee&#13;
to which I belong. I was first&#13;
surprised, then appalled, when&#13;
they stated that the x-rated film&#13;
was, among other things, a money&#13;
maker. I had been naive enough to&#13;
believe that a film series on a&#13;
college campus was not a money -&#13;
making proposition. I had&#13;
assumed the purpose was to&#13;
provide educational and entertaining&#13;
films, both old and new,&#13;
at a convenient place and at a low&#13;
price for the college community.&#13;
Is it really necessary to show&#13;
films of little or no redeeming&#13;
educational / social value as a&#13;
money raiser?&#13;
If there is any group in our&#13;
society that ought to respect the&#13;
dignity and worth of all human&#13;
beings, it is a college community&#13;
where intellectual inquiry is&#13;
valued. To encourage and perpetuate&#13;
a demeaning portrait of&#13;
women is inappropriate to an&#13;
intelligent society; to use the fees&#13;
of the student body to present an&#13;
inaccurate and debasing view of&#13;
women is, in my opinion, highly&#13;
inappropriate to a college society.&#13;
Thanks for letting me say my&#13;
piece!&#13;
Stella C. Gray,&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
Student's interest is strong point&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
It's always nice to see a student&#13;
who has a cause, somewhere on&#13;
campus, a concern that they feel&#13;
right about fighting for. There are&#13;
a number of students involved in&#13;
the Student Government here, and&#13;
even though they don't always all&#13;
agree on a particular subject, they&#13;
meet certain goals as a whole&#13;
function within the Parkside&#13;
community.&#13;
The members of the various&#13;
other clubs and major&#13;
organizations also meet on a&#13;
somewhat regular basis to define&#13;
and meet certain goals they have&#13;
set as whole groups. When&#13;
something positive happens as a&#13;
result of their efforts, they have&#13;
good reason to be pleased with&#13;
their accomplishments. On this&#13;
campus, as on many others&#13;
throughout the world I'm sure,&#13;
there are those few students who&#13;
focus on certain subjects not as&#13;
members of a large group, but as&#13;
individuals.&#13;
On February 10, the Ranger&#13;
printed a story about Regina&#13;
Rademacher, a student at&#13;
Parkside fighting to save the open&#13;
primary in Wisconsin. Put the&#13;
primary issue aside, and the&#13;
secondary issue becomes that she&#13;
is a student who has taken the&#13;
time to find a cause and work with&#13;
it, to fight for it. Good for her!&#13;
There are other students on this&#13;
campus who have taken the time&#13;
to note the things about the&#13;
campus that they would like to see&#13;
changed. One student has even&#13;
stood on her own to oppose the&#13;
showing of X-rated films. At this&#13;
point, I'm not making any&#13;
judgement on a film being shown&#13;
this campus, rather, I'm just&#13;
pointing out that it is a good thing&#13;
that someone had concern to take&#13;
a stand and point out to various&#13;
people on this campus that she&#13;
does not approve of the showing of&#13;
a film of this type. There are&#13;
concerned students on this&#13;
campus, people with genuine&#13;
concerns about basic things. Some&#13;
of them are willing to take a stand,&#13;
even on their own at first.&#13;
The point is not to get everyone&#13;
on campus suddenly upset or&#13;
outraged about any random&#13;
subject on campus, but rather if&#13;
you have a problem with&#13;
something, to speak up about it, to&#13;
speak out about it, and see what&#13;
can be done. The response won't&#13;
always be "NOTHING." Even if it&#13;
does mean standing alone for a&#13;
cause, that doesn't mean you&#13;
shouldn't take that stand, or be&#13;
that individual.&#13;
Schroeder announces candidacy&#13;
Think Piece&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
Writing this column is an event I&#13;
often look forward to. However,&#13;
last week I shirked my responsibilities&#13;
and didn't deliver. My&#13;
excuse is a common one: Winter&#13;
Carnival. Yes, ladies and gentlemen,&#13;
last week I slurpped jello&#13;
(a dying art), sacrificed my own&#13;
blood, dressed like a moron,&#13;
played a competitive sport in the&#13;
snow (which was more like ice),&#13;
made an ugly banner (which&#13;
placed), painted an uglier window,&#13;
consumed unprecedented&#13;
amounts of alcohol, and had one of&#13;
the best times of my life. But no&#13;
column.&#13;
What made me feel even guiltier&#13;
was the fact that so many of you&#13;
had written letters or stopped me&#13;
in the halls to talk about the&#13;
column. I appreciate the input and&#13;
look forward to more. So, in order&#13;
to make it up to you, here's two&#13;
short Think Pieces this week.&#13;
» * *&#13;
I set out to explore a topic for&#13;
this week's column when a&#13;
devastating tragedy struck my&#13;
Take time; we're poor&#13;
family. A relative had died&#13;
unexpectedly. On my way into the&#13;
library Sunday night a friend&#13;
stopped me to say that a mutual&#13;
friend of ours was going into the&#13;
hospital Monday for open heart&#13;
surgery.&#13;
So here I sit; pen in hand trying&#13;
to sort things out. On my way to&#13;
this desk I passed two close&#13;
friends. They were exhausted&#13;
from studying and asked me to&#13;
cheer them up. After a few&#13;
minutes they were laughing and I&#13;
was feeling at ease just being with&#13;
them.&#13;
Then I arrived at this desk. Next&#13;
to me sat the person who gives me&#13;
support by making me stand on&#13;
my own. And I realized, it's not&#13;
what you've got but what you do&#13;
with it that really counts.&#13;
I can exist for 20 years but if I&#13;
never share the first day of Spring&#13;
with a friend; the awe - taking&#13;
clusters of snow flurries with a&#13;
class; a reality - rocking hang -&#13;
over with a classmate; or a&#13;
depression with someone close,&#13;
then have I really lived?&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
My name is David Schroeder,&#13;
and I am announcing my candidacy&#13;
for the office of PSGA&#13;
President. I have very strong&#13;
feelings as to the way a student&#13;
government should work on a&#13;
campus such as our own. At this&#13;
time, PSGA is headed in that&#13;
direction, but is also running into&#13;
obstacles. These obstacles are, by&#13;
no means, insurmountable. Under&#13;
the right leadership, they can be&#13;
reduced drastically. I feel that I&#13;
am the right person to do that job.&#13;
Besides being a PSGA Senator,&#13;
Chair of the Legislative Affairs&#13;
Committee and on several&#13;
Faculty Committees, I am the&#13;
Vice Chair of the Student&#13;
Organizations Council, which, I&#13;
feel, is a sort of a barometer for&#13;
the opinion of the student&#13;
population. Through this office, I&#13;
have heard different thoughts&#13;
from almost all the different&#13;
groups of students on this campus.&#13;
I have also learned about the&#13;
budgeting process that the&#13;
University uses.&#13;
Most of all, I think it is very&#13;
important that the student&#13;
population makes a truly informed&#13;
decision as to who is the&#13;
person to represent them for the&#13;
next full year. Therefore I urge&#13;
you to attend the debate of the&#13;
candidates that the Ranger is&#13;
sponsoring. Also feel free to talk to&#13;
me at any one of the following&#13;
phone numbers: 553-2244, 553-2594,&#13;
694-0719.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
David Schroeder&#13;
A few weeks ago I urged you to&#13;
take the first step and say hello.&#13;
Now I'm asking you to take it&#13;
further. You've got to walk; to run&#13;
together. You've got to let people&#13;
know what they mean to you while&#13;
you can. Don't make plans for a&#13;
lunch next week, share a sunset&#13;
today.&#13;
• * *&#13;
Our second topic is less on the&#13;
humanistic side, leaning more&#13;
toward being food - for - thought.&#13;
As a matter of fact, it is about food&#13;
and notebooks and beer. Put your&#13;
thinking caps on. You have some&#13;
numbers coming your way. Our&#13;
Food service charges 60c for a&#13;
hamburger, 70C for a&#13;
cheeseburger, and 99c for a fish&#13;
while McDonald's charges 55C,&#13;
60C, and 84c for the items&#13;
respectively. The food service&#13;
charges 40c for bagels and english&#13;
muffins which can be purchased&#13;
in bags of s ix for about 89c retail.&#13;
They charge 45C for two pieces of&#13;
raisin toast which may be purchased&#13;
for around $1.07 per loaf&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#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;
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;
c. A1 STAFF&#13;
RY,tn°JL du-.,Terj7 Byr"e' Maureen Burke, Jeanne&#13;
KwhmLV ii-Pu' C,arra Carie,,°' Patricia Cumbie, Dan&#13;
Dowhower, Michael Kailas, Carol Kortendick, John&#13;
NNaanpoo lpeaann S«c arbK roughu,r ' JeRnonbieb TuLunekhierc, z. Kathy Rayburn,&#13;
uw parkside and ,hey are soieiy&#13;
WriHP ER iS Primed by ,he UnVoT?Cwper^fve'p/hr r^XCep* dUrin9 breakS 3nd holidayS'&#13;
i ten permission is required for reorint nt * ubl|shing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed•« £V ?or,ion of RANGER.&#13;
Letter's to Wisconsin ST Ra"9er' Universi,y &lt;* WisconSin&#13;
P3P-T on® inch nwglns^S^enerVm^kT' doublespaced on standard size&#13;
ctoded for verification. " let,ers must be signed and atelephone number Indefemf?&#13;
a" edi,orial privileges3^3 reU.'Jnn ?ub,ica,ion on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. n refuS'ng to print letters which contain&#13;
Grossman to speak&#13;
on nuclear cover-up&#13;
New Vnrlr . H„ i _ .&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 24, 1983&#13;
inveTtilTk ' 1)386(1 author and&#13;
rw»t e reP°rter Karl&#13;
S5S5R- wlU present a lecture&#13;
Mot c °ver " up: What You Are&#13;
NuclearPpSed &gt;!° Kn°W About&#13;
nuclear Power" at the Union&#13;
Wednesday&gt; Mar. 2 at 7&#13;
P-m. The program is $2 for the&#13;
general public; $1.50 for Parkside&#13;
fvan hi' Advance tickets are&#13;
available at the Union Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
Grossman is the author of a&#13;
book with the same title as his&#13;
slide - illustrated lecture and of&#13;
another book, "The Poison&#13;
Conspiracy," which deals with&#13;
toxic chemical poisons, their&#13;
manufacturers and government&#13;
regulatory agencies.&#13;
WSMTSTvan m neWS anch0r °n&#13;
WSNL-TV in New York and his&#13;
reportage is syndicated in many&#13;
New York area papers. He has&#13;
been producer - host of his own&#13;
weekly TV program, "Karl&#13;
Grossman Reports," and has&#13;
written for such magazines as the&#13;
Columbia Journalism Review, In&#13;
These Times, Environmental&#13;
Action and Mother Jones.&#13;
Grossman says he obtained&#13;
many of the government&#13;
documents and photographs&#13;
Parkside scholarship&#13;
applications available&#13;
Applications for Parkside&#13;
scholarships are now being accepted&#13;
for the 1983 - '84 school&#13;
year. Nine scholarships in all&#13;
totalling $2,400 are being awarded&#13;
to continuing students. The&#13;
scholarships are:&#13;
Joan M. Esser — One $400&#13;
scholarship, awarded on the basis&#13;
of need, scholarship and interest&#13;
in ecology. Applicant must have&#13;
completed 30 - 90 credits at the&#13;
time of application.&#13;
Kenneth L. Greenquist — Two&#13;
$250 scholarships, based on need&#13;
and scholarship. Applicant must&#13;
have completed 75 - 105 credits..&#13;
Bernard C. Tallent - Four $250&#13;
scholarships, based on scholarship,&#13;
need and service. Applicant&#13;
must have completed 60 - 90&#13;
credits.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie — Two $250&#13;
scholarships, based on scholarship&#13;
and need. Applicant must&#13;
have 75 - 105 credits completed.&#13;
Application forms can be picked&#13;
up at the Library / Learning&#13;
Center Information desk, the&#13;
Main Place Information Kiosk,&#13;
the Union Information Desk and&#13;
all divisional offices. The deadline&#13;
for application is Friday, Mar. 11,&#13;
1983.&#13;
Earth Science major&#13;
to get name change&#13;
by Sharron Aken&#13;
The Earth Science Discipline&#13;
has requested that its name be&#13;
changed to Geology.&#13;
"We have been thinking of&#13;
changing the name since October&#13;
of '81. We weighed all the pros and&#13;
cons and decided it would be best&#13;
to change the name," said A.F.&#13;
Schneider, Earth Science Coordinator.&#13;
"The most pertinent reason for&#13;
the name change is that is would&#13;
simply reflect more clearly the&#13;
character of the faculty." said&#13;
Schneider. Homer Knight, Science&#13;
Division Chairman, agrees&#13;
saying, "The change would reflect&#13;
the present interest of the staff."&#13;
The Earth Science staff is trained&#13;
in the area of Geology, and conducts&#13;
their research on Geology&#13;
related topics.&#13;
In addition, the Earth Science&#13;
department feels that the image of&#13;
the program will be improved by&#13;
this change. Particularly it will&#13;
influence entering students and&#13;
their parents in view of the tarnished&#13;
and degrading connotation&#13;
that "earth science" conveys in&#13;
the local high schools.&#13;
"Of even greater importance is&#13;
the probability that would accrue&#13;
to our majors, especially&#13;
graduating seniors who seek&#13;
employment in industry. Employers&#13;
seek geologists, not earth&#13;
scientists," said Schneider.&#13;
Students who inquire about a&#13;
geology program are told that&#13;
Parkside does not offer a geology&#13;
major, only an earth science&#13;
major.&#13;
Another important factor is that&#13;
several parts of the earth science&#13;
program, notably the environment&#13;
concentration, are not&#13;
being serviced, principally&#13;
because the former meteorology&#13;
position has been abolished, and&#13;
the program no longer has the&#13;
services of many faculty members,&#13;
who in the past contributed&#13;
much to this facet of the program.&#13;
In order to establish this change&#13;
it had to first be passed by the&#13;
Science Division Executive&#13;
Committee. The requested change&#13;
was passed by the committee on&#13;
Oct. 20,1982. Then the change had&#13;
to be passed by the Academic&#13;
Planning and Program Committee.&#13;
The APPR Committee, at&#13;
it's meeting on Dec. 1, 1982,&#13;
recommended approval of the&#13;
requested name change. Then, the&#13;
request is to be passed by the&#13;
UWP Faculty Senate for final&#13;
approval. The meeting of the&#13;
Senate took place Feb. 22, 1983.&#13;
"The only reason I feel that the&#13;
Senate would have had for not&#13;
passing the change, would have&#13;
been that they might feel it would&#13;
retain the broad area," said&#13;
Knight.&#13;
"I feel that the Senate would&#13;
have had no reason at all for not&#13;
passing the change. In fact, I&#13;
would have been very surprised if&#13;
it didn't pass," said Schneider.&#13;
The change from Earth Science&#13;
to Geology will be established in&#13;
the new fall semester catalog.&#13;
Students should note, however,&#13;
that no courses are being dropped&#13;
due to this change.&#13;
Nine candidates seek president,&#13;
vice president seats&#13;
KARL GROSSMAN, author of&#13;
the book, "Cover - up: What&#13;
You Are Not Supposed To&#13;
Know About Nuclear Power,"&#13;
will appear in the Union&#13;
Cinema Wednesday.&#13;
under the U.S. Freedom of Information&#13;
Act.&#13;
Grossman has received a&#13;
number of awards for his&#13;
reportage including the George&#13;
Polk award, one of the highest&#13;
honors in U.S. journalism, and has&#13;
been a journalism faculty&#13;
member at the State University of&#13;
New York at Old Westbury.&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
There are currently six students&#13;
vying for the position of President&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. These candidates&#13;
are John Monks, Jeanne&#13;
Buenker - Phillips, Phillip&#13;
Pogreba, Pat Ramsdell, Dave&#13;
Schroeder and Masood Shafiq.&#13;
The election will be held on March&#13;
9 and 10.&#13;
John Monks is 21 years old and&#13;
majoring in Economics and&#13;
Political Science. He has played&#13;
soccer at Parkside for three years&#13;
and works in the Union building&#13;
Monks ran unsuccessfully in last&#13;
year's election as a write - in&#13;
candidate for vice president. If&#13;
elected President, Monks wants to&#13;
straighten out the office, increase&#13;
communication between students&#13;
and the government, and concentrate&#13;
on the concerns of the&#13;
students.&#13;
Marty Rheome, 25 years old, is&#13;
running with Monks for the office&#13;
of vice - president. Rheome, came&#13;
to Parkside in 1976. He then went&#13;
to the University of Minnesota in&#13;
Minneapolis, worked in a factory,&#13;
and has experience with lower&#13;
management at a company in&#13;
Montana. Rheome returned to&#13;
Parkside in 1981 to complete his&#13;
double in Business and Applied&#13;
Computer Science.&#13;
Jeanne Buenker - Phillips, a 19&#13;
year old Communication major, is&#13;
a presidential candidate. Phillips&#13;
has been a PSGA senator since the&#13;
summer of 1981. She has been&#13;
active as the United Council&#13;
Election&#13;
rules&#13;
announced&#13;
Petitions for the upcoming&#13;
PSGA elections are due tomorrow,&#13;
Friday, Feb. 25. They must&#13;
be turned in to an Elections&#13;
Committee member in the PSGA&#13;
office in WLLC D-139A. Any&#13;
person interested in running for&#13;
president, vice president, senate,&#13;
SUFAC or the Union Advisory&#13;
Board who has not turned in a&#13;
petition can still run as a write - in&#13;
candidate. All write - in candidates&#13;
must fulfill the same&#13;
requirements as those declared&#13;
candidates for the same positions.&#13;
Candidacy must be declared in&#13;
writing and filed with the elections&#13;
committee by March 4 at noon in&#13;
order to be eligible as a write - in&#13;
candidate. Write - ins must also&#13;
file a release form with an elections&#13;
committee member. A list of&#13;
write - in candidates will be&#13;
available at the polling place.&#13;
Absentee ballots will be&#13;
available on Mar. 1 at the PSGA&#13;
office. They must be picked up&#13;
and returned in person or postmarked&#13;
by noon Wednesday, Mar.&#13;
The elections will be held&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday, Mar. 9&#13;
and 10, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. The&#13;
polls will be located on the concourse&#13;
level of Molinaro. Each&#13;
voter must be a Parkside student&#13;
in order to register a valid ballot.&#13;
Each student may vote only once.&#13;
Any contestation, complaint or&#13;
comment on the conduct of the&#13;
elections must be filed in writing&#13;
with any member of the elections&#13;
committee by Mar. 24. The&#13;
decision of the PSGA Senate will&#13;
be final and binding when dealing&#13;
with contestation or complaint.&#13;
Write Ranger&#13;
a letter !&#13;
Women's Affairs Director and&#13;
also formed the Women's Affairs&#13;
Sub - Committee at Parkside.&#13;
Phillips served as assistant Pro -&#13;
Tempore of the Senate and was&#13;
elected president Pro - Tempore&#13;
in December. She is co - editor of&#13;
the PSGA newsletter Dialogue&#13;
and a Ranger staff member.&#13;
Phillips is also vice - president of&#13;
U. W. Parkside Association of&#13;
Communicators. If elected, her&#13;
main goal is to formulate a&#13;
Minorities Affairs Committee.&#13;
Luis Valldejuli, 21 years old, is&#13;
running with Phillips for the vice&#13;
president's office. He has been a&#13;
senator for three years, was&#13;
assistant Pro - Tempore and is&#13;
currently chairman of the&#13;
Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee. Valldejuli&#13;
is a Political Science and Spanish&#13;
major.&#13;
Phillip Pogreba has been a&#13;
senator for two years. He served&#13;
on SUFAC for one and a half years&#13;
until last semester and was&#13;
president Pro - Tempore for one&#13;
year. Pogreba served on several&#13;
committees such as Academic&#13;
Progress Planning and Review&#13;
Committee, Academic Actions&#13;
Committee, Library Learning&#13;
Center Committee and the&#13;
Disciplinary Committee. He also&#13;
served on three Administration&#13;
Committees. Pogreba is 22 and&#13;
majoring in Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene.&#13;
Running with Pogreba for the&#13;
vice - presidential position is Mike&#13;
Scoon. Scoon.is currently a Justice&#13;
Academic games&#13;
and has served as a Senator and&#13;
assistant Pro - Tempore. He&#13;
served on SUFAC, Save the&#13;
Library Committee and six other&#13;
committees. Scoon is 25 years old&#13;
and is majoring in Life Science&#13;
and Pre - Med.&#13;
Pat Ramsdell is a 20 year old&#13;
business major and a presidential&#13;
candidate. He became a Senator&#13;
this fall and is currently assistant&#13;
Pro - Tempore of the Senate.&#13;
Ramsdell also served on SUFAC&#13;
and is Parkside's Academic Affairs&#13;
Representative at the United&#13;
Council.&#13;
David Schroeder, presidential&#13;
candidate, has been a Senator&#13;
since November. He is vice&#13;
chairman of SOC, chairman of the&#13;
Budget and Review Committee,&#13;
and Legislative Affairs Chairman.&#13;
He has also served on the Ad hoc&#13;
Committee to formulate SOC&#13;
guidelines, Winter Carnival&#13;
Committee and three Faculty&#13;
Committees. Schroeder feels that&#13;
SOC has become much more&#13;
concerned about the direction it is&#13;
moving in this year. The potential&#13;
candidate is 21 years old and&#13;
majoring in dramatic arts.&#13;
Masood Shafiq is 26 years old&#13;
and majoring in Management&#13;
Accounting and Computer&#13;
Science. He is a member of the&#13;
Accounting Club and Photo Editor&#13;
of the Ranger. Shafiq's goals, if&#13;
elected, are to make students&#13;
more politically aware and&#13;
allocate more funds to&#13;
professional clubs and&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The "Triple Threat" theory&#13;
of academic excellence&#13;
by Jeanne Buenker - Phillips&#13;
Like the great football players&#13;
of the past, faculty members are&#13;
theoretically "triple - threat."&#13;
Besides being good teachers and&#13;
respected scholars, they are&#13;
supposed to be good "university&#13;
citizens" as well.&#13;
Generally this latter injunction&#13;
means that faculty have a&#13;
responsibility to participate in&#13;
faculty governance, mostly by&#13;
serving on some of the many&#13;
committees which establish&#13;
policies and help the university&#13;
operate on a day - to - day basis.&#13;
Because Parkside is also a&#13;
community - based university,&#13;
faculty are also expected to&#13;
participate in community affairs&#13;
using their expertise as consultants&#13;
or putting on programs of&#13;
interest to community people.&#13;
Faculty governance really&#13;
begins at the divisional level.&#13;
Each division is governed by the&#13;
executive committee which&#13;
consists of all the tenured&#13;
members in the division presided&#13;
over by the chair who is elected by&#13;
the members of the division to&#13;
serve a one - year term. The&#13;
executive committee determines&#13;
the annual merit ratings of each&#13;
professor, makes the original&#13;
d e t e r m in a t i o n r e g a r d i n g&#13;
renewals and tenure and is&#13;
primarily responsible for the&#13;
hiring of new faculty members.&#13;
Most divisions have a number of&#13;
committees to deal with a variety&#13;
of functions such as curriculum,&#13;
budget, and personnel. The&#13;
executive committee however is&#13;
the final arbiter on all matters at&#13;
the divisional level.&#13;
At the campus - wide level,&#13;
faculty members have a wide&#13;
variety of committees to choose&#13;
from depending on their interests&#13;
and abilities. Since these bodies&#13;
set policy and make operational&#13;
decisions about every aspect of&#13;
university life, the apex of the&#13;
university government is the&#13;
Senate, which is the chief policy -&#13;
making body for the faculty. The&#13;
Senate only meets once a month&#13;
therefore the day - to - day&#13;
operation of faculty government is&#13;
handled by the University&#13;
Committee which really functions&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
Ranger&#13;
General Membership Meeting&#13;
Friday, Feb. 25 at I p .m.&#13;
in WLLC D-139 C&#13;
Current members should attend&#13;
to renew their membership.&#13;
New members welcome!&#13;
Thursday , February 24,1983&#13;
Anthro Antics&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Gina G. Sheppard - Wolthausen&#13;
In a time long ago, in a place not&#13;
far away a Shannaki spirit made a&#13;
joke about the Terrapin God&#13;
having a square back. As a result&#13;
the Shannaki spirit was cursed to&#13;
five man lives among the men&#13;
with the Keytoea spirit. This is&#13;
Folklore! But does this tale affect&#13;
anyone's life today?&#13;
According to Homer Hockett&#13;
(1938) "Legends and traditions&#13;
should be avoided .. . nothing can&#13;
be made of them of any positive&#13;
value for the simple reason that&#13;
they cannot be traced to their&#13;
origins." Today, Folklore has&#13;
been deemed as an embellished&#13;
history. The narratives are not&#13;
only told by a people about&#13;
themselves, but they also articulate&#13;
the feelings of a group&#13;
about events in their lives and the&#13;
world they live in.&#13;
The Anthro Club is pleased to&#13;
announce that our next seminar is&#13;
entitled "What Is The Folklore&#13;
Anthropology Connection''. Our&#13;
guest speaker will be Wendy&#13;
Leeds - Hurwitz who teaches&#13;
Communication at UW - Parkside.&#13;
She has her Masters in Folklore,&#13;
and is currently completing here&#13;
doctoral dissertation on the&#13;
connections between Folklore,&#13;
Anthropology, and Linguistics in&#13;
America in the 1920's.&#13;
This seminar will focus on how&#13;
Folklore is the child of both Anthropology&#13;
and Literature. Leeds -&#13;
Hurwitz will also show how&#13;
Folklore as practiced today has&#13;
synthesized the approaches of its&#13;
parent disciplines into a method of&#13;
its own.&#13;
All are invited to attend&#13;
February 28, at 4:00 p. m. in&#13;
MOLN 324 and see how an inter -&#13;
disciplinary approach can benefit&#13;
our understanding of other&#13;
peoples' legends and also our own.&#13;
To those still concerned about&#13;
the Terrapin God curse, yes it&#13;
affects some peoples lives today.&#13;
First, a terrapin is a turtle,&#13;
pronounced tar - pen in the&#13;
dialect. A Shannaki (sha-knockkey)&#13;
is a Cherokee since white&#13;
contact. A Key - tow - a is the&#13;
original Cherokee spirit when&#13;
spirits were free to roam. The five&#13;
man lives without the Keytoea&#13;
spirit curse was completed in&#13;
March of 1982. At that time the&#13;
Shannaki spirit joined with the&#13;
Keytoea spirit and they together&#13;
will return to the descendents of&#13;
the original owner in March of&#13;
1983. This has far reaching&#13;
economic, social, and moral&#13;
implications for the descendents.&#13;
CLIMB, group of actor -&#13;
educators, to appear&#13;
CLIMB, a theatrical troupe of&#13;
specially trained actor - educators&#13;
devoted to arts programming for&#13;
the disabled, will present a free&#13;
lecture - demonstration at&#13;
Parkside from 3:30 to 5 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, Mar. 1, in Union 104-106.&#13;
The program is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside unit of the Student&#13;
Wisconsin Education Association&#13;
(SWEA), which is inviting area&#13;
teachers, education, psychology&#13;
and drama students, as well as&#13;
other interested parties. The&#13;
program is planned as a prelude&#13;
to the Very Special Arts Festival&#13;
for handicapped children, held&#13;
each March on campus.&#13;
A Minnesota - based&#13;
organization, CLIMB has won&#13;
wide recognition for its pioneering&#13;
work in developing the artistic&#13;
potential of the physically or&#13;
mentally disabled, emotionally&#13;
disturbed, learning disabled,&#13;
chemically dependent and&#13;
children learning English as a&#13;
second language.&#13;
CLIMB was honored in 1981 as&#13;
the best new children's theater&#13;
company in America by the&#13;
Elect&#13;
Jeanne&#13;
Buenker-Phillip s&#13;
and&#13;
Luis Valldejuli&#13;
PSGA President and&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Vote for Jeanne and Luis #&#13;
on March 9 &amp; 10&#13;
paid advertiseme nt&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
ISO&#13;
The International Student&#13;
Organization will have a meeting&#13;
Friday, Feb. 25 at 1 p. m. in Union&#13;
106. Topics of discussion will be&#13;
ISO's dinner Party and the upcoming&#13;
election of officers. ISO ,_r\T&#13;
office hopefuls may submit their UWi L/ I&#13;
candidacy at Friday's meeting.&#13;
Club Events&#13;
subjects and America's involvement&#13;
in this highly controversial&#13;
area of the world.&#13;
There will be time for a question&#13;
and answer period. The program&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
Accounting&#13;
The Accounting Club has&#13;
started up its advising lab for all&#13;
accounting principles students.&#13;
The lab is staffed by juniors and&#13;
seniors majoring in accounting.&#13;
They are there to answer any&#13;
questions students might have&#13;
about their accounting principles&#13;
classes. The lab is open Monday&#13;
through Friday from 9 a. m. to 12&#13;
p. m. in MOLN D-133.&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
American Theater Association&#13;
through its Zeta Phi Eta award&#13;
and has also received recognition&#13;
from the National Committee /&#13;
Arts for the Handicapped and the&#13;
Minnesota Department of&#13;
Education.&#13;
The group was founded in 1975&#13;
by Executive Director Peggy&#13;
Wetli, an experienced singer and&#13;
actress and a graduate of the&#13;
University of Minnesota. Its actors&#13;
are professionals chosen by&#13;
audition, and undergo an extensive&#13;
apprenticeship training&#13;
program which teaches skills in&#13;
special education, creative&#13;
dramatics and theater.&#13;
Its programs include both&#13;
original scripts directed and&#13;
performed by CLIMB actor -&#13;
educators for child audiences and&#13;
plays written and directed by&#13;
CLIMB but performed by disabled&#13;
and able - bodied students.&#13;
Although there is no admission&#13;
charge, persons wishing to attend&#13;
are asked to make reservations by&#13;
calling the Education Division,&#13;
553-2351, to ensure adequate&#13;
seating.&#13;
The Chemistry and Physics&#13;
Clubs are visiting Argonne&#13;
National Laboratory on Mar. 5.&#13;
These government labs are the&#13;
location for research in nuclear&#13;
physics, chemistry and physical&#13;
chemistry. The tour of these&#13;
facilities will begin at noon and&#13;
last three to four hours. Buses will&#13;
leave Parkside at 10 a.m. from the&#13;
Union Bazaar. Sign up sheets are&#13;
located at GRQ 108 and 231. The&#13;
deadline is noon on Friday, Feb.&#13;
25.&#13;
Political Science&#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;
minister, and Enrique Baldonia, a&#13;
Catholic priest, will address these&#13;
This is your last chance to&#13;
volunteer for the Very Special&#13;
Arts Festival before we send the&#13;
hit men to your house. The Dart&#13;
Team needs at least five more&#13;
members to sign up as tour&#13;
guides. There will also be a Post -&#13;
Festival Feast and Party. If you&#13;
are not going to Florida, give your&#13;
time to some children who need it.&#13;
There will be another Dart Team&#13;
meeting on Monday at 1 p.m. in&#13;
MOLN 126. This may be your last&#13;
chance to save your sister's life.&#13;
Pre Med&#13;
The Pre - Med Club will be&#13;
meeting on Monday, Feb. 28 at 8&#13;
p.m. in the D-l staff lounge of the&#13;
Library. Dr. Dennis Fahey, DDS,&#13;
a graduate of the Marquette&#13;
Dental School, will discuss dentistry,&#13;
dental school, and his&#13;
recent trip to Haiti, where he&#13;
spent two weeks working with the&#13;
Red Cross. Anyone interested in&#13;
attending is welcome.&#13;
SWEA&#13;
As a prelude to the Very Special&#13;
Arts Festival, SWEA is sponsoring&#13;
a performance and&#13;
workshop by CLIMB (Creative&#13;
Learning Ideas for Mind and&#13;
Body), in Union 104-106 from 3:30&#13;
to 5 p.m. (Hi Tuesday, Mar. l.&#13;
CLIMB is a theatrical troupe of&#13;
specially trained actor /&#13;
educators devoted to arts&#13;
programming for the disabled.&#13;
The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Freshman merit&#13;
scholarships offered&#13;
A new Merit Scholarship&#13;
Program for first year students at&#13;
Parkside will be inaugurated with&#13;
next fall's freshman class.&#13;
The scholarships are based&#13;
solely on demonstrated academic&#13;
achievement in high school and&#13;
potential for continued academic&#13;
excellence at Parkside. The&#13;
awards are privately funded.&#13;
Deadline for applications is&#13;
April 1, 1983.&#13;
Most of t he scholarships will be&#13;
in the amount of $1,0 00, payable in&#13;
installments of $250 per semester&#13;
over the first two years of study at&#13;
UW-Parkside. Recipients must&#13;
maintain full - time student status&#13;
and appropriate academic&#13;
records for the four semesters to&#13;
remain eligible for the award, and&#13;
must be first - year students,&#13;
regardless of age, entering UWParkside&#13;
for the first time.&#13;
Winners of t he scholarships will&#13;
be selected by the Faculty Awards&#13;
and Ceremonies Committee. They&#13;
will be notified on or before May 2,&#13;
1983, and must indicate acceptance&#13;
by May 16, 1983.&#13;
Application forms are available&#13;
from the Awards and Ceremonies&#13;
Committee, UW-Parkside, Box&#13;
No. 2000, Kenosha, WI 53141&#13;
(Phone 553-2397).&#13;
AA/UVW»AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAArf Think Piece&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
retail. The bookstore charges&#13;
$2.39 for a three subject notebook&#13;
(150 s heets) and $1.49 for an 80&#13;
page notebook while a local&#13;
convenient store charges only&#13;
$1.28 for a 100 sheet notebook. And&#13;
we all know that the $3.00 c over&#13;
charges and 550 beers of the Union&#13;
can be undercut anywhere in&#13;
either town.&#13;
The point is not that they're&#13;
charging a few more pennies here&#13;
and there, the point is that we're&#13;
being screwed. When will this&#13;
university realize that we are&#13;
students living at or near the&#13;
poverty level? How can they&#13;
expect people living on fixed incomes&#13;
to afford these prices? If&#13;
we could, we'd all be going to&#13;
Madison or the bourgeois Ivy&#13;
Leagues!&#13;
Why does this university constantly&#13;
treat the students as&#13;
second class citizens? Why are&#13;
outside organizations always&#13;
given priority just because their&#13;
bank books host more digits than&#13;
ours? One shining example of this&#13;
school's insensitiveness towards&#13;
the students is the way that&#13;
everything closes so early. Let's&#13;
look at the following scenario: you&#13;
get out of a five hour physics&#13;
lecture at 10:00 p. m. You're&#13;
Enjoy God's Country&#13;
with Style. 4ft&#13;
thirsty and would like a beer (but&#13;
will settle for a coke). All the food&#13;
services are closed. The Rec&#13;
center is closed. The machines&#13;
(which only sell sodas) are&#13;
broken. So you either pay a $3&#13;
cover charge to get into the Union&#13;
or you go to a local bar.&#13;
How can campus life possibly be&#13;
promoted if such ridiculous&#13;
conditions are maintained? Of&#13;
course, if you can afford the $2.50&#13;
cost to see the basketball game&#13;
you can get into the dance for free&#13;
(funny the library doesn't offer a&#13;
comparable deal). If all other&#13;
refreshment facets of these institutions&#13;
are going to be cut off&#13;
then the Rec center should stay&#13;
open until 12:00 a. m. At least this&#13;
way there will be a place we don't&#13;
have to pay an admission to just to&#13;
buy a coke.&#13;
I don't know about the rest of&#13;
you, but I'm going to apply for&#13;
financial aide next semester. Just&#13;
to be able to participate in a few of&#13;
the student activities out here&#13;
(although $1000 can only go so&#13;
far). I love this school and I'm&#13;
proud of it. It's about time that the&#13;
administration stop fighting those&#13;
feelings and begin to evoke them.&#13;
""W5 CO nC u ctossi ' On Tap&#13;
at Union Square&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 24,1983&#13;
by Dave Schroeder&#13;
Kate Nelligan proves that she is&#13;
a powerful actress in the new&#13;
movie Without A Trace. In it, she&#13;
stars as a part time professor at&#13;
Columbia as well as a recently&#13;
separated wife and mother. The&#13;
story of how her child disappeared&#13;
and her painful wait for some kind&#13;
of development in the case quickly&#13;
unfolds.&#13;
This movie could have been&#13;
very cliche ridden. The mother&#13;
could have cried a lot. The police&#13;
could have been totally insensitive,&#13;
etc. But instead, it was&#13;
the exact opposite. The movie tells&#13;
us how this disappearance affects&#13;
all those involved in the case.&#13;
Judd Hirsch plays Detective&#13;
Minnetti, a veteran who begins to&#13;
fear for the safety of his son of the&#13;
same age as the missing child.&#13;
Stockard Channing plays the&#13;
mother's very concerned best&#13;
Without A Trace' leaves good impression&#13;
. friend. David Dukps ic fVlA rfiiJU . .&#13;
cue ios C ennrt combination of fear, guilt, sorrow,&#13;
These performances are what InilT ,°n etach *?rt of the&#13;
makes the movie click tE! Pcopie closely entwined in the web&#13;
The of this case is what sets this movie&#13;
apart from most movies of this&#13;
genre, which usually deal with&#13;
only one of these emotional&#13;
aspects.&#13;
Stanley Jaffe must also be noted&#13;
for his apt direction. Through his&#13;
hand we see once again that the&#13;
best movies are not the over -&#13;
dramatic ones, but instead it is the&#13;
film that is so painfully real that&#13;
&lt;fl Aeu*&#13;
grips our attention. All I'm going&#13;
to say about the ending isI w as not&#13;
totally satisfied with it. But it is&#13;
such a difficult ending to deal&#13;
with, that I for one, don't have any&#13;
suggestions as to how to make it&#13;
any better.&#13;
Nevertheless, Without A Trace&#13;
is still a very fine movie that was&#13;
written, directed, and acted well,&#13;
and is well worth seeing. It has&#13;
earned its three star rating. ***&#13;
One sad note. While sitting in&#13;
the theater watching the story&#13;
unfold, I was terribly shocked to&#13;
hear a father periodically lean&#13;
over to his son of about seven&#13;
years of age and say, "See, this is&#13;
what will happen to you if you take&#13;
a ride with strangers!" I found&#13;
this very unnecessary, and&#13;
frightening to a child of that age.&#13;
Somehow, no matter how innocent&#13;
this may seem at the time, this is&#13;
not the film to use as a&#13;
disciplinary instrument for&#13;
children, and it might be good to&#13;
be careful as t o what you say to&#13;
your kids during it.&#13;
Regency Cinema worth a look&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
I first went to the new Regency&#13;
Theaters a few weeks ago to see&#13;
'Das Boot.' I knew that Regency&#13;
had six separate theaters, so I was&#13;
expecting six very small&#13;
auditoriums with tiny screens. I&#13;
must say I was pleasantly surprised.&#13;
A brief description: The'&#13;
building has an enclosed box -&#13;
office right out front, sort of like&#13;
old - time theaters. After buying&#13;
your tickets outside, you walk into&#13;
the lobby, which is pretty well&#13;
organized with a sort of 'refreshment&#13;
stand in the round' planted&#13;
in the center of the lobby. This was&#13;
a good idea - a refreshment&#13;
counter flush against the wall&#13;
would have made for very long&#13;
lines. The lobby is clean, bright&#13;
(the walls are painted white if I&#13;
remember correctly) and in&#13;
general nice, if not austere. On to&#13;
the theaters.&#13;
The theaters are small, but they&#13;
are well proportioned, being short&#13;
and wide with fairly large&#13;
screens. The sound and picture&#13;
quality was very good for both of&#13;
the films I have seen, and in&#13;
general I was surprised and&#13;
pleased with the auditoriums.&#13;
The opening of the Regency&#13;
brings six new screens to Racine,&#13;
making a total of fourteen for the&#13;
city. Jim Janssen, manager of the&#13;
Regency, believes that with the&#13;
added theaters Racine may be&#13;
able to see a wider variety of films&#13;
in the future, including foreign&#13;
films. In addition to 'Das Boot,' a&#13;
German film which played a week&#13;
ago, the Regency is currently&#13;
showing 'The Year of Living&#13;
Dangerously,' an Australian&#13;
film. Another unique feature that&#13;
Regency offers is that wonderful&#13;
old convention known as the weekday&#13;
matinee. Most Racine&#13;
theaters have some weekday&#13;
matinees during the summer, but&#13;
Regency features them now, and&#13;
all shows before 6 p. m. are two&#13;
dollars. So check out the Regency.&#13;
You might be, as I was, pleasantly'&#13;
surprised.&#13;
NOW HEAR THIS .. . NOW HEAR THIS!&#13;
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28 IS&#13;
MASH&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
IN UNION SQUARE&#13;
SEE THE FINAL SHOW ON OUR&#13;
7 FT. TV SCREEN AND SAY&#13;
FAREWELL TO HAWKEYE,&#13;
FATHER MULCAHY, HOT LIPS&#13;
HOULIHAN, KLINGER AND ALL&#13;
THE GANG FROM THE 4077TH.&#13;
SPECIAL 2 V* HOUR SHOW&#13;
7:30 TO 10:00 PM&#13;
Sound Digprnqs&#13;
Miles Davis blows PAC away&#13;
by Napoleon Scarbrough&#13;
On my first expedition I happened&#13;
across a bit of treasure that&#13;
has been buried for some eight&#13;
years beneath the rubble of&#13;
commercial AM. Legendary jazz&#13;
trumpeter Miles Davis has dusted&#13;
himself off and made a triumphant&#13;
return to the stage.&#13;
Naturally your roving reporter&#13;
Napoleon, conquerer of the&#13;
colossal sound, was on hand to&#13;
witness this resurrection of sound&#13;
treasure for his devoted followers.&#13;
The show, which was held last&#13;
Thursday at Milwaukee's PAC,&#13;
got off to a slow but steady start!&#13;
After the first number, a kind of&#13;
jam, the room began to come&#13;
alive. Thanks to the precision&#13;
rhythm section including&#13;
drummer A1 Foster, bassist Tom&#13;
Barney and percussionist Mino&#13;
Cinelu, the place began to rock as&#13;
Miles used the synthesizer to&#13;
punctuate his horn lines. Later, as&#13;
we all fell into the groove (which&#13;
was now knee deep), Miles&#13;
strolled up and down the stage,&#13;
blowing like a Florida hurricane.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
i crniDc • Thursday, Feb. 24&#13;
at 1 P- m- in Union 207. Charles Wallace and Milton Lewis will talk nn "The&#13;
Org an zia iforf ^ and °Pe" ,he pub"&#13;
gaAmCem- .Assdimonisasti °thne * Co^or , s *a&#13;
MJ?era'ra;» 12 in Uniop *»»•• Admission is&#13;
Sh" w!" be rePea,ed at 1 p- m. and at 7:30p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
with Tnrf rrt'cT^n«V,n,0n.!:qUarf fea,urin9 "Dazzle." Admission at the door is 50c for students&#13;
with ID cards and $2 for others. Sponsored by the Black Student Organization.&#13;
_ A A 1 S a t u r d a y , F e b . 2 6&#13;
sored by Shiden^Ufe* ,eaturing ,he Reid Flemmin9 Band, after the basketball game. Spon-&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 27&#13;
MOVIE "Mash" will be repeated at 7:30p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Feb. 28&#13;
?inhtVthTLE,hat.-t^15 P'm' in Union 106' Prof- Sue s,rickler will talk on "Legislative Oversight&#13;
With Teeth. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, Mar. 1&#13;
L at ^h30^3' mi103' Robert Coles' of Harvard University will talk on "What is&#13;
JT American Family." The lecture is free and open to the public&#13;
?hJ^ aIwP' "V Ln "1® Union Cinema featuring the Parkside Wind Ensemble. Admission at&#13;
the door is $1 for students and senior citizens and $2 for others.&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 2&#13;
iSi"rlXplaininl' Women's Adulthood Experience" by Prof. Teresa Peck at 12 noon in&#13;
Union 106. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
F 1 ,P' I"' •?. ^nLN 109' Pa,ricia Castro, a Baptist minister, and Enrique Blandon, a&#13;
catholic priest, will talk on "Central American Political Movements." The event is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
BLOOD PRESSURE from 5 p. m. to 8 p. m. on the Molinaro Concourse. All are welcome. Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
LECTURE "Cover Up: What You Are Not Supposed to Know About Nuclear Power" by Karl&#13;
Grossman at 7 p . m. .n the Union Cinema. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center. Prices are $1.50 for Parkside students and $2 for others. Sponsored by PAB&#13;
This Friday, Fob. 25th&#13;
Maxa i.P.&#13;
NEW WAVE LOUNGE&#13;
2148 Racine St., Racine&#13;
Phone 634-9299&#13;
00&#13;
The band had other outstanding&#13;
musicians on hand, such as Mike&#13;
Stern, who alternated from rhythm&#13;
to lead guitar. His stirring solos&#13;
did much to electrify the concert&#13;
hall. Also present was young Bill&#13;
Evans, whose soprano and tenor&#13;
sax work, as well as his soulful&#13;
piano solo, led me to the conclusion&#13;
that Miles still knows how&#13;
to knot together a tight young&#13;
band, a band that can really&#13;
cook when let loose in the kitchen.&#13;
Finally, there was veteran&#13;
guitarist John Scofield, whose&#13;
blues guitar gave the music a&#13;
down - home feel.&#13;
When the row I was in stopped&#13;
rocking, my chair was still&#13;
knocking, thanks to the groove&#13;
that penetrated my body and&#13;
elevated my spirit. I looked&#13;
around to see i f anyone else was&#13;
"in the groove," and sure enough,&#13;
as th e show came to a close, all&#13;
sixteen hundred in the audience&#13;
rose to a standing ovation as they&#13;
swayed to the sound that still&#13;
coursed through their bodies. A&#13;
great show!&#13;
* # *&#13;
This was not, however, "the"&#13;
musical treasure that I am&#13;
looking for, but it is a dig in the&#13;
right direction, for in it, I have&#13;
found a clue. Stay with the sound&#13;
expedition as we journey into the&#13;
uncharted jungle of K.&#13;
Jazz artist&#13;
to perform&#13;
Pianist and recording artist&#13;
George Winston, whose latest&#13;
album "Winter Into Spring" hit&#13;
the top 30 jazz listings of both&#13;
Billboard and Cash Box&#13;
magazines last fall, will perform&#13;
at Parkside at 8 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
March 9, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater under&#13;
sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board (PAB).&#13;
All seats are reserved. Advance&#13;
tickets are available at the&#13;
Campus Union Information&#13;
Center. Admission is $4 ($2 for&#13;
UW-P students).&#13;
Winston, who describes himself&#13;
as a "folk pianist," blends impressionistic,&#13;
blues, black gospel,&#13;
Latin and stride in his work. His&#13;
tough - t o - c ategorize music has&#13;
scored with adult - contemporary,&#13;
pop and jazz audiences.&#13;
Winston began playing electric&#13;
keyboards in 1967 and switched to&#13;
acoustic piano in 1971. A year later&#13;
he made his first album originally&#13;
titled "Piano Solos" and re -&#13;
issued later under the title,&#13;
"Ballads and Blues."&#13;
His album of solo piano compositions,&#13;
"Autumn," was&#13;
recorded in June of 1980 and drew&#13;
praise from such well - known&#13;
show - biz journals as "Rolling&#13;
Stone," "Downbeat" and&#13;
"Billboard." Heavy air play on&#13;
both jazz and progressive rock&#13;
radio stations helped boost it to&#13;
become one of the biggest selling&#13;
acoustic LPs ever recorded on an&#13;
independent label.&#13;
Thursday, February 24, 1983&#13;
'Ghandi' is mixture of philosophy and politics&#13;
hbvy GG.. HHpelltgrepsconnn J— u- u 1 • J '&#13;
Special to the Ranger&#13;
When "Ghandi" opened locally&#13;
last week (at the Marc in Racine&#13;
and the Lake in Kenosha) my&#13;
husband and I went, even though&#13;
our plans were messed up by his&#13;
working too late to eat more than&#13;
a few crackers before we raced to&#13;
the Lake. Which turned out to be&#13;
pretty irrelevant by the time this&#13;
long (three hours plus) film was&#13;
over — and we'd watched the&#13;
Mahatma return to simplicity and&#13;
repeatedly fast to personalize the&#13;
suffering of the masses. It would&#13;
have been hard to eat at McDonald's&#13;
after all that.&#13;
It was the publicity that got to&#13;
us, media suckers that we are.&#13;
The commercials: millions of&#13;
people yelling "Ghandi-ji" in&#13;
chorus. The small man in white&#13;
homespun turns his gaze to look&#13;
kindly and sadly toward his&#13;
people. The write - ups: most&#13;
popular publications have carried&#13;
some form of propaganda on the&#13;
film during the past two months.&#13;
The Milwaukee Journal seems to&#13;
have reserved space for coverage&#13;
of some aspect of the film every&#13;
Sunday since New Year's.&#13;
Television: even PBS got into the&#13;
act last Sunday with "The Making&#13;
of Ghandi."&#13;
I went to see "Ghandi" ready to&#13;
be inspired by a great and compassionate&#13;
thinker and activist. I&#13;
wanted to see the recreation of a&#13;
human saint. While I got what I&#13;
ordered from Ben Kingsley and&#13;
others, I left the theater with more&#13;
than a measure of doubt about&#13;
Richard Attenborough, the man&#13;
behind the making of "Ghandi."&#13;
Attenborough has been on a&#13;
personal mission to make this&#13;
movie for the past twenty years.&#13;
He was primarily responsible for&#13;
raising funds for it and was the&#13;
major controlling influence at&#13;
every other stage of production.&#13;
The film's basic plot can be&#13;
jelled down to this: a member of a&#13;
people oppressed and exploited by&#13;
racism, religious discrimination,&#13;
and colonially enforced poverty&#13;
achieves the pseudo - status of t he&#13;
oppressor through education and&#13;
the resulting achievement of a&#13;
power position, that of a lawyer.&#13;
Ghandi returns to his people at the&#13;
film's beginning as a rather&#13;
dapper young man to find that&#13;
nothing he has gained can change&#13;
his basic status as a Kaffir. He can&#13;
still be kicked off a train in South&#13;
Africa for riding first class; he&#13;
can still be told "there are no&#13;
Indian lawyers," logic to the&#13;
contrary.&#13;
Ghandi begins to meet with&#13;
other token Indian exceptions and&#13;
begins to see that overthrowing&#13;
the oppressor means more than&#13;
becoming an oppressor. In&#13;
struggling to free non - whites in&#13;
South Africa, he also begins to see&#13;
there is work beyond fighting&#13;
individual pieces of legislation.&#13;
Ghandi is moved by his struggle to&#13;
return to his "roots" in India to&#13;
fight against colonial British&#13;
oppression, and to try to find a&#13;
way of relating to others as&#13;
equals. He thinks an oppressed&#13;
group can teach the oppressor the&#13;
value of h uman dignity over that&#13;
of property. He is somewhat&#13;
successful, but is assassinated&#13;
before he can show the Indian&#13;
people that systematic oppression&#13;
must be tackled within the nation&#13;
also.&#13;
One of the most beautiful&#13;
examples of Ghandi's large view&#13;
of th e world is the development of&#13;
his wife during the movie.&#13;
Married to Ghandi at 13, she is&#13;
hardly an independent creature at&#13;
first. But as Ghandi grows, she&#13;
also grows. After spending most of&#13;
her life (in the movie) huddled at&#13;
the fringes of the action with other&#13;
women, she evolves in starts and&#13;
stops into a woman who asserts&#13;
that if her husband is arrested,&#13;
she will speak to the people in his&#13;
place. She tells a western reporter&#13;
that to Ghandi "women and untouchables"&#13;
are the two groups&#13;
most oppressed in India.&#13;
Despite the fact that I was&#13;
deeply moved by "Ghandi," or&#13;
perhaps because of it, I am&#13;
disturbed by the making of it.&#13;
Among the many incongruities of&#13;
the movie's production:&#13;
• Although most of "Ghandi"&#13;
was filmed in a tropical climate&#13;
and focused on millions of people&#13;
living at subsistence level, the&#13;
overall portrait the movie painted&#13;
was as pristine as a Mr. Clean&#13;
commercial. The only fly in India&#13;
between the late 1920's and 40's&#13;
would appear to have been&#13;
hovering over the deathbed of a&#13;
man being systematically starved&#13;
off of his land by the British. Not&#13;
too realistic.&#13;
• This film purports to be about&#13;
a man loved and revered by all of&#13;
India. There are a few touching&#13;
scenes in which Ghandi interacts&#13;
with the common people individually,&#13;
but overwhelmingly&#13;
the majority of scenes revolve&#13;
around Ghandi's interaction with&#13;
the British. Is this film about the&#13;
pulling together of a great people&#13;
or about political negotiations. We&#13;
all know which type of plot is seen&#13;
as more exciting to the media.&#13;
• While "Ghandi" is about the&#13;
"success" of India's claim to&#13;
independence, the on - location&#13;
filming of it seems to be a strange&#13;
means to an end. A co - producer&#13;
on the PBS show explained that&#13;
hundreds of thousands of Indians&#13;
were needed to film some of the&#13;
great scenes (the Salt March, the&#13;
funeral) and that the company fed&#13;
about 7,000 people and "watered"&#13;
about 4,000. The Indian military&#13;
assisted them, they commandeered&#13;
local transportation,&#13;
and according to the co - producer&#13;
"it was a military project" to keep&#13;
order on the set. Is it possible for&#13;
the western world to enter the&#13;
eastern world in any other way?&#13;
• Along the same line of&#13;
thought — A ttenborough said on&#13;
the PBS show that "we must at all&#13;
times be aware of the susceptibility&#13;
of the people who are&#13;
around." In the Milwaukee&#13;
Journal Interview, he mentioned&#13;
that it was good footage to capture&#13;
the faces of the Indians in the&#13;
crowds when they first viewed&#13;
Ensemble to perform Schoenberg work&#13;
AArrnnnoMld Schoenberg's .m.. ast&lt; er- _&#13;
work for band, Theme and&#13;
Variations, will be presented by&#13;
the Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
under the direction of P rof. Mark&#13;
Eichner at 8 p.m. on Tuesday,&#13;
March 1, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The Variations were composed&#13;
in 1943, shortly after Schoenberg's&#13;
emigration to the U.S., where he&#13;
served on the faculty at the&#13;
University of California Los&#13;
Angeles (UCLA). Commissioned&#13;
by a publisher to write a major&#13;
piece for band, Schoenberg&#13;
produced what Eichner described&#13;
as "a mature work — rich with&#13;
expressive, lyrical melodies and a&#13;
compelling harmonic fabric."&#13;
The program also will feature&#13;
the Giles Farnaby Suite by&#13;
Gordon Jacob. Farnaby was a&#13;
16th century composer and a&#13;
builder of virginals, a&#13;
Renaissance keyboard instrument&#13;
similar to a harpsichord, and&#13;
many of his compositions are&#13;
included in the Fitzwilliam&#13;
Virginal Book, an anthology of&#13;
Renaissance keyboard pieces by&#13;
English composers. Jacob's Suite&#13;
contains eleven of these tunes&#13;
arranged in the symphonic setting&#13;
of the modern wind band.&#13;
The concert also will include&#13;
Girolamo Frescobaldi's Toccata,&#13;
a transcription from a Baroque&#13;
organ piece; Four Scottish&#13;
Dances by Malcolm Arnold, who&#13;
has composed movie scores and&#13;
theme music in addition to&#13;
"serious" works; and Robert E&#13;
Jager's Third Suite, a three -&#13;
movement satirical piece. Jager&#13;
is a winner of the prestigious&#13;
Ostwald Award of the American&#13;
Bandmaster's Association.&#13;
The 41 - member Wind Ensemble&#13;
will present a concert on&#13;
May 10 on campus also.&#13;
Admission is $2 for the general&#13;
public; $l for students and senior&#13;
citizens.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
announces a&#13;
SOUL FOOD&#13;
LUNCHEON&#13;
(in celebration of Black History MonthJ&#13;
FEATURING:&#13;
• Deep Fried Catfish • Southern Fried Chicken&#13;
• Red Beans 'N Rice • Black Eyed Peas&#13;
• Collard &amp; Mustard Greens • Candied Yams&#13;
• Cracklin Bread • Sweet Potato Pie&#13;
FRIDAY, FEB. 23&#13;
UNION DI NI NG ROOM 1 1 am- 2 p m&#13;
The Kind' highlights Union events |&#13;
The Chicago rock band The&#13;
Kind will perform a mini - concert&#13;
at 9 p.m. on Friday, March 11 in&#13;
Union Square. Advance tickets, at&#13;
the Union Information Center, are&#13;
$2 for students and $3 for guests.&#13;
Admission is $4 a t the door.&#13;
The Kind, whose debut album of&#13;
the same name was ranked by&#13;
Chicago radio station WLS as one&#13;
Chicagofest performance last&#13;
year: "The band combines&#13;
touches of Beatlesque melodicism&#13;
with the sort of muscle needed to&#13;
reach the 80's rock audience.''&#13;
McLeese said the group has a&#13;
good chance to "break beyond the&#13;
Chicago club scene through&#13;
national radio exposure."&#13;
Lead singer and rhythm&#13;
THE KIND&#13;
of the "top 20" most popular LP's&#13;
last fall, and whose single "Loved&#13;
By You" was ranked among the&#13;
station's top 20 most popular&#13;
singles, stresses hard - driving&#13;
"power pop" and entertaining&#13;
showmanship.&#13;
The group has been praised by&#13;
Chicago - area rock music&#13;
reviewers, including Don&#13;
McLeese of the Chicago Sun&#13;
Times, who wrote of The Kind's&#13;
guitarist Frank Jalovec&#13;
established the group in the mid -&#13;
1970's and he's the sole remaining&#13;
original member. For the past two&#13;
years The Kind has been composed&#13;
of Jalovec, lead guitarist&#13;
Frank Capek, bassist Mark&#13;
Gardner and drummer Frank&#13;
Sberno, all of whom had performed&#13;
with popular musical&#13;
groups previously.&#13;
The performance is being&#13;
sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
as the executive committee of the&#13;
Senate. The University Committee&#13;
sets the agenda for the&#13;
Senate, makes recommendations&#13;
for changes and policy, supervises&#13;
activities of faculty committees,&#13;
and serves as the final court of&#13;
appeal from the decisions of&#13;
faculty committees.&#13;
Overall there are approximately&#13;
twenty - five faculty&#13;
Kingsley as Ghandi. On the PBS&#13;
show one humorously - intended&#13;
segment was about Indian males&#13;
being dressed and groomed for&#13;
filming who had problems with&#13;
haircuts given by women because&#13;
of cultural and religious taboos.&#13;
Their hair was cut anywav I&#13;
guess.&#13;
• Several Indians on the PBS&#13;
show expressed objections about&#13;
the film. Most controversial is the&#13;
depiction of Ghandi demonstrating&#13;
to western reporters his&#13;
marriage ceremony. Evidently&#13;
the Indian Hindu view of private&#13;
matters is quite different from our&#13;
western view. At any rate, Indian&#13;
followers of Ghandi have stated&#13;
that the film, in part or entirety is&#13;
sacrilegious. Attenborough&#13;
counters this by asserting that&#13;
since no Indian made a film about&#13;
Ghandi in 33 years, he did one&#13;
Very sensitive.&#13;
"Ghandi" is a beautiful film&#13;
about the spiritual growth of a&#13;
man and those around him. But&#13;
the making of the movie contrasted&#13;
with the recent slaughter&#13;
of immigrating Moslems by the&#13;
Hindu majority brings home the&#13;
point — has the western world&#13;
^rned anything lasting from&#13;
Ghandi the man or Ghandi the&#13;
principle?&#13;
Triple Threat'&#13;
committees. Of these, Personnel&#13;
Review, Research and Creative&#13;
Activity, and Course and&#13;
Curriculum have the most&#13;
prestige. In addition, there are&#13;
committees that serve certain&#13;
aspects of university life such as:&#13;
Library / Learning Center,&#13;
Athletics, Bookstore, and&#13;
Academic Actions.&#13;
Community service involves&#13;
faculty serving as consultants to&#13;
private businesses, school boards,&#13;
and local government agencies&#13;
Prior to the budget cuts of the last&#13;
couple of &gt;cars, Parkside even&#13;
had a number of outreach institutes&#13;
or centers which provided&#13;
various services to the community.&#13;
To encourage faculty&#13;
participation in community affairs,&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
established a Distinguished&#13;
S6rvice Award in faculty&#13;
outreach.&#13;
Although service is generally&#13;
looked upon as the least important&#13;
of t he three evaluation criteria, it&#13;
is however an aspect that no&#13;
faculty member could afford to&#13;
ignore or denegrate. While no&#13;
faculty member could hope to&#13;
make her / his career solely on&#13;
university or faculty service, only&#13;
those with superstar credentials&#13;
m teaching and researching could&#13;
dare to avoid this responsibility&#13;
all together.&#13;
AUTHOR'S NOTE: This is the&#13;
last of my series entitled&#13;
Academic Games." I hope that&#13;
as result, the Parkside student has&#13;
a greater understanding of the&#13;
University and of how it functions.&#13;
I would like to thank all who gave&#13;
me the insight that I needed;&#13;
especially Professor John&#13;
Buenker. Watch for my new series&#13;
m upcoming Ranger issues.&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Regency Mall/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Sports Reporter tries the Body Shoppe | Women's Track&#13;
by Carol Kortendick&#13;
After breaking my bathroom&#13;
scale at home (not due to the&#13;
added poundage from Christmas,&#13;
mind you) I seriously contemplated&#13;
yet another one of my&#13;
famous diets. The thought fled my&#13;
mind just as quickly as it popped&#13;
up when whiffs of bacon and eggs&#13;
beckoned me to the breakfast&#13;
table. Upon arriving at school that&#13;
day, however, I was soon&#13;
reminded again, when I came&#13;
upon a rather small, obscure&#13;
poster with its words blazoned out&#13;
towards me: THE BODY&#13;
SHOPPE, lose weight in ten&#13;
weeks, FREE PROGRAM! Being&#13;
a poor college student, the last&#13;
detail really captured my attention,&#13;
so I headed down to&#13;
Molinaro where the Student&#13;
Health Center awaited me.&#13;
I entered rather nervously, with&#13;
thoughts running through my&#13;
head such as, "Will they weigh me&#13;
in front of the entire student&#13;
body?" and "Is there any hope for&#13;
me?" An assistant warmly&#13;
greeted me and took my name.&#13;
She explained in some detail what&#13;
the program entailed. The&#13;
program is a personal account of&#13;
your weight loss (hopefully not&#13;
your weight gain). She then informed&#13;
me to come in next week&#13;
to weigh in and begin the&#13;
program.&#13;
Great," I thought rather&#13;
smugly. "I can lose an easy 10&#13;
pounds by starving myself this&#13;
week so I'm not the heftiest person&#13;
on the list." Well, as soon as I left,&#13;
I passed an innocent looking bake&#13;
sale dying for some hard earned&#13;
money. After cleaning up all their&#13;
goodies, I locked myself into an&#13;
unoccupied lavatory stall and&#13;
devoured every last morsel. So&#13;
much for fasting!&#13;
The next week I weighed in with&#13;
some reluctance yet determined&#13;
to rid myself of this excess&#13;
baggage. I had to then record my&#13;
beginning weight and my desired&#13;
goal.&#13;
The Body Shoppe supplied me&#13;
with my own personal folder&#13;
containing information on&#13;
nutrition, calories and a graph to&#13;
chart my hopeful weight loss.&#13;
With all that paraphernalia, one&#13;
couldn't help losing weight. I left&#13;
with a determined air, ready to&#13;
conquer the world. I passed by&#13;
another yet "innocent" bake sale&#13;
without flinching an inch. So far so&#13;
good. Stay tuned for further&#13;
reports of THE BODY SHOPPE&#13;
and my desperate attempts to lose&#13;
weight.&#13;
Spino gears up for a fast season&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
A familiar scene at the P. U.&#13;
gym this year has been Deb Spino&#13;
flying in at exactly 4:15 p. m. for&#13;
the afternoon workout with the&#13;
track team. As her team mates&#13;
say hello, Spino tries to say hello&#13;
to everyone while still getting to&#13;
practice on time, which starts at&#13;
4:15 p. m.&#13;
Spino has dominated the&#13;
Parkside running scene these past&#13;
two years. Now a national&#13;
champion four times over, Spino's&#13;
start in running was far from&#13;
unusual. A graduate from&#13;
Tremper High School in Kenosha,&#13;
she began running her sophomore&#13;
year. She was junior varsity&#13;
quarter miler and mile relay&#13;
member. Her junior year she&#13;
made the varsity team as a mile&#13;
relay member. Her senior year&#13;
she went out for Cross - Country&#13;
although she finished the season&#13;
injured. In track that year she&#13;
qualified for the state meet in not&#13;
only the mile relay but also the&#13;
mile run. Spino finished fourth at&#13;
state in 5:09, an impressive time&#13;
by any standards.&#13;
That state meet could have been&#13;
the end of Spino's running career.&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
Womeldorf combines Sports and School successfully&#13;
by Carra Carrello&#13;
Erik Womeldorf is a 20 year old&#13;
sophomore who has a double&#13;
major in computer science and&#13;
business.&#13;
Erik's been playing basketball&#13;
as long as he can remember. "I&#13;
followed in my older brother's&#13;
footsteps. I've always been tall so&#13;
I felt forced to play, but I enjoyed&#13;
playing too." Since Erik (6' 8" and&#13;
225) was tall he felt clumsy.&#13;
"Playing basketball made me less&#13;
embarassed," he said.&#13;
Erik played on an all - state&#13;
team and in an all conference&#13;
games in high school. He has also&#13;
received awards for his grades. In&#13;
high school, at Mound - Westonka,&#13;
he was on honor roll. At college he&#13;
is on the dean's list, both at&#13;
Augsburg and at Parkside.&#13;
The stereotype of being a&#13;
dumb jock bothers Erik. "The&#13;
first impression everyone feels&#13;
right away is you're dumb and&#13;
then you have to prove yourself.&#13;
With some people it's not worth&#13;
trying to prove you're smart, so I&#13;
Sports&#13;
Calendar Men's Basketball&#13;
Feb. 24, Thursday, St.&#13;
Scholastica. HERE 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Feb. 26, Sa turday. Eau Claire.&#13;
HERE 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Women's Basketball&#13;
Feb. 25, Friday. Carroll College.&#13;
HERE 3:30 p. m.&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Feb. 26, Saturday, Northwestern&#13;
Invitational. Away.&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
Feb. 25-6, Fri. - Saturday,&#13;
door Nationals. Kansas City.&#13;
In-&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
Feb. 25-6, Fri. - Saturday. Indoor&#13;
Nationals. Kansas City.&#13;
let them think I'm dumb." He&#13;
feels school is very important and&#13;
he sacrifices a lot to get good&#13;
grades. Erik received a full&#13;
scholarship to Parkside, which he&#13;
was really happy about. "I wasn't&#13;
sure how I was going to pay for&#13;
school," he admitted. He was only&#13;
getting financial aid at Augsburg.&#13;
Even though Erik likes playing&#13;
basketball there are some&#13;
drawbacks. Much time is spent&#13;
practicing or the road trips. The&#13;
team practices from 3 - 7 p. m.&#13;
after school. "After you get out of&#13;
practice, get back to the Y, make&#13;
supper and clean up, it's already&#13;
eight - thirty and there is still&#13;
homework to do." Erik continued,&#13;
"People think jocks are dumb.&#13;
We're not. There just isn't enough&#13;
time." Other drawbacks are&#13;
always being tired and sore.&#13;
The pros do out - weigh the cons&#13;
because he is able to go to school&#13;
for free or at least cheaper. What&#13;
he likes most is just being able to&#13;
play and the competition. "Being&#13;
on the team, you feel you fit in&#13;
because you have people to hang&#13;
around with." He wishes there&#13;
was more fan support. "The&#13;
crowds aren't any bigger than&#13;
when I played for high school. You&#13;
still get nervous, but it's good&#13;
because it gets the adrenalin&#13;
pumping."&#13;
Erik likes Parkside because he&#13;
gets to meet new people. "I get&#13;
homesick but it's nothing I can't&#13;
live with." Even though Parkside&#13;
is a commuter college, Erik&#13;
recommends it to people in sports&#13;
even if they don't live in this area.&#13;
Coach Rees Johnson commented,&#13;
"Erik has really improved.&#13;
At Augsburg he sat out&#13;
second semester, and sat out first&#13;
semester here. (Because of&#13;
transferring.) He started slow, he&#13;
shows tremendous improvement&#13;
and works hard. Erik isn't afraid&#13;
to get physical. He's improved in&#13;
jumping and offense."&#13;
Coach J ohnson feels Erik went&#13;
to Augsburg because it was close&#13;
to home. His brother was there&#13;
and they have a good education&#13;
program. He also feels Erik's&#13;
brother had a lot to do with Erik&#13;
transferring to Parkside. His&#13;
brother told Erik what a good&#13;
coach Johnson is. So when&#13;
Johnson came to Parkside, Erik&#13;
came too. Erik has enormous&#13;
respect for Johnson, "I couldn't&#13;
play for anyone else. He is great."&#13;
Coach Johnson has only admiration&#13;
for Erik. "Erik is a fine&#13;
person. He has a lot of character&#13;
and dedication. He's on the dean's&#13;
list with a 3.7 (grade point&#13;
average)," Johnson continued.&#13;
"Erik's not afraid to work. He's&#13;
very goal oriented. Erik's an&#13;
achiever and I'm very pleased&#13;
with him."&#13;
"Erik will be a success no&#13;
matter what he does," Coach&#13;
Johnson added, "When Erik's a&#13;
Senior he will be respected and&#13;
known by Parkside opponents."&#13;
After graduation, she decided to&#13;
attend the Kenosha Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute to obtain an&#13;
Aviation degree. When she&#13;
enrolled, Gateway did not have a&#13;
Cross - Country or Track team.&#13;
"There were some rumors that a&#13;
team was going to be forming.&#13;
Then Coach DeWitt was hired as&#13;
coach and I went out. I wasn't&#13;
expecting to run at all," she&#13;
commented.&#13;
At Gateway, Spino competed in&#13;
Cross - Country and Track where&#13;
for two years she was a junior&#13;
college national champion.&#13;
After completing her degree,&#13;
Spino received offers to run at the&#13;
University of Arizona, but she&#13;
declined as she felt it would be in&#13;
her best interest to keep the same&#13;
coach for two more years and&#13;
enrolled at Parkside. "I like how&#13;
Coach Mike coaches. I've got his&#13;
pattern of coaching down and&#13;
every year I've run under him,&#13;
I've improved." she said.&#13;
Coach DeWitt feels that Spino&#13;
has been one of the easiest&#13;
athletes to coach he has ever&#13;
coached. Since he began coaching&#13;
her four years ago he feels she has&#13;
improved much more mentally&#13;
than physically. "Deb has always&#13;
had natural ability. Her times&#13;
have improved but I think her&#13;
confidence has improved much&#13;
more. She has le arned to believe&#13;
in herself and her ability," he&#13;
commented.&#13;
Spino's talent has allowed her to&#13;
travel all over the country competing&#13;
in the various national&#13;
meets. This past summer, she&#13;
competed for the USA&#13;
racewalking team in the World&#13;
Championships held in Denmark&#13;
and Norway. Last year was her&#13;
first season competing as a race&#13;
walker. The traveling has&#13;
provided many good memories&#13;
and she considers those th e highpoints&#13;
of her career.&#13;
When asked about lowpoints,&#13;
her blue eyes had a far away look&#13;
and she softly stated, "Injuries."&#13;
For a moment, Spino seemed lost&#13;
in a world far from Parkside.&#13;
"Injuries are the real lows. It can&#13;
get very depressing."&#13;
Since December, Spino has been&#13;
hampered by a flare up pain in her&#13;
knee. This past Sunday, the pain&#13;
was so intens e she was unable to&#13;
even racewalk, which is not as&#13;
strenuous on the knees as running.&#13;
"If it wasn't for racewalking, I&#13;
think I would die. I need to keep&#13;
competitive. Walking has really&#13;
kept me in shape," she commented.&#13;
A self - admitted perfectionist,&#13;
Spino always sees ro om for improvement&#13;
in herself. She trains&#13;
year round. In fall, she competes&#13;
in Cross - Country, which is&#13;
quickly followed by track and now&#13;
that she has begun racewalking,&#13;
her summer will be spent competing&#13;
in those races, which&#13;
usually are 5 kilometers.&#13;
Spino has run every event from&#13;
the 440 yd. run to the marathon.&#13;
She considers the 1500 meter and&#13;
the mile her all - time favorite&#13;
event. "I don't like the very long&#13;
distance races but I think it is&#13;
because I really haven't put a&#13;
consistent effort into it. I guess&#13;
what you concentrate on the most&#13;
is what you'll do the best in," she&#13;
stated.&#13;
Spino's eligibility is up at the&#13;
end of the track season. Her future&#13;
plans are to concentrate on race&#13;
walking. She will be moving to&#13;
Colorado Springs, CO. to live near&#13;
and to use the facilities of the&#13;
Olympic Training Center.&#13;
DeWitt feels that if Spino concentrates&#13;
on the racewalk, she&#13;
will establish herself as the best&#13;
woman race walker in the&#13;
country.&#13;
Last year, Spino was the indoor&#13;
/ outdoor national champion in the&#13;
mile. Although her knee has been&#13;
bothering her much of the indoor&#13;
season, it is a certain possibility&#13;
that she will be back to defend her&#13;
title in Kansas City at the indoor&#13;
national meet this weekend.&#13;
The Harsh Reality&#13;
"Sometimes running can be so&#13;
frustrating. I don't go out at night&#13;
with my friends because I have a&#13;
race or a 20 miler the next day. Or&#13;
I will go past a vending machine&#13;
and want to get a Snickers, but I&#13;
won't because being a fat runner&#13;
is embarrassing. Everyday every&#13;
run brings pain. I try to keep a&#13;
positive attitude and think that&#13;
tomorrow will be better, but it&#13;
never is. The next day there is a&#13;
new pain to add to the lsi t. And the&#13;
old ones never seem to go away.&#13;
When I complain, people will tell&#13;
me to think of all the benefits I get&#13;
from running, but I can only think&#13;
'what benefits?' I see no improvements,&#13;
no gains. Only pain."&#13;
— A Parkside athlete's answer&#13;
when asked how training was&#13;
going.&#13;
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414-694-1380&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
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TO HELP YOU 6R0W!&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
Thursday, February 24,1983&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••,* Cpr^DT KICW/C&#13;
Me n' s Wr e s t l i n g WI N 1 I N I -W0&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
On Friday, Feb. 18, the Men's&#13;
Wrestling team competed in the&#13;
'83 Midwest Regionals here at&#13;
Parkside. The Rangers took&#13;
second place overall with a total of&#13;
59 points. There were four&#13;
Parkside wrestlers who qualified&#13;
for the NCAA Nationals on Feb 25&#13;
&amp; 26 in Fargo, N.D. They were&#13;
Mike Vania (126) who took 2nd&#13;
Mike Winter (142) who took 2nd,&#13;
Ted Keyes (177) who took 2nd, and&#13;
Mike Muckerheide (150) who too k&#13;
1st pl ace.&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
The Men's Indoor Track season&#13;
is beginning to draw to a close. In&#13;
the past two weeks they competed&#13;
at Illinois Benedictine College and&#13;
in the qualifying meet for&#13;
Nationals at UW-Oshkosh. In&#13;
Illinois, the men came in fourth&#13;
with 36 poin ts. At the qualifying&#13;
meet no one qualified for&#13;
nationals, but a few did place. The&#13;
meet at Oshkosh was basically an&#13;
individual competition and points&#13;
were not awarded.&#13;
At Benedictine, every team&#13;
member was entered in an individual&#13;
event. Despite the fact&#13;
that the team has few individuals&#13;
who compete in field events, those&#13;
that participated in the distance&#13;
track events did very well. In the&#13;
mile, Andy Serrano took 2nd&#13;
(4:4.8.), A1 Correa was 3rd in the&#13;
600 (1:21.28 .). The 880 yielded two&#13;
places for Parkside; Rich Miller&#13;
placed 1st (2:06.49), and a 4th&#13;
from Jim Brewer (2:10.62). In the&#13;
1000, Glenn Schultz placed 2nd&#13;
(2:25.69).&#13;
"My men are mostly distance&#13;
men, and that's where the teams'&#13;
strength lies," said Lucian Rosa&#13;
in response to the men's performance.&#13;
Jim Miller and Andy&#13;
Serrano took 2nd and 3rd&#13;
respectively in the two mile event.&#13;
Miller's time was 10:10.84 with&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
TV11.U, . MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
Tr, • my home' Professional, speedy&#13;
serv.ce, student rates. Call Debbie at 681&#13;
BOOK SALE: "Presidents, Politics, and&#13;
Americana". A special collection at The&#13;
Old Book Corner, Martha Merrell's&#13;
Bookstore, 312-6th street, Racine. Used and&#13;
i ofTd »/!n.d ,ltles at Paperback prices.&#13;
LOST: Wristwatch in WLLC restroom. If&#13;
found, contact 657-0204.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
LOR I S.: Would a S4000 snowmobile be worth&#13;
another weekend together? James P.S&#13;
Thanks for the memories.&#13;
BRAD: If I could have a dream come true, it&#13;
surely would be me-n-you. —Evening Echo&#13;
BRAD: Let s make some memories, take a&#13;
chance, I'm not looking for promises See&#13;
me when you can. Evening Echo&#13;
dapv.L: Y°VKCarry my luS9age? Sharon&#13;
naDvh- ^ my lu99«ge? Jeff&#13;
dakYL: I lost my luggaqe! Steve&#13;
WANTED T° BUY: Set of soTt luggage. Ed&#13;
MAP W V°U p,ease exP,ain 'luggage'!&#13;
""J?RY: I'm STARVED!! Sharon&#13;
CAROL: The aspirin didn't work, taking&#13;
TnrcUS»^midvice " Tbanks! Tori&#13;
»if 5 stened ,0 me complain&#13;
about my pain without yelling - Thanks, I&#13;
really appreciate it! Tori&#13;
.T2.R,: " s 'ust 'cause we love you.&#13;
WOMENS TRACK: Good luck in nationals!&#13;
Keep strong!&#13;
floor of the library? C'mon,&#13;
wa!TM?r,°9/n?' You only live 5 m away. Think of CR's rep. in.&#13;
When M and B drives you crazy, try&#13;
thumb exercises, and see if the schpilkies&#13;
go away, if they don't, you can call, you&#13;
know that.&#13;
CCChhrrisi«sl!ef, fIU dSidnA Ht gAeRt5 m,! yH porwe sweanst ,B aan,tdim woere'll&#13;
have to v.sit that Marci with our lawn&#13;
chairs real soon!! Ed&#13;
V«ITE1!E: ' *aven't seen you doing your&#13;
thumb exercises lately. Why not"&#13;
PAT: Who's doing their best to try and find&#13;
their way through?? Pat&#13;
M?LLY,L Don't 9et overworked and unaerpaid.&#13;
Ed&#13;
STACEY: Sorry I missed your call, but I'll&#13;
return It soon.&#13;
Happy Bir,hday a little late. Better&#13;
late than never. Sorry I missed the party.&#13;
Pat&#13;
CB: Thanks for the green M&amp;M's! Now I need&#13;
orange!! J BP&#13;
DEAR DARLENE: Thanks for the Birthday&#13;
present. What do I get next year? Jeff&#13;
THE RANGER ENDORSES Mickey Mouse&#13;
for President!&#13;
DONALD DUCK for V.P.&#13;
JSQ: Just keep believing in yourself. Things&#13;
will get better. Tori&#13;
"r-you are the queen of my life!!&#13;
JULIE NEU: We want you!! WAFU - T he JS&#13;
Society&#13;
JOANNE H.: Aren't you glad your neighbors&#13;
nA0VT1uVH!S?,Le,S have a G" Dead Par»V&#13;
DAVE H.: Only one more big bash before&#13;
Tney go.&#13;
DAN: Friends are friends, but buddies share&#13;
feather pillows, octapus's,etc.&#13;
«£ure in ,he ,op ten ,or D.A.'s.&#13;
MEN OF PU: Wo-o here she comes. Watch&#13;
out boys, she'll chew you up!!&#13;
JULIE: How many notches do you have in&#13;
your lipstick case? JS&#13;
Serrano close on his heels at&#13;
10:11.84. Parkside's mile relay&#13;
team took a 2nd (3:46.04). The&#13;
team consisted of Correa, Pm-&#13;
Pheron, Schultz, and Miller.&#13;
Team members Rich Miller and&#13;
Jim Brewer commented on the&#13;
Oshkosh meet and the prospect of&#13;
competing in nationals. Brewer&#13;
noted, "We have been doing O.K.&#13;
despite all events not being&#13;
covered, and this makes for the&#13;
lack of points. But individually, I&#13;
think I should do better than I&#13;
have." Miller added, "I am&#13;
pleased with the races, but not&#13;
with my times. Now I just try to&#13;
relax. I'm just now getting my&#13;
racing edge back."&#13;
The Oshkosh Titan Open Meet&#13;
yielded a few places for the&#13;
Parkside men. In the track event&#13;
Glenn Schultz placed 4th in the&#13;
1000 yard run (2:21.4). In field&#13;
events with the Pole Vault was&#13;
John Anderson who placed 4th&#13;
with 13'6".&#13;
In the two mile walk, Jim&#13;
Heinng, formerly from Parkside,&#13;
now competing for Athletic Attic,&#13;
broke his old meet record of&#13;
12:50.3. The new record is 12:28.2.&#13;
Will Preischl was second in&#13;
13:29.8. Along with Coach Mike&#13;
DeWitt, these three men will be&#13;
competing in the TAC meet in&#13;
New York cm Friday.&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
In action on Feb. 20, the&#13;
following games in the Men's IM&#13;
basketball league were played:&#13;
Lone Rangers 48 — Grit's Gunners&#13;
32&#13;
The Hawks 66 — The Clash 57&#13;
McNulty's 60 — Olson's 40&#13;
The Clash 73 —Olson's 46&#13;
Reign of Pain 83—S.G.'s 59&#13;
The Why won by forfeit over The&#13;
Misfits.&#13;
Top scorers for the night were&#13;
B. McGonnegle with 27 points for&#13;
The Hawks, J. Wang with 26 fo r&#13;
The Clash, and Steve Kollman&#13;
with 20 for Olson's.&#13;
Standings in the league are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
McNulty's&#13;
The Why&#13;
The MisFits&#13;
Reign of Pain&#13;
The Hawks&#13;
S.G.'s&#13;
Lone Rangers&#13;
The Clash&#13;
Olson's&#13;
Grit's Gunners&#13;
4-0&#13;
4-0&#13;
4-1&#13;
3-1&#13;
3-1&#13;
2-3&#13;
1-3&#13;
1-5&#13;
0-3&#13;
0-5&#13;
REMINDER to all intramural&#13;
badminton players — Monday&#13;
afternoon is your day. Plan on&#13;
bringing a friend to play between&#13;
noon and 2 p.m.&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
by Carra Cariello&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 15, th e Rangers&#13;
played against Milwaukee. The&#13;
final score was 83-69 in&#13;
Milwaukee's favor. Milwaukee&#13;
had 22 turnovers, where Parkside&#13;
only had five. Coach Johnson&#13;
commented on the game, "We've&#13;
been up and down like a rollercoaster&#13;
this year. They (The&#13;
Rangers) shot well, but they&#13;
weren't good on defense."&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 17, the Rangers&#13;
took on Lewis in a home game.&#13;
The final score of this game was&#13;
78-62 in Lewis' favor. The Rangers&#13;
made two out of eight freethrows,&#13;
where Lewis made 22 out of 27.&#13;
Coach Johnson feels the loss for&#13;
this game was, "part referees and&#13;
because we're not aggressive&#13;
enough on offense or defense."&#13;
Tim Opps started in this game.&#13;
Coach Johnson feels, "His defense&#13;
is down a bit. He will be playing&#13;
tomorrow." The game is against&#13;
Northern Michigan.&#13;
Coach Johnson had these&#13;
comments Friday before they left&#13;
for the game against Northern&#13;
Michigan. "It should be an interesting&#13;
game, because there&#13;
seems to be a lot of rivalry between&#13;
the two schools."&#13;
The Rangers beat the Michigan&#13;
Wildcats 78-76 on Saturday. The&#13;
Wildcats were winning by half&#13;
time with a score of 43-30. The&#13;
Rangers came back by playing&#13;
with a solid defense. The high&#13;
scorers of this game were Brian&#13;
Diggins with 17, Erik Womeldorf&#13;
with 16, and Tom Trotter with 13&#13;
points.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 24, the Rangers&#13;
will play against St. Scholastica.&#13;
The Rangers were suppose to play&#13;
them on Feb. 12, but St.&#13;
Scholastica had to cancel because&#13;
they had too many games.&#13;
On Saturday, Feb. 26, the&#13;
Rangers will take on Eau Claire.&#13;
Both of these are home games&#13;
starting at 7:30. Coach Johnson&#13;
predicts that the Rangers will win&#13;
both games.&#13;
The Women's Track team's last&#13;
meet before indoor nationals was&#13;
held in Milwaukee last Saturday.&#13;
Team scores were: Milwaukee -&#13;
105, Parkside - 51, Carroll College -&#13;
18, UI - Chicago - 16, and&#13;
Milwaukee Tech - 14.&#13;
The team had three first place&#13;
finishes. The two mile relay team&#13;
composed of Dona Driscoll, Jane&#13;
Roszykowski, Sue Meyer and Deb&#13;
Spino won in 9:34.1. Driscoll was&#13;
also first in the 600 yard run&#13;
(1:31.3) and Spino was also first in&#13;
the 1000 yard run (2:42.7).&#13;
The 880 relay team composed of&#13;
Sandy Peligrino, Carol Romano,&#13;
Shirley Gunther, and Lin&#13;
Pfilestifer was second (1:59.6).&#13;
Sue Meyer was second in the mile&#13;
(5:20.6). Pfilestifer was second in&#13;
the 440 yard run (1:08.1). The mile&#13;
relay team composed of&#13;
Pfilestifer, Karen Jacobsen,&#13;
Peligrino, and Romano was also&#13;
second (4:31.6).&#13;
Jacobsen was third in the 1000&#13;
(2:51.2). Karling Thurman was&#13;
also third in the 60 yard dash (7.5).&#13;
Vicki Stacy recorded a season&#13;
best in the high jump, 5-0, getting&#13;
fifth place.&#13;
Gunther putted 30-6, which was&#13;
good for fifth place in the shot put.&#13;
Michelle Gross also finished&#13;
fourth in the two mile (12:36.3).&#13;
The indoor national meet will be&#13;
held in Kansas City, MO this&#13;
weekend. Trials will be on Friday&#13;
and finals will be held on Saturday&#13;
night. Those competing are: Spino&#13;
(mile), Meyer (two mile),&#13;
Driscoll (600 yard) and the&#13;
distance medley relay.&#13;
Good times offer:&#13;
Seagram&#13;
Sr.t®®1\ °z-glass mug for sale. It's the two-fisted&#13;
Slto 9 times and salute your 9reat taste&#13;
in drinks. Why not start a collection? Please send this&#13;
coupon, along with a check or money order for $4.95&#13;
nff mnnnScash P,ease)t0: Seagram's 7Crown Mua&#13;
Offer, P.O. Box 1622, New York, N.Y. 10152&#13;
Name&#13;
Address.&#13;
City. .State.&#13;
Specify quantity.&#13;
-2'P-&#13;
—Amount enclosed $_&#13;
Offer expires January 31,1984. No purchase necessary.&#13;
New York residents add 8.25% sales tax.&#13;
Please allow 4 to 6 weeks for shipment.&#13;
WPKC24&#13;
Seagram's&#13;
01982 SEAGRAM DISTlUfRS CO., NYC. AMERJCAN^WHISKEY-A</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 11, issue 20, February 24, 1983</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>1983-02-24</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="70544">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="70545">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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