<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3091" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/3091?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T20:20:13+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="4696">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/deab116b84f464e17e91099b48c38b4f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>9ddbb7e7ad6217e15d2bcf8267018d45</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="70631">
            <text>Volume 11, issue 26</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="70632">
            <text>Physical plant workers face potential shift change</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="70642">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="90754">
            <text>W University of . Parkside&#13;
Physical plant workers&#13;
face potential shift change&#13;
PROTESTERS and movie viewers seen&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Union Bazaar&#13;
by Jeanne Buenker - Phillips&#13;
and Bob Kiesling&#13;
Building Maintenance personnel&#13;
are protesting an announcement&#13;
recently made by&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Gary Goetz&#13;
to change the working hours of&#13;
some of the maintenance personnel,&#13;
known as BMH's, for&#13;
"Building Maintenance Helpers "&#13;
from first shift to third shift. '&#13;
Third shift BMH personnel were&#13;
originally transferred to first shift&#13;
almost three years ago to help&#13;
relieve supervisory shortages.&#13;
With a reclassification of the third&#13;
shift supervisor from state civil&#13;
service to classified academic&#13;
staff, the shortage will be filled.&#13;
Physical Plant administration&#13;
anticipates that the change will go&#13;
into effect shortly, when a new&#13;
third shift supervisor can be&#13;
found.&#13;
Physical Plant head Jack&#13;
Dudley originally supported the&#13;
change to first shift "on a trial&#13;
basis," but said that some of the&#13;
personnel needed to be transferred&#13;
back to third shift because&#13;
too many personnel were working&#13;
on the first shift. "We do not feel&#13;
it's the most efficient utilization of&#13;
manpower," he said of the present&#13;
system.&#13;
BMH personnel charge that&#13;
they are paying for mistakes&#13;
made by management. In a&#13;
printed statement they said, "If&#13;
the management has problems&#13;
with supervision, why not correct&#13;
the problem? Why take it out on&#13;
the employees?" They also stated&#13;
that the first shift had received&#13;
many letters of praise for their&#13;
performance. The BMH personnel&#13;
also charged that an additional&#13;
$10,400 would be required for&#13;
extra heat and light costs for the&#13;
third shift.&#13;
Goetz stated that the change of&#13;
BMH hours to first shift was in&#13;
fact an experiment, and the&#13;
change would be made as soon as&#13;
a revised maintenance supervisory&#13;
structure was completed.&#13;
An academic staff member will&#13;
be added to supervise the BMH&#13;
personnel of both the first and&#13;
third shifts and aid in planning,&#13;
but, "not get involved in the&#13;
operational nitty - gritty." Goetz&#13;
also said that the estimated cost&#13;
increase of a split shift would be&#13;
about $4,000, which would be offset&#13;
by the increased operating efficiency.&#13;
&#13;
BMH personnel would not&#13;
comment further because the shift&#13;
change is not official yet. "We&#13;
have not received anything in&#13;
writing," they said.&#13;
Goetz and Dudley both emphasized&#13;
that the shift change has&#13;
Prolonged incompletes&#13;
lead to "failures"&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Many students at Parkside are&#13;
unaware of the incomplete policy&#13;
and are finding F's on their&#13;
transcripts. The policy has been in&#13;
affect since the fall of 1979, and&#13;
says that.&#13;
Students who receive incompletes&#13;
in their courses must&#13;
remove them before the end of th e&#13;
following semester or summer&#13;
session. If the incomplete is not&#13;
removed within the required&#13;
period of time, the grade will&#13;
lapse to an "F".&#13;
Last semester there were 749&#13;
incompletes filed in the Student&#13;
Records office. To date, only 130 of&#13;
those incompletes have been&#13;
changed to passing grades,&#13;
therefore, 619 may be lapsed to&#13;
"F's".&#13;
"It's the students responsibility&#13;
to make sure their incompletes&#13;
are taken care of," said Gail&#13;
Starks, Student Data Analyst.&#13;
There are many reasons why&#13;
students receive incompletes. If a&#13;
student is unable to take the final&#13;
exam or complete the required&#13;
assignments the instructor may&#13;
grant an incomplete. If an instructor&#13;
fails to turn in grades&#13;
then all of the students in that&#13;
course will be given incompletes&#13;
until their grades are changed.&#13;
their grade changed.&#13;
"I wish more students would&#13;
look at their transcripts to make&#13;
sure everything is in line. We just&#13;
carry out the policies, the&#13;
decisions are not made in our&#13;
office. We can only assume in&#13;
good faith that students are aware&#13;
of the policies," said Starks.&#13;
If the time allotted to fulfill&#13;
course requirements is insufficient,&#13;
then students can apply&#13;
for an incomplete extension.&#13;
Students must make a request for&#13;
the instructor to take executive&#13;
action and grant them an extension.&#13;
&#13;
Don Gunderson, Associate&#13;
Registrar, feels that the incomplete&#13;
policy is lenient at&#13;
Parkside compared to that of&#13;
other universities. One change he&#13;
would like to see in the policy is to&#13;
extend incompletes to full&#13;
semesters and delete the summer&#13;
session requirement. "I would&#13;
prefer students have until the next&#13;
full semester to make up incompletes&#13;
because many instructors&#13;
are unavailable in the&#13;
summer and their courses are not&#13;
offered," said Gunderson.&#13;
Students may not graduate with&#13;
an incomplete on their transcripts&#13;
if failure in an incompleted course&#13;
itil their grades are changed. would would mmakake e them them inel ineligib igible le to&#13;
Students receiving incompletes graduate. Therefore, students are&#13;
ar"c e sent sent a a fform orm rpminH remindincf ing th#» them m tn to nrffed to take care of their incontact&#13;
their instructor and have&#13;
urged to take care __&#13;
completes as soon as possible.&#13;
been under consideration for some&#13;
time. Goetz stated that the move&#13;
of al l BMH employees to a single&#13;
shift had never been a permanent&#13;
move, and that the administration&#13;
has found that maintenance work&#13;
is completed more efficiently&#13;
when "they're not competing with&#13;
an operating institution." He said&#13;
that self - evaluation by the staff&#13;
would be facilitated, both in the&#13;
areas of personnel and product&#13;
performance.&#13;
"It's the result of ma ny hours of&#13;
deliberations," Dudley said,&#13;
adding that while the single shift&#13;
was a good idea at the time it was&#13;
implemented, a changed supervisory&#13;
structure would allow the&#13;
split shift employees to plan&#13;
major maintenance, such as&#13;
painting and floor sealing, without&#13;
interfering with the operations of&#13;
the university.&#13;
Movie produces&#13;
many views on issue&#13;
by Masood Shafiq&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
A large crowd showed up at the&#13;
Union Bazaar on Apr. 7 for the&#13;
3:30 p. m. showing of the film&#13;
Emmanuelle. The crowd included&#13;
a small group of protestors consisting&#13;
of stu dents and faculty, as&#13;
well as movie goers.&#13;
The protestors chose to ignore&#13;
the group of students who put up&#13;
an act of dragging a female&#13;
student, tied up in chains, forcing&#13;
her to watch the film.&#13;
Of the 75 people who saw the&#13;
film that day, I saw a brother and&#13;
sister, a married female honors&#13;
program student, and a female&#13;
president of a student club line up&#13;
to see the film. Were these people&#13;
lining up to see the film because&#13;
they approved of the subject&#13;
matter or were they making a&#13;
statement that they had the right&#13;
to choose for themselves or were&#13;
they simply curious about the film&#13;
that had caused so much controversy?&#13;
In all, 365 peo ple saw&#13;
the film during its entire showing.&#13;
For all the films shown during&#13;
the entire semester only Raiders&#13;
of the Lost Ark outsold Emmanuelle.&#13;
The number of v iewers&#13;
for the others films are as follows:&#13;
Poltergeist - 255, Star Trek II - 268,&#13;
The Enforcer -115, Raiders of the&#13;
Lost Ark - 397, Richard Pryor Live&#13;
on Sunset Strip - 238, M*A*S*H -&#13;
271, The China Syndrome - 69&#13;
Rocky III - 181 an d Reds - 44.&#13;
"A Delicate Balance" at UW-P&#13;
Edward Albee's Pulitzer Prize&#13;
winning "A Delicate Balance," a&#13;
play at once funny and sad, sober&#13;
and silly, is the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline's spring&#13;
production, on stage for two&#13;
weekends in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Performances are at 8 p. m. on&#13;
Apr. 22,23,29 and 30 and at 2 p. m.&#13;
on Apr. 24. Advance tickets,&#13;
available by calling 553-2345 a nd&#13;
553-2042, are $2.50 for UW - P&#13;
students, staff and for senior&#13;
citizens and $3.50 for others.&#13;
Tickets at the door are $3 for UW -&#13;
P students and staff and senior&#13;
citizens and $4 for others.&#13;
The play's plot is simple. A man&#13;
and a woman whose suburban -&#13;
based marriage is crumbling try&#13;
to shelter the woman's alcoholic&#13;
sister from the pain of a bitter&#13;
world. During the course of an&#13;
evening the couple are visited by&#13;
their unhappy daughter and&#13;
another couple freshly&#13;
traumatized by a shocking experience.&#13;
The central characters&#13;
are thrown into an emotional state&#13;
"delicately balanced" between&#13;
sanity and madness.&#13;
Members of the cast are Andrew&#13;
Brhel, of Cudahy, and Lee&#13;
Lawler, of Kenosha as the couple&#13;
whose marriage is disintegrating;&#13;
Patricia Casciaro, of K enosha, as&#13;
the alcoholic sibling; Rebecca&#13;
Julich, of Racine, as the&#13;
daughter; and Scott&#13;
Reichelsdorf, of K enosha, and Liz&#13;
Schoenoff, of Minneapolis, as the&#13;
traumatized couple.&#13;
Albee, whose plays have won&#13;
two Pulitzers, is considered one of&#13;
the most important playwrights of&#13;
the contemporary American&#13;
theatre. He has also won the New&#13;
York Press Association's Best&#13;
Plays Award, the Lola D'Annunzio&#13;
Award and the Obie&#13;
Award.&#13;
"A Delicate Balance" is considered&#13;
by many critics to be&#13;
Albee's best work. Harold Clurman,&#13;
writing for "The Nation,"&#13;
called the play "brilliant... it is a&#13;
further step in the author's&#13;
progress and is superior to his&#13;
more sensational 'Who's Afraid of&#13;
Virginia Woolf?' "&#13;
Eliot Norton, writing in the&#13;
"Boston Record American" said&#13;
of "A Delicate Balance": "The&#13;
play is as simple as a child's fable,&#13;
as complex as life itself and&#13;
although the story it tells is&#13;
profoundly serious, it is often&#13;
gustily funny."&#13;
The UW - Parkside production is&#13;
being directed by Leon Van Dyke,&#13;
associate professor of dramatic&#13;
arts.&#13;
Special ticket prices are&#13;
available with a coupon in the&#13;
Ranger. For $4 persons can buy&#13;
both a ticket to "A Delicate&#13;
Balance" and a ticket to the&#13;
Milwaukee Paradox Studio&#13;
Theatre's production of Luis O.&#13;
Arata's "The World and Other&#13;
Inventions," to be performed at 8&#13;
p. m. on Wednesday, April 27 in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
dis^^^he^pr^^em^o^parl^ing^urf^^^^saVfor^a "sce^ne' fr^'A^e^ka^e^Balance ^&#13;
CommunVcat' to"heato"'* SPr&#13;
'&#13;
n9 ma&#13;
'" ^ Pr&#13;
°&#13;
dUCt,0n A"&#13;
ril 22 " 24 ^ 2&#13;
' - 3 ° in &#13;
Thursday, April 14,1983&#13;
Editorial&#13;
What's Earl up to?&#13;
People have begun to question the good intentions of one Governor&#13;
Anthony Earl after a set of w hat many Wisconsites see as failures and&#13;
errors. The straw that seems to have broken the people's back was the&#13;
headline last Thursday showing that the state overpaid for a land&#13;
development site. Were the land actually going to be developed into&#13;
something the people wanted, few would have blinked an eye, however&#13;
the land was acquired under rather curious conditions.&#13;
Appraisals on the warehouse site ranged from $950,000 to $1.1 million&#13;
Earl's administration agreed to pay $1.2 million to Loop Distributors for&#13;
the warehouse in order to convert it to a 200 - inmate penitentiary. This&#13;
all took place despite the protests of homeowners and Henry Maier&#13;
Milwaukee's mayor. The claims say that so much was paid for the&#13;
building site because, "we didn't want to gouge the owner."&#13;
Certainly enough, the efforts to add a prison to the Wisconsin area are&#13;
frustrated and unsuccessful. The state went ahead with the purchase of&#13;
the property although there was a court order blocking the sale of the&#13;
property. The court order was sought by Maier and other concerned&#13;
citizens, protesting the prison location.&#13;
The shine people saw on Earl when he was in his first days as&#13;
governor has worn off. When he entered office, Earl was witness to a&#13;
budget deficit ever increasing, and an unemployment fund owing the&#13;
federal government some $880 million. Earl's first step was tax After&#13;
gaining way with the five cent tax on a dollar, Earl urged increases and&#13;
surgages on income tax. (That is for those lucky enough to have jobs).&#13;
Many politicians foresee that these increases will not take place as it is&#13;
only seventeen months until most of these politicians are up for primarv&#13;
and re - election. J&#13;
The other thing people feel uncomfortable about are the appointees&#13;
Earl has stumbled upon. Most feel that Harold Fuller is unqualified for&#13;
the personnel position Earl has given him. Earl was good - hearted&#13;
enough to give the office of Transportation Secretary to Lowell Jackson&#13;
a gubernatorial candidate in 1982, Republican. While Earl, working the&#13;
Department of Natural Resources, DNR, appeared to be an environmentalist,&#13;
at this point, he is backing Jackson's new highway&#13;
package even though the environmentalists are very opposed to it.&#13;
People have begun to question the roads Earl is traveling himself,&#13;
through the state capital, wondering if he really is a governor in office&#13;
for the good of the people.&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Pornography degrading&#13;
- level mentality when confronted&#13;
with a valid issue. Therefore, I&#13;
will not go into depth on those&#13;
points.&#13;
Pornography does, in fact, put&#13;
rape into an acceptable context.&#13;
The industry is based on lies about&#13;
women's sexuality:&#13;
"The pornography industry&#13;
misrepresents and abuses&#13;
women's sexuality. It presents&#13;
women as willing, compliant toys&#13;
and as masochists who seek out&#13;
pain. The message is clear: Any&#13;
female body is available for&#13;
comment, to be grabbed, undressed,&#13;
possessed, beaten,&#13;
mutilated, raped or murdered for&#13;
the 'erotic' pleasure of men.&#13;
Equal numbers of nude men and&#13;
women are rarely found in pornography.&#13;
Rather, nude women&#13;
are usually viewed by clothed or&#13;
unseen men. This one - sided&#13;
exposure in itself is a humiliating&#13;
act toward all women. (Note how&#13;
one - sided nudity is used by males&#13;
to dominate and humiliate other&#13;
males in prisons and military&#13;
training)." (Women Against&#13;
Pornography, NY, NY)&#13;
During the last decade, a new&#13;
body of research has proven a&#13;
definite link between aggressive&#13;
pornography and aggression&#13;
against women. The following&#13;
quote is from a pre - print written&#13;
by Dr. Edward Donnerstein, who&#13;
was kind enough to send 2 different&#13;
pre - prints on this subject&#13;
to me. It is to appear in R. Geen&#13;
and E. Donnerstein (Eds).&#13;
Aggression: theoretical and&#13;
empirical reviews. Vol. 2: Empirical&#13;
reviews. New York:&#13;
Academic Press, 1983.&#13;
"One question that might come&#13;
to mind is whether or not there is,&#13;
in fact, an increase in aggressive&#13;
erotic images. Research and&#13;
reviews (e.g., Eysenck &amp; Nia's,&#13;
1978; Malmuth &amp; Check, 1981;&#13;
Malamuth &amp; Spinner, 1980) tend to&#13;
suggest that such images have&#13;
been on the increase in recent&#13;
years. More important are the&#13;
findings that have shown that&#13;
exposure to aggressive erotica&#13;
can, in male subjects, result in (a)&#13;
self - generated rape fantasies&#13;
(Malamuth, in press); (b) an&#13;
increase in sexual arousal&#13;
(Malamuth, Heim &amp; Feshback,&#13;
1980; (c) a lessened sensitivity&#13;
to rape (Malamuth &amp; Check, in&#13;
press); and (d) an increased acceptance&#13;
of r ape myths and interTo&#13;
the Editor,&#13;
"Asserting that those who have&#13;
no power are practicing censorship&#13;
is ludicrous." This, as&#13;
stated in the March 23 Ranger's&#13;
guest editorial, is true. We are a&#13;
grass - roots level protest, exercising&#13;
our own freedom of speech&#13;
to sensitize others to a very valid&#13;
issue.&#13;
Unfortunately, many people do&#13;
not wish to be enlightened to&#13;
pornography's degrading&#13;
treatment of women; to its increasingly&#13;
violent content; and to&#13;
the fact that aggressive pornography&#13;
has been proven to&#13;
increase aggression against&#13;
women. In fact, by the&#13;
exaggerations and blatant lies&#13;
told about our protest, the same&#13;
people who have accused us of&#13;
censorship have literally censored&#13;
the real issue (and people's&#13;
thoughts regarding that issue),&#13;
thus far.&#13;
1. No group in power has been&#13;
asked to stop the movie. We have&#13;
approached these people only to&#13;
make this issue known. They were&#13;
asked to remember that, as individuals&#13;
(and groups of individuals),&#13;
they have every right&#13;
to speak out on this issue. Fear of&#13;
a slap on the wrist by a defensive&#13;
or threatened student group is no&#13;
reason to forfeit one's own&#13;
freedom of speech.&#13;
2. Our petition did not&#13;
"demand" that the showing of t he&#13;
movie be halted. THIS ONE&#13;
MOVIE IS NOT, AND NEVER&#13;
HAS BEEN, THE ISSUE. No&#13;
movie is specified. The petition&#13;
states only what we feel the issue&#13;
is. It ends with the statement:&#13;
"While in agreement with the&#13;
above points, we ask that PAB not&#13;
show pornographic movies in&#13;
what is meant to be our&#13;
educational environment."&#13;
As far as social responsibilities&#13;
are concerned, we have a very&#13;
basic right to a non - degrading,&#13;
non - threatening educational&#13;
environment. Just as we expect&#13;
the KKK and Neo - Nazis not be&#13;
supported and promoted here, so&#13;
do we expect the porn industry not&#13;
be supported and promoted. As&#13;
you can see, social responsibilities&#13;
carry more weight than many&#13;
would wish to admit.&#13;
The other exaggerations and&#13;
lies are imbecilic. We take this as&#13;
evidence that these people are&#13;
incapable of anything past surface&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
A few days ago, last Wednesday,&#13;
I was walking down the&#13;
hall over by the bookstore. I was&#13;
looking into the bookstore window&#13;
when I heard a number of books&#13;
falling onto the concourse floor.&#13;
Without stopping to see what had&#13;
happened, I turned around and&#13;
saw out of the corner of my eye&#13;
that a woman who could have&#13;
been about 25 or so, had fallen&#13;
down, and her books flew into&#13;
every corner of the hall. Not&#13;
thinking that the woman could&#13;
have probably used a little help, I&#13;
just kept walking until I got to the&#13;
first alcove, past the bookstore.&#13;
Then I realized what an idiotic&#13;
thing I had done by not at least&#13;
stopping to see if the woman was&#13;
hurt. So I turned around.&#13;
I didn't go back though. Instead&#13;
I stood down by the corner of t he&#13;
alcove and watched this woman&#13;
slowly get up, gather her books&#13;
and continue. A few people&#13;
chuckled as they went by, perhaps&#13;
giving the woman a feeling of&#13;
being rather embarrassed. None&#13;
of them stopped to help, most&#13;
people either ignored that anyone&#13;
was even on the floor, or they&#13;
personal violence against women&#13;
and (d) an increased acceptance&#13;
of rape myths and interpersonal&#13;
violence against women&#13;
(Malamuth &amp; Check, 1981) as well&#13;
as self - reported possibility of&#13;
raping (Malamuth, Haber, &amp;&#13;
Feshbach, 1980). It is of further&#13;
interest to note that these increases&#13;
in arousal and changes in&#13;
rape attitudes are also highly&#13;
correlated with actual aggression&#13;
against women (e.g., Donnerstein&#13;
&amp; Malamuth, forthcoming;&#13;
Malamuth &amp; Donnerstein, forthcoming).&#13;
These attitudinal&#13;
effects and their correlations with&#13;
aggression were the basis for a&#13;
series of studies that have&#13;
examined the direct relationship&#13;
between aggressive erotica and&#13;
subsequent aggressive behavior."&#13;
While absorbing this research,&#13;
people of conscience will realize&#13;
that pornography is no longer&#13;
what it used to be. It has evolved&#13;
into an extreme.&#13;
What must be understood is that&#13;
by showing pornographic&#13;
materials on campus, we are&#13;
supporting and promoting an&#13;
industry which literally&#13;
legitimizes a culture of violence&#13;
against women.&#13;
NOTE: Anyone interested in&#13;
reading any of our material is&#13;
more than welcome to do so&#13;
Believe me, we have a lot of it&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Donna L. Sahakian&#13;
The insensitivity of it all&#13;
stared in a rather critical way,&#13;
like the woman had something&#13;
wrong with her. Feeling rather&#13;
guilty about just standing there&#13;
staring at her myself, I approached&#13;
the woman and&#13;
questioned if she was alright. She&#13;
glared at me, and reported, "Yes,&#13;
I'm fine, just never mind."&#13;
This of course made me feel&#13;
even better. In the midst of feeling&#13;
good, I realized that the only&#13;
reason the woman had responded&#13;
to me in the way she did was&#13;
because she had indeed felt a little&#13;
embarrassed by what had taken&#13;
place, and maybe she was a bit&#13;
angry that no one had the&#13;
courtesy to even help her pick up&#13;
her books. I guess I would have&#13;
felt much the same way. I certainly&#13;
would have responded&#13;
similarly.&#13;
Thursday was another day, and&#13;
insensitivity still ran rampid&#13;
through the halls of Parkside. This&#13;
time though, the insensitivity took&#13;
place down in the Union Bazarr&#13;
area, right before the X-rated film&#13;
was shown. There were opposers&#13;
to the film, who all stood in a&#13;
single area, just making their&#13;
stand known, they weren't loud or&#13;
obnoxious, or insensitive to the&#13;
people m the line who were drawn&#13;
m to see the film. They just&#13;
wanted to do all they could to let&#13;
people know where they stand&#13;
Then there were the people&#13;
standing in the line. Some talking&#13;
amongst themselves, others&#13;
looking rather embarrassed about&#13;
Theirnprnh&#13;
Gy ^ StGpped into&#13;
-&#13;
ineir embarrassment was not&#13;
enough to keep them from seeing&#13;
the movie however.&#13;
The third group was a rather&#13;
dispassionate looking group&#13;
stirring in and amongst the crowd&#13;
perhaps looking for a wa™&#13;
demonstrate a good bit of insensitivity.&#13;
They did an outstanding&#13;
job. A n umber of people&#13;
took one girl and made it look as if&#13;
they had chained and bound her&#13;
into captivity and dragged her off&#13;
to wherever. To be honest, I was&#13;
rather embarrassed by the insensitive&#13;
display the group had&#13;
put on. It showed how curiously&#13;
unintelligent a group can be. The&#13;
display really only caused bad&#13;
feelings for the student / faculty&#13;
opposition demonstration, and the&#13;
people waiting in line to see the&#13;
movie.&#13;
While I'm sure certain people&#13;
found the demonstration quite&#13;
humorous, others felt the impact&#13;
in the vulnerability they experience&#13;
every day. It's one thing&#13;
to take a stand and recognize with&#13;
others that stand, and demonstrate&#13;
that stand in a well -&#13;
thought, intelligent manner. It&#13;
becomes a different kind of experience&#13;
when people lose the&#13;
perspective of sensitivity that&#13;
they otherwise might hold. It's a&#13;
shame that has to happen in an&#13;
institution of higher education,&#13;
then again, maybe the insensitivity&#13;
of it all has to be seen&#13;
as part of t he learning experience&#13;
for all involved.&#13;
Correction&#13;
Pat Mulligan, a Parkside&#13;
Senior is not graduating with&#13;
honors in Economics. She is&#13;
graduating with Distinction in&#13;
the Honors program. Her story&#13;
was the second in a series on&#13;
students involved in the Honors&#13;
program and graduating with&#13;
Distinction.&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
Herbert Kubly&#13;
anger&#13;
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;
Advisor&#13;
responsiblefoM tsTdItor i&#13;
bV s,uden,s&#13;
°&#13;
f UW • Parkside and they are solely&#13;
Published every Thur^,. J "f"&#13;
6* and&#13;
RANGER is printed bv thl I M I n&#13;
°2&#13;
he academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
Written permission is Sired'm Coopera,ive Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All co&#13;
rrespondence shm?iH ^5iHrf&#13;
repri&#13;
'&#13;
an&#13;
^ P°&#13;
r&#13;
'ionof RANGER.&#13;
Parkside, Box No 2000 yP„nt?&#13;
dr&#13;
"?.&#13;
ed ,0: Pa&#13;
rkside Ranger, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Letters to the Edi'toVw'ilhoI ' ^&#13;
ISC0nsin&#13;
- 53141.&#13;
Paper with one inch marnin.A ?^&#13;
6&#13;
? " '^written, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification letters must be signed and a telephone number inDeadtfne"f&#13;
o r''tetters ^ s' Mond&#13;
Va&#13;
''&#13;
reasor&#13;
«&#13;
reserves all editorial ilrkmjJX • p m for Publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content pr,vtleBes ,n refusing to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Bu&#13;
t&#13;
s&#13;
i&#13;
ness Club seeks to form Frat&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, April 14,1983&#13;
Clube&#13;
isPDir&#13;
a&#13;
knnde ^&#13;
0men Bu&#13;
siness UUD is planning to petition for a 2KJ- 1116 Phi Gamma NS&#13;
Phi rnm °&#13;
n ?T&#13;
ampus next fall. Phi Gamma Nu is a national&#13;
ODen^ohTh fraternity in business ?&#13;
p&#13;
.&#13;
n to both men and women. The&#13;
fha/h*&#13;
y&#13;
.&#13;
Consists of chapters that have been instituted at fully&#13;
accredited universities, colleges&#13;
and departments of business&#13;
a&#13;
t—ahon, offering courses&#13;
leading to recognized business&#13;
degrees. Persons who have&#13;
completed six credits of&#13;
business subjects,&#13;
eco nom ics&#13;
pre -&#13;
including&#13;
r e t a ili n g ,&#13;
management, political science,&#13;
data processing, food&#13;
management and other courses&#13;
are eligible for membership.&#13;
Phi Gamma Nu has a student&#13;
loan fund from which any undergraduate&#13;
may receive aid in&#13;
order to complete their education.&#13;
The fraternity also supports four&#13;
different scholarships to encourage&#13;
academically minded&#13;
students to increase their GPA's,&#13;
as well as the average GPA of the&#13;
chapter as a whole.&#13;
summer and early fall and would&#13;
like to hear from any interested&#13;
students. There will be a table&#13;
with information and signup&#13;
sheets in the Molinaro concourse&#13;
this Wednesday, Apr. 19, at 6:30 p.&#13;
m. There will also be a signup&#13;
sheet on the bulletin board next to&#13;
Irene Herreman's office, Moln&#13;
326H.&#13;
3 students awarded&#13;
BRI fellowships&#13;
Women in Business is currently&#13;
organizing activities for this&#13;
More information about what&#13;
Phi Gamma Nu has to offer will be&#13;
presented at the next Women in&#13;
Business meeting, Apr. 21 at 1 p.&#13;
m. Interested students are&#13;
^ ° — welcome.&#13;
Small business workshop scheduled&#13;
"HHow ow to Read and Ttifn * to Read and Interpret&#13;
Financial Statements" will be the&#13;
topic of a three - part seminar for&#13;
owners, managers and key emP'oyees&#13;
of small businesses to be&#13;
held from 9 a.m. to noon on three&#13;
successive Wednesdays — Apr. 13&#13;
20 and 27 — in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Union.&#13;
The seminar will be taught by&#13;
Robert R. Davidson, a financial&#13;
management specialist, who holds&#13;
a master's degree in business&#13;
administration and is an associate&#13;
professor of business and an area&#13;
business agent for University&#13;
Extension. Davidson instructs and&#13;
counsels small businessmen in&#13;
Milwaukee, Racine and Kenosha&#13;
and has six years of small -&#13;
business management experience&#13;
in Milwaukee and Chicago.&#13;
Persons interested in&#13;
establishing a small business, as&#13;
well as spouses of persons who&#13;
own or operate small businesses,&#13;
also are encouraged to enroll in&#13;
Letters&#13;
NACA: Thanks&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is an open letter to all those&#13;
Parkside students who gave of&#13;
their time and energy this past&#13;
weekend during the NACA&#13;
(National Association for Campus&#13;
Activities) Regional Conference.&#13;
It was because of your support&#13;
that we received so many compliments&#13;
about Parkside and this&#13;
being "one of the best regional&#13;
conferences" — which made us&#13;
Is Parkside Lucky?&#13;
proud to work with such a great&#13;
bunch of students.&#13;
We hope that you were able to&#13;
view Parkside in a different light&#13;
this past weekend, and were able&#13;
to allow your pride in Parkside to&#13;
show through. Your support was&#13;
greatly appreciated!&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
"Co-op Couvion"&#13;
and&#13;
"Marilyn Parkside"&#13;
the seminar, which will be of&#13;
interest to operators of retail,&#13;
service, manufacturing and&#13;
wholesale enterprises.&#13;
The first session, titled "Und&#13;
e rs t a n d i n g F i n a n c i al&#13;
Statements," will focus on&#13;
balance sheets and income&#13;
statements, accrual versus cash&#13;
methods of accounting and four&#13;
types of accounts. How to make&#13;
debits and credits easier to understand&#13;
also will be discussed.&#13;
The second session, "Interpreting&#13;
and Analyzing&#13;
Financial Results," will explore&#13;
using operating ratios as a&#13;
barometer of business health and&#13;
how to use ratios to compare one&#13;
business to another.&#13;
The third session, "Financial&#13;
Planning and Budgeting," will&#13;
examine the methods of projecting&#13;
income and expenses,&#13;
planning cash flow and budgeting&#13;
for cost - control.&#13;
The $15 enrollment fee includes&#13;
all three sessions, handout&#13;
materials and refreshments.&#13;
Complete registration material&#13;
can be obtained by calling&#13;
Parkside's Office of Business&#13;
Outreach at 553-2047 or 553-2189.&#13;
Advance payment is required.&#13;
P a r k s i d e 's Biom edic al&#13;
Research Institute has announced&#13;
selection of three 1983 undergraduate&#13;
summer research&#13;
fellows who will spend 10 weeks&#13;
working with UW-Parkside&#13;
faculty members associated with&#13;
the Institute.&#13;
Recipients of the fellowships,&#13;
which carry a $1,200 stipend, are:&#13;
Mark De Rosch, 7834-42nd Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha, who will work with Prof.&#13;
Edward Wallen, life science,&#13;
studying the relationship between&#13;
the peneal gland, the hormone&#13;
melatonin and photoperiodism as&#13;
they affect reproduction. The&#13;
experiments involve varying the&#13;
light / dark cycle and determining&#13;
what affect this has on hormone&#13;
production.&#13;
Sharon Rudnick, 9009 River&#13;
Road, Kenosha, who will work&#13;
withProf. Keith Ward chemistry&#13;
on a project attempting to obtain&#13;
crystals of the anti - tumor drug&#13;
bleomycin and to .:haractemeits&#13;
crystalline structure b&#13;
y X-ray&#13;
diffraction techniques. An und&#13;
e r st a n d i n g o f the c r y s a1&#13;
' ^&#13;
struc ture cou ld faci lita te&#13;
development of even more el&#13;
fective drug analogs.&#13;
Judith Rudnick, 3339 N. Charles&#13;
St Baltimore, Md., who will work&#13;
Bruce Branchini,&#13;
in attempting to&#13;
the enwith&#13;
Prof,&#13;
chemistry,&#13;
synthesize inhibitors of&#13;
zyme acetylcholinesterase, which&#13;
, is involved in neurotransmission.&#13;
The development of specific&#13;
inhibitors of this enzyme has&#13;
important clinical implications in&#13;
cardiology.&#13;
The fellowships are supported&#13;
by BRI funds and a grant from the&#13;
Johnson Wax Fund of Racine.&#13;
Students, teachers get together&#13;
for physics conference&#13;
The 38th annual meeting of the&#13;
Wisconsin section of American&#13;
Association of Physics Teachers&#13;
will be held at Parkside on Friday&#13;
and Saturday, Apr. 22-23. The&#13;
meeting will be held jointly with&#13;
Zone 8 (Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana,&#13;
and the upper peninsula of&#13;
Michigan) of the Society of&#13;
Physics Students. The conference&#13;
will feature talks and demonstrations&#13;
by Wisconsin physics&#13;
teachers as well as talks on&#13;
research projects carried out by&#13;
students from schools in&#13;
Wisconsin and Michigan. Special&#13;
highlights of the meeting will be a&#13;
demonstration presented by Joe&#13;
Meyer, Vice President of&#13;
American Association of Physics&#13;
Teachers, titled "The Physics of&#13;
Plagiarism, or Demonstrations I&#13;
Have Stolen"; and a talk by&#13;
Edwin Goldwasser of the&#13;
University of Illinois titled&#13;
"Changing Attitudes Toward&#13;
Research and Risk in our&#13;
Society."&#13;
The demonstration show will be&#13;
given at 4 p .m. in Grq. 103, and&#13;
Prof. Goldwassertalk will be&#13;
given after the annual banquet on&#13;
Friday evening. Another special&#13;
feature of this year's meeting is&#13;
the participation of a large group&#13;
of high school teachers, which has&#13;
been made possible through&#13;
grants from the Johnson Foundation,&#13;
Twin Disc, Inc, Unico Inc,&#13;
and UW-Parkside.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As of this past weekend&#13;
Parkside students were offered&#13;
the opportunity to see Emmanudle.&#13;
&#13;
Should we feel lucky to have a&#13;
pornographic movie such as this&#13;
on campus?&#13;
PAB has to justify its showing of&#13;
the film. We can understand&#13;
people's constitutional rights and&#13;
that type of argument. Also as&#13;
they say, it will make a lot of&#13;
money. Is money the only goal of&#13;
PAB in showing films on campus?&#13;
Since this film has been shown&#13;
you've accomplished both purposes&#13;
. My question is this: What is&#13;
Will this type of movie now be&#13;
shown on a regular basis and&#13;
always for the above mentioned&#13;
reasons?&#13;
, Why? Why?&#13;
There are movie houses with a&#13;
reputation for this type of film. Do&#13;
we need to use our fine university&#13;
for this purpose? Everyone has&#13;
heard the old cliche, "money is&#13;
the root of all evil." Let's not&#13;
encourage the pornography industry&#13;
with our patronage.&#13;
Let's not degrade our school and&#13;
ruin our growing fine reputation&#13;
by showing films that are objectionable.&#13;
&#13;
Sincerely&#13;
Extension offers summer workshop&#13;
in the creative arts&#13;
Anyone interested in the&#13;
creative arts can combine leisure&#13;
and learning at the twentieth&#13;
annual session of the Rhinelander&#13;
School of Arts, July 25-29. Sponsored&#13;
by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Extension Arts&#13;
Development Unit, the school held&#13;
at Rhinelander offers workshops&#13;
in writing, the Visual arts,&#13;
photography and dance.&#13;
Harry Mark Petrakis, noted&#13;
novelist and short story writer will&#13;
the next step? E.Spalla be be in in resiideer nce, as will the inv.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.......-.................&#13;
ternationally known watercolor&#13;
painter, Valfred Thelin.&#13;
include: article, fiction, non -&#13;
fiction, juvenile, poetry,&#13;
playwrighting, humor, radio,&#13;
colu mn, reg ion al and&#13;
reminiscence writing. A writing&#13;
course in "Inperpreting Nature,"&#13;
coupled with environmental field&#13;
trips will also be offered, plus&#13;
courses in marketing, journal&#13;
writing and storytelling.&#13;
In the visual arts, workshops in&#13;
oil and watercolor painting,&#13;
drawing and illustrating, woodcarving,&#13;
and Raku pottery will be&#13;
given. Beginning and advanced&#13;
photography will also be offered&#13;
and DANCECIRCUS will give&#13;
dance workshops for children and&#13;
adults.&#13;
For a brochure with complete&#13;
information about the school&#13;
write to: Gen Lewis, UWEX 610&#13;
Langdon, Rm. 722) Madison' WI&#13;
53706; or Cedric Vig, Rhinelander&#13;
School of Arts, P.O Box&#13;
Rhinelander, WI 54501. 695,&#13;
Veteran's Club Run Saturday Creative writing courses will&#13;
The Parkside Veteran's Club is&#13;
sponsoring a five - mile race this&#13;
Saturday, Apr. 16 at 9 a.m.&#13;
The race will begin under the&#13;
Union Bridge on the Inner Loop&#13;
Road. Course maps will be&#13;
available at 8:30 a.m. on race day.&#13;
Entry fee is $6 and will include&#13;
admission to a post - race dance on&#13;
the Union Patio. The dance is also&#13;
open to the general public, for a $3&#13;
fee. The music of the band&#13;
"Jazmin" will be featured.&#13;
The admission price includes a&#13;
T-shirt, which will be available to&#13;
early registrants at race time. All&#13;
other registrants will get their&#13;
shirts the week after the race. Tshirts&#13;
will also be available to non&#13;
- entrants, for an additional $3 fee.&#13;
Write&#13;
Ranger&#13;
a l etter&#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;
NEED HELP F IGHTING BACK?&#13;
LEARN WHATTHE UNIVERSITY&#13;
WON'T TEACH YOU&#13;
Regarding resolving conflicts with school, governmental&#13;
agencies, businesses, landlords, etc.&#13;
Advice on "Games You Were Never Taught'&#13;
and 2 Letters to Your Adversary.&#13;
654-1903 Rets Hanson, M.A.&#13;
REASONABLE RATES&#13;
Not A Legal or Psychological Service&#13;
IS&#13;
linger&#13;
now accepting applications for&#13;
Editor&#13;
for the 1983-84 academic&#13;
Applicants must be registe]&#13;
Parkside students plannin,&#13;
least 6 credits each seme&#13;
K a d l i n e f °&#13;
r aPpUcatU&#13;
Iy&#13;
°°n, April 22, 1*&#13;
Send application RANGEF&#13;
Resume to:&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
ATT: Ch &#13;
Thursday, April 14, 1983 RANGER&#13;
by Patrick Luchack&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside will be visited by a man&#13;
Apr. 19, wh o is better known for&#13;
dropping in on the Yanomamo in&#13;
southern Venezuela than on a&#13;
group of students in southern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
He is Dr. Napolean A. Chagnon&#13;
and his anthropological work&#13;
among the Yanomamo is probably&#13;
some of the best known anthropological&#13;
literature around&#13;
Chagnon's book "The Fierce&#13;
People" is one of the first required&#13;
readings for any student entering&#13;
the field of anthropology.&#13;
Chagnon, who is presently at&#13;
Northwestern University in&#13;
Illinois, has written dozens of&#13;
articles, as well as producing over&#13;
Anthro Antics&#13;
twenty documentary films, on&#13;
these people of the South&#13;
American rain forest; taken from&#13;
ten field studies lead by himself to&#13;
this still unwesternized land.&#13;
Chagnon is coming to Parkside&#13;
not to talk on the Yanomamo, but&#13;
on a subject that is currently&#13;
interesting even to the general&#13;
public and will hold a special&#13;
interest for anthropology&#13;
students, life science students,&#13;
psychology students and any other&#13;
student or faculty member who is&#13;
interested in why humans act the&#13;
way they do; the topic is the&#13;
controversial subject of&#13;
Sociobiology.&#13;
The heart of Chagnon's talk will&#13;
be based on how this school of&#13;
thought, concerned with human&#13;
CLUB EVENTS&#13;
behavior, affects contemporary&#13;
anthropological endeavors. We&#13;
would like to stress at this point&#13;
that because human behavior is&#13;
the bottom line concern of this&#13;
topic and we are all humans; this&#13;
talk by Dr. Chagnon should be of&#13;
interest to a lot of people even&#13;
presently not involved with any&#13;
facet of the Behavior or Physical&#13;
sciences.&#13;
Everyone at the university is&#13;
encouraged to listen to this&#13;
fascinating man. I can almost&#13;
guarantee you that you will not be&#13;
disappointed. For additional information&#13;
stop up at the anthro&#13;
lab m Moln. 321 and ask any&#13;
smiling faced anthro student up&#13;
there. The lecture is scheduled for&#13;
1 P- m . in Moln. 324.&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
FALL SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seekino a&#13;
degree a UW-Parkside) should consult their academic adviser&#13;
prior to registration for Fall Semester. A Certification of Ad&#13;
vising form, signed by the adviser, is required for registration.&#13;
lorinT^hfl KC0Ur&#13;
!f Schedules wi&#13;
" be available on April n.&#13;
April 11-25 has been designated as an academic advising period&#13;
and advisers will make every effort to meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean of&#13;
acuity, 348 Wylhe Library - Learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non - matriculant students (students not seekinc a&#13;
degree at UW-Parkside) are exempt from this requirement.&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
ALL STUDENTS! I&#13;
1. YOUR REGISTRATION PACKET FOR FALL 1983 will ha&#13;
availab'e beginning Monday, April n, 1983 in Lower Main&#13;
2. COURSE SCHEDULES FOR FALL 1983 will also be available.&#13;
OFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL&#13;
ANALYSIS AND REGISTRATION&#13;
Accounting&#13;
Tickets for the Spring Banquet&#13;
are now being sold in Molinaro&#13;
Hall. The price is $15 for the&#13;
dinner and dance. If you just want&#13;
to go to the dance, tickets are $8&#13;
The banquet will be held at the&#13;
Racine Sheraton. The music of&#13;
"Carolina County" will be&#13;
featured.&#13;
For all Accounting Principles&#13;
students the learning Lab is open&#13;
Monday through Thursday from 9&#13;
a.m. to 12 p.m.&#13;
Geology&#13;
"Paleomagnetic Characteristics&#13;
of the Ordovician -&#13;
Silurian Boundary in Wisconsin"&#13;
will be the next Geology&#13;
Colloquium, to be held on Friday,&#13;
Apr. 15 at 3 p.m. in Grq. 113'&#13;
Sponsored by the Geology Club."&#13;
ISO&#13;
The International Students&#13;
Organization will have a meeting&#13;
on Friday, Apr. 15 a t 1 p.m. in&#13;
Union 106. A membership drive&#13;
and preparation for the ISO&#13;
elections will be the main activities.&#13;
&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
If you are interested in&#13;
becoming a 1983 - '84 Parkside '&#13;
cheerleader you can pick up&#13;
applications at the Union Information&#13;
Center. There will be&#13;
workshops on Tuesday, Apr 19&#13;
and Wednesday, Apr. 20 from 2 to&#13;
8 p. m. in the Phy Ed building.&#13;
Try outs are on Monday Apr 25&#13;
at 6 p. m.&#13;
PSE&#13;
The third annual Loop 500 ro ad&#13;
race will be held on Wednesday,&#13;
Apr. 27 a t 1. p. m. on the Inner&#13;
Loop Road. Entrance fee is $10 per&#13;
team, which includes a T - shirt&#13;
for each team member and one&#13;
pitcher of beer per team. The&#13;
teams must consist of two men&#13;
and two women. Prizes for the&#13;
winning teams will be announced&#13;
during signup week.&#13;
Signup will begin on Wed., Apr.&#13;
20 in the Molinaro Concourse. The&#13;
race is sponsored by PSE and the&#13;
Marketing Club.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
The Art Addicts and the Fine&#13;
Arts Division would like to announce&#13;
the opening of the 1983&#13;
Student Art Show on Monday, Apr..&#13;
18 at 7 p. m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Gallery. Jane Brite, this year's&#13;
judge, will give a presentation&#13;
about this year's show. All are&#13;
welcome to attend.&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
Trike Race Two has been moved&#13;
to Apr. 22nd, in order to appease&#13;
the Flagpersons Union. The Union&#13;
Steward said "the UWPDT&#13;
negotiation team knew they, didn't&#13;
stand a chance. We have always&#13;
thought them to be a bit slow. You&#13;
know what I mean, like dense&#13;
even. The Brewers home opener is&#13;
a state holiday. There is no way in&#13;
hell we would even consider&#13;
working that day."&#13;
The UWPDT Negotiation team,&#13;
after hearing the flagpersons&#13;
comments, stated, "I wonder&#13;
what that guy meant by dense?"&#13;
The UWPDT would like any&#13;
student organizations interested&#13;
in participating in a large fund&#13;
raising party to drop off a note in&#13;
the UWPDT mail box in the SOC&#13;
office, with the name and phone&#13;
number of your club's fund raising&#13;
representative. The UWPDT&#13;
would like to have an event big&#13;
enough to profit all organizations&#13;
involved.&#13;
To those who helped on the&#13;
Peter J. Simon percussion recital,&#13;
thank you very much.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
TOSENTS PARADOX STUDIO THEATRE®&#13;
THE WORLD&#13;
"AND OTHER INVFNTIOM?&#13;
A NEW PLAY BY LUIS O. ARATA "&#13;
WEDNESDA Y, APRIL 27,1983 8:00p m&#13;
COMMUNICATION ARTS THEATRE&#13;
Advance Tickets $3.50 General Admission&#13;
$2.50 Students/Staff/Seniors&#13;
at the door $4.00 &lt;&amp; $3.00&#13;
_ _&#13;
r&#13;
f _&#13;
c&#13;
fT' 553-2581&#13;
SPECIAL OFFER WITH THIS COUPON: One •&#13;
show P L US one t i c k e t fo r 'A Del n&#13;
C k e t f o r t h&#13;
' s&#13;
22-21.,29-301 for SA in advan ce 0"'&#13;
e&#13;
J&#13;
8l&#13;
«ce' (Apri,&#13;
Center o r Fin e Ar t s D i v is O f f i J . °&#13;
n , n f o&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESS &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 14,1983&#13;
A personal account of Parkside's trip to the U S S&#13;
„ Feature Editor's Note: Alan G. _ I « • V Vi «&#13;
Zond is PflrlrClHp cfll^onf nn/4 Krin^nrr /&gt;« 4A *_ L _r. t « ..&#13;
Feature Editor's Note: Alan G.&#13;
Zond is a Parkside student, and&#13;
w spring break he travelled to&#13;
the Soviet Union. The following is&#13;
a personal account of his travels,&#13;
by Alan G. Zond&#13;
Saturday, March 5&#13;
We met at Howard Johnson's for&#13;
a farewell brunch this morning. In&#13;
all, there are 11 people in our&#13;
group: Ken Hoover, group leader;&#13;
Judy Hoover, the head of the&#13;
district office for Congressman&#13;
Les Aspin; Marvin Nice, a&#13;
Kenosha physician; Theresa&#13;
Wintis, a beautician from Racine;&#13;
Robert Gertenbach, a retired&#13;
banker, also from Racine; Wesley&#13;
Brooks, a Parkside Business&#13;
Graduate student; Vince&#13;
Tomkiewicz, a UW-Madison&#13;
graduate; Eugene Dunk, Eric&#13;
Simonsen, Diane Evans,&#13;
Georgette Kellam and myself'&#13;
who are all UW-Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
After checking to make sure all&#13;
our papers were in order, we&#13;
boarded a bus to take us down to&#13;
O'Hare Airport for our flight to&#13;
New York. The flight was of the&#13;
cramped commuter variety, but&#13;
the time passed quickly as we&#13;
engaged ourselves in conversation&#13;
with members of our own and&#13;
other groups.&#13;
Once at John F. Kennedy International,&#13;
we received our final&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 am - 4:00 p m&#13;
• Jube Jells&#13;
• Licorice Bully&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Milk Carmels&#13;
• Orange Slices&#13;
Peanut Butter Chip&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
Peppermint Kisses&#13;
Rootbeer Barrels&#13;
• Sour Balls&#13;
• Spearment Leaves&#13;
• Starlite Mints&#13;
• Carmel Targets&#13;
• Cinnamon Discs&#13;
• Candy Pops&#13;
• Corn Nuts&#13;
• Assorted Perky&#13;
• Assorted Royal&#13;
• Assorted Toffee&#13;
Bridge Mix&#13;
Burndt Peanuts&#13;
Butterscotch Discs&#13;
• Candy Coffee Discs&#13;
• Carmel Bully&#13;
• Chocolate Drops&#13;
• Chocolate Jots&#13;
• Chocolate Peanuts&#13;
• Chocolate Raisins&#13;
• Chocolate Stars&#13;
• Jelly Beans&#13;
• California Mix&#13;
• Caribbean Delicacy&#13;
• Carob Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Carob Raisins&#13;
• Carob Peanuts&#13;
Natural Pistachio&#13;
_ Red Pistachio&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Sunflower Seeds&#13;
• Student Food Mix&#13;
• Yogurt Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Yogurt Peanuts&#13;
• Yogurt Raisins&#13;
~ Yogurt Sesame Brittle&#13;
Smoked Almonds whole&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF APR. 17&#13;
CHOCOLATE&#13;
COVERED PEAHUTS&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
briefing on the trip before boarding&#13;
our Finair flight to Helsinki.&#13;
Although the flight was an hour&#13;
late in taking off, the service and&#13;
attentiveness of the flight crew&#13;
made the wait well worth it.&#13;
Soviet* Uniom ***"&#13;
pr6Sent war memorials seen throughout the&#13;
Sunday, March 6&#13;
After nearly seven hours in the&#13;
air, we arrived, rather tired, in&#13;
Helsinki. After clearing Passport&#13;
Control, we boarded a bus for a&#13;
sightseeing tour of the city.&#13;
During the tour we had a chance&#13;
to see the many architectural&#13;
wonders, both ancient and&#13;
modern, which abound in this city.&#13;
Among the structures was a&#13;
church which is built into a rock in&#13;
the center of town. Unfortunately,&#13;
since it was Sunday, we were only&#13;
able to see the exteriors of the&#13;
buildings, but found this fi&#13;
our day before we headed&#13;
the airport for our fligl&#13;
Moscow.&#13;
Upon our return to the &lt;&#13;
we boarded an early e&#13;
flight which brought u&#13;
Moscow at 9:15 p.m. Once&#13;
the very modern termii&#13;
headed down an escala&#13;
Customs and Passport (&#13;
where we filled out a decl;&#13;
of the valuables and U.S. cu&#13;
we were bringing into the&#13;
Union. We learned that we&#13;
keep this declaration with u&#13;
times during our trip sir&#13;
would need it whenever •&#13;
changed currency.&#13;
After filling out the decla&#13;
I picked up my luggage an&#13;
Continued On Page S&#13;
CflM€UOT WMUSK&#13;
IS MUSIC AND&#13;
Prices Good&#13;
Thru&#13;
Sunday&#13;
112 WAR VANGELIS&#13;
CHARIOTS OF FIRE&#13;
(Jrigmal SounJtnxk Album&#13;
BRYAN ADAMS&#13;
Cuts Like A Kijife&#13;
Albums&#13;
•andB&#13;
cassettes&#13;
Give the gift&#13;
of mus tie.&#13;
U2 WAR • STYX • MICHAEL JACKSON&#13;
PINK FLOYD • KENNY ROGERS&#13;
ALABAMA • DEXYS MIDNIGHT RUNNERS&#13;
PINK FLOYD&#13;
THE FINAL CUT&#13;
including;&#13;
^Sy~&#13;
l&#13;
*.P"&#13;
U/Th&#13;
* Gunner. Dm.m&#13;
The Fletcher Memorial Home&#13;
Not Now John/The Final Cut&#13;
MICHAEL&#13;
JACKSON&#13;
THRILLER&#13;
Thrilr/^2* 2!".&#13;
h *&#13;
,ul McCartney)&#13;
Mlne/Blllle Jean&#13;
Wanna Be Startln Somethln&#13;
is MUSIC AND "&#13;
VQ,&#13;
loble At Vour Nearby&#13;
MOR€! CflM€LOT MUSIC Store &#13;
Milwaukee group to perform | Soviet trip Continued&#13;
MMililwwaauukkeeee's ParaHnv 's Paradox Studio&#13;
Theatre will bring its production&#13;
of L uis O. Arata's new play, "The&#13;
World and Other Inventions,"&#13;
which depicts the clash between&#13;
science and the arts, to Parkside&#13;
at8p. m. on Wednesday, Apr. 27 in&#13;
the Comm. Arts Theatre.&#13;
The Parkside performance is&#13;
being supported by a $1,000 grant&#13;
from the Wisconsin Humanities&#13;
Committee and will feature&#13;
Paradox performers who&#13;
premiered the play on April 8 in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The play is directed by David&#13;
Rommel, who has studied and&#13;
acted in New York, London and&#13;
Minneapolis and is a member of&#13;
Milwaukee's professional experimental&#13;
theatre company&#13;
Theatre X.&#13;
Advance tickets are $2.50 for all&#13;
students, staff and senior citizens&#13;
and $3.50 for others. Tickets at the&#13;
door are $3 for students, UW - P&#13;
staff and senior citizens and $4 for&#13;
others. Reservations can be made&#13;
by calling 553-2581 or 553-2345 and&#13;
tickets can be purchased at the&#13;
Campus Information Desk or at&#13;
the Fine Arts Division office.&#13;
In "The World and Other In&#13;
ventions," Arata, a native of&#13;
Argentina who holds an undergraduate&#13;
degree in physics&#13;
and a PhD in literature and&#13;
theater from Cornell University,&#13;
creates two friends — former&#13;
college roommates — who&#13;
represent opposite ends of the&#13;
intellectual spectrum. One&#13;
character is a physicist, the other&#13;
a playwright and in the course of&#13;
the play the two confront each&#13;
other's ideological positions. The&#13;
playwright condemns science for&#13;
inventions like nuclear weapons&#13;
and the scientist criticizes&#13;
humanity for using morally&#13;
neutral scientific discoveries for&#13;
destructive purposes.&#13;
Special ticket prices are&#13;
available with a coupon appearing&#13;
in the Ranger. For $4, one can buy&#13;
both a ticket to "The World and&#13;
Other Inventions" plus a ticket to&#13;
Parkside Dramatic Arts&#13;
Discipline's spring production of&#13;
Edward Albee's "A Delicate&#13;
Balance," which will be performed&#13;
at 8 p. m. on April 22, 23 , 29&#13;
and 30 and at 2 p. m. on April 24 in&#13;
the Comm. Arts Theater.&#13;
'Mozart on Fifth' to play here&#13;
"Three bums redeemed by&#13;
music."&#13;
That's the self - description erf&#13;
Mozart on Fifth, a trio of versatile&#13;
musicians which will bring its&#13;
ecclectic music to Parkside in a&#13;
dessert theater concert on&#13;
Thursday, Apr. 21 at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Campus Union Dining Room. The&#13;
program is sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Advance tickets are available at&#13;
the Union Information Center.&#13;
Admission is $2 for UW-P&#13;
students; $4 f or others.&#13;
The three classically - trained&#13;
"bums" are Richard Goldfarb,&#13;
clarinet-, Daniel Kelly, clarinet,&#13;
and Ron Grun, bassoon, and their&#13;
music ranges from Mozart,&#13;
performed in 18th Century&#13;
costume on New York's Fifth&#13;
Avenue and subsequently around&#13;
the country, to Scott Joplin, their&#13;
nominee as the "Bach of pop."&#13;
Their current success, including&#13;
gigs at Lincoln Center, the&#13;
Whitney Concert Series, the New&#13;
York Historical Society and the&#13;
Museum of Natural History in&#13;
New York, the New Orleans Mardi&#13;
Gras and festivals around the&#13;
nation, is a "rags to Restoration&#13;
riches" story.&#13;
Six years ago, Goldfarb, the&#13;
leader of the group, was a&#13;
struggling young clarinetist who&#13;
ushered at Carnegie Hall and&#13;
moonlighted as a street musician&#13;
playing for his supper.&#13;
But Goldfarb had a street act&#13;
with class. He performed Mozart&#13;
on one of toniest corners in&#13;
Manhattan: Fifth Avenue at 56th&#13;
St., along with Kelly and Grun.&#13;
Shortly after their debut, they&#13;
added 18th Century period dress to&#13;
their ensemble and Joplin as well&#13;
as show tunes to their repertoire.&#13;
It got them off the streets — and&#13;
into some of New York's most&#13;
respected concert halls. That led&#13;
to dates outside Manhattan and a&#13;
growing reputation for both&#13;
showmanship, representative of a&#13;
new kind of chamber group&#13;
playing everything from Bach to&#13;
the Beatles, often in non -&#13;
traditional settings.&#13;
In the process, they have&#13;
diversified their original two&#13;
clarinets and bassoon instrumentation&#13;
to include&#13;
saxaphone, flute, bass clarinet,&#13;
guitar and banjo, and their&#13;
program to include a number of&#13;
jazz styles.&#13;
According to critics, they&#13;
manage to put it all together&#13;
whether they're performing on the&#13;
sidewalks of New York or out in&#13;
the "provinces."&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ARCHAEOLOGY/TRAVEL Excavate a&#13;
biblical site, 6 credits, 1983summer session.&#13;
Call (608 ) 262-9785 for information&#13;
BREWERS OPENING DAY: Parkside's&#13;
buses leave at 11:30 a.m. from Union&#13;
Bazaar.&#13;
ARE YOU NOW LOOKING FOR A JOB? Do&#13;
you know what employers expect? If you&#13;
would like to find out, you are welcome to&#13;
attend an Organizational Communications&#13;
Workshop in Moln D101 April 14th at 7 00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
SHARE 2 bedroom at Woodcreek beginning&#13;
June 1st. Call 552-9528 before 8:30 a.m or&#13;
nighttime by end of April.&#13;
PIANO PLAYER WANTED: For rock/blues&#13;
band. Call 654 4456 or 654-3624.&#13;
LOST: Maxwell UDXL-90min. tape on second&#13;
floor in library. If found, call Jose at 634-&#13;
1919, room 326; $5.00 reward.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
RJP: Happy 20th Birthday!!! From your&#13;
little girl,&#13;
SCOOTIE: Meet you in Baraboo in 35 days!&#13;
Fondly, the Racoons&#13;
MR. G: Are we legal in Peoria? Mrs. G.&#13;
I WAS RIGHT! Everything I knew was&#13;
wrong! Cox&#13;
INNOCENT OR OTHERWISE: Never trust a&#13;
prankster.&#13;
DEBBIE LEE: Mon amie et I'amie d'Henri,&#13;
Dont (comme M Rousseau) Les feuilles&#13;
sont belles trop, Done en deuil, n'en sois pas&#13;
quand je dis: "ie n'aime pas Une coquille "&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, tut tut Giovanni R&#13;
Mutt.&#13;
ALLEZ, ALLEZ! 3 wins In Debuque!&#13;
WHAT WELL KNOWN EDITOR LOST HER&#13;
CAR LAST FRIDAY?&#13;
CHRIS H.: I'll always love you, even if you&#13;
don't like tuna fishing.&#13;
WHAT WELL KNOWN EDITOR was recently&#13;
seen being happy about her permanently&#13;
missing brother?&#13;
MOLLY: What will we do during next year's&#13;
Brew - Crew opener?&#13;
PAT: I'm glad we didn't eliminate a week&#13;
BLANCHE - DAHLING: See at the gayla&#13;
party in May at youknowwho's house Then&#13;
I'll be off to Florida.&#13;
MOLLY: Be patient w/me, and have a good&#13;
weekend, I mean an excellent weekend!&#13;
RICK: Leave me alone. Gen&#13;
RICK: You irritMe me! Gen&#13;
GEN: Leave me alone. Rick&#13;
GEN: You irritate me! Rick&#13;
RICK &amp; GEN: You always fight. Rudy&#13;
RICK &amp; GEN: Embarrassed?&#13;
RICK: I'm sorry. Gen&#13;
GEN: I'm sorry. Rick&#13;
RICK &amp; GEN: Good. Rudy&#13;
RICK &amp; GEN: April Fool's. Fool&#13;
BRUCE P.: Is green your color or was it the&#13;
store clerk? You rascal you!&#13;
NEVER TRUST a barking duck. Well, almost&#13;
never.&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
over to baggage inspection where&#13;
my declaration was stamped and&#13;
my luggage X-rayed. In all, it took&#13;
the entire group about an hour and&#13;
a half to clear customs, so that we&#13;
did not leave for the hotel until&#13;
11:30 p.m. The bus ride and check&#13;
in at the hotel Cosmos occupied&#13;
another hour. Thus, by the time I&#13;
got up to my floor and obtained&#13;
my key from the key lady it was&#13;
nearly 12:30 a.m. Being&#13;
thoroughly exhausted, I unpacked&#13;
only the bare essentials and&#13;
headed straight to bed.&#13;
I feel an explanation of t he term&#13;
"key lady" is warranted here,&#13;
since the concept is totally foreign&#13;
to anyone traveling in the U.S. A&#13;
key lady is an elderly woman who&#13;
is in charge of the dispensing of&#13;
keys on the individual floors. Each&#13;
time you check into a Soviet Hotel,&#13;
you are given a card with your&#13;
room number on it, this card must&#13;
be presented to gain admittance ,&#13;
into the hotel and to obtain your&#13;
key from the key lady each time&#13;
you want to get into your room. It&#13;
is strictly forbidden for you to&#13;
leave the hotel premises with your&#13;
key.&#13;
Monday, March 7&#13;
Today we spent the morning&#13;
touring the city, complete with a&#13;
visit to Red Square. In addition,&#13;
we saw the famed Bolshoi&#13;
Theatre, as well as a panoramic&#13;
view of the massive Kremlin&#13;
complex from across the Moskva&#13;
River. The afternoon was spent&#13;
touring the USSR Economic&#13;
Achievements Exhibition across&#13;
the street from out hotel. The&#13;
exhibition runs throughout the&#13;
year, and shows the various&#13;
agricultural and industrial&#13;
achievements of the Soviet&#13;
Republics. The complex consists&#13;
of 300 buildings, most of which&#13;
were closed, and would take&#13;
almost two days to tour completely.&#13;
After dinner, it was on to&#13;
Tsaichovsky Concert Hall for an&#13;
excellent folk dance performance,&#13;
consisting primarily of the high&#13;
energy dances we most associate&#13;
with Soviet culture.&#13;
Tuesday, March 8&#13;
This morning's tour promised to&#13;
be cne of the high points of the&#13;
trip, a tour of the Kremlin.&#13;
However, once inside the gate, we&#13;
were limited to only a small part&#13;
of t he complex and saw the inside&#13;
of only one building, the Archangel&#13;
Cathedral which dated&#13;
back to the sixteenth century. It is&#13;
noteworthy that armed guards&#13;
were everpresent to ensure that&#13;
tourists did not walk outside of t he&#13;
boundaries to which they were&#13;
confined.&#13;
Since our afternoon was free, a&#13;
group of us, Marvin, Eugene,&#13;
Wesley and myself decided to try&#13;
our luck on Moscow's massive&#13;
subway system called Metro. With&#13;
a little bit of patience and some&#13;
luck, we were able to figure out&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
DINNER THEATER&#13;
COMING ATTRACTION&#13;
U IllllUi) IJJJ1MTTTT&#13;
WISCONSIN ACTORS' ENSEMBLE&#13;
presents&#13;
FOUR&#13;
POSTER&#13;
by Jan de Hartog&#13;
Starring Barbara Berlnskl and Michael Skewes Directed by Jm loqulnta&#13;
A Tony Award Winner&#13;
"The pteasantest comedy ot the season" N Y Timet&#13;
Dinner Theater performances In the Vista Room:&#13;
Friday April 15 ana 22 Cocktails&#13;
Dinner&#13;
Performance&#13;
6-00 Sunday April 17 and 24 Cocktalh&#13;
7 OO Dinner&#13;
BOO Performance&#13;
5.JO&#13;
600&#13;
7-00&#13;
Dinner and theater S13 OO all Inclusive Ploy only $5 OO.&#13;
(-all For More Inform ation&#13;
RACINE ROTOR INN&#13;
535 Main St. • 633-3551&#13;
' 1 1 1 1 » * ' ' t t i . n i t n i m i i i i i i u i n i m u "&#13;
the subway map. Once we figured&#13;
out where we wanted to go, we&#13;
descended to the trains and found&#13;
ourselves in a rather ornate and&#13;
very clean subway station vastly&#13;
different from those found in&#13;
larger cities such as New York.&#13;
The subway system was easily&#13;
mastered, and each stop was&#13;
announced over a loudspeaker so&#13;
AN ONION DOME&#13;
CATHEDRAL-St. Andrews in&#13;
Kiev.&#13;
that we had no problem reaching&#13;
our hotel.&#13;
As our evening was also free,&#13;
the Parkside group visited&#13;
Professor Babkov, a science&#13;
historian who is a good friend of&#13;
Frank Edgerton. At his apartment,&#13;
we were treated to an excellent&#13;
meal and an informative&#13;
conversation. We learned from&#13;
Professor Babkov that the rent he&#13;
pays for a 30 foot by 30 foot&#13;
apartment is between 25 and 30&#13;
dollars per month, the cost of&#13;
utilities were oily a few pennies&#13;
per month,&#13;
and&#13;
. j°?&#13;
d journalists&#13;
scarce as western J j&#13;
would lead us to belief Hegaor&#13;
told us that any aPP . ma(je&#13;
utility repairs were usu T an(j&#13;
very quickly, at a l%P&#13;
shoU'id be&#13;
were of good quality. It „ince&#13;
, added, though, that since&#13;
Professor Babkov's wit ...&#13;
prominent maker of scl&#13;
u&#13;
en(T -iv&#13;
in the Soviet Union, his fanuy&#13;
may have better access t0&#13;
and services than the ave g&#13;
citizen.&#13;
All in all, the evening with&#13;
Professor Babkov was most e -&#13;
joyable. We found his hospitality&#13;
extended even further as ne&#13;
presented each of the women in&#13;
our group with a gift in honor ot&#13;
International Women's Day.&#13;
Wednesday, March 9&#13;
We began our morning with a&#13;
very brief (2 minutes) visit inside&#13;
of Lenin's Tomb, after waiting in&#13;
line for 45 minutes on a rather&#13;
brisk day. Before we actually&#13;
entered the tomb, we were told&#13;
that we might be subject to a&#13;
metal detector search and/or&#13;
body frisk. Once inside, we were&#13;
not permitted to talk, and men&#13;
were required to remove their hat&#13;
as they filed past the well&#13;
preserved body of one of the&#13;
founders of the U.S.S.R. Afterward,&#13;
we walked behind&#13;
Lenin's Tomb in order to see the&#13;
graves of the people buried along&#13;
the Kremlin Wall.&#13;
In the afternoon, we visited a&#13;
"Friendship - House" where we&#13;
engaged in a question and answer&#13;
session with a reporter from&#13;
Moscow News, and a professor&#13;
from the U.S.S.R. Institute for&#13;
U.S.A. and Canadian Studies.&#13;
Continued Next Week&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
FINE ARTS DIVISION&#13;
presents&#13;
• - $L&#13;
^^t^'e^ert, Condue&#13;
5&#13;
Sunday, April 17, 1983&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
Admission: General $2.00 Students/Sr. Cit $1.00&#13;
Proceeds to benelit UW-Parkside Music Scholarship Fund&#13;
i the Ywith a hearti&#13;
For Women Of All Ages&#13;
— NEW TERM STARTS APRIL 1 ] __&#13;
• Coed Aerobics for couples who want&#13;
together. Mondays, 7-8 p.m. Fee: $35 (onp Jexer&#13;
cise&#13;
must be a member) '&#13;
he couple&#13;
• Hatha Yoga. 16 sessions. Beqinner- r.&#13;
5:30 - 6:30 p m. Fee: $40 ' Tues&#13;
- &amp; T hurs.,&#13;
OR&#13;
Try our drop-in exercise classes^&#13;
over 55 hours per Week&#13;
•Aerobic 'X .Fjtness ,&#13;
•Fit-Aerobic 'X&#13;
740 College Avenue • Racine &#13;
Thursday, April 14,1983&#13;
&gt;Sv&#13;
•Sit&#13;
Parkside Students:&#13;
SUMMER ROOMS AVAILABLE&#13;
$300 June 1 - August 31&#13;
RACINE Y.M-C.A&#13;
Individual Room • Y.M.C.A. Membership&#13;
• Food Service In-House&#13;
• Laundry &amp; Cooking Facilities&#13;
Located on Lake Front in Downtown Racine&#13;
FIRST COME - FIRST SERVE BASIS&#13;
$300 Up Front And&#13;
Refundable $100 Security Bepesit.&#13;
2 GYMS *&#13;
2 POOLS&#13;
RUNNING TRACK&#13;
WEIGHTROOIA&#13;
NAUTILUS&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
* i * * * * * * *&#13;
THE MOST COMPLETE&#13;
SUMMER RESIDENCE&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
* t&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
RACINE YMCA 634-1994&#13;
W.V.W.VAV.'.-V.V.'.VA'.i" &#13;
Thursday, April 14, 1983&#13;
Men's Tennis victorious in early competition&#13;
THE INTRAMURAL SWIM MEET was a big splash despite a&#13;
low turnout of participants. Entrants received a free T-shirt.&#13;
by Carra Cariello&#13;
The Men's Tennis Team has a&#13;
very intelligent slogan this&#13;
season: "Practice hard and play&#13;
smart." So far they have carried&#13;
out their slogan with three&#13;
straight victories. Coach Dicky&#13;
Frecka feels that the victories&#13;
reflect on the fact that he has&#13;
seven very balanced players.&#13;
Frecka feels Frank Mejia, with&#13;
his high school experience, should&#13;
be the number one player for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Calvin Singleton is the number&#13;
two player. Singleton, a junior, is&#13;
competing for the Rangers for the&#13;
first time. According to Frecka he&#13;
is an experienced player though.&#13;
Iram Cruz is the number three&#13;
singles player. Tony Nielson is the&#13;
number four player and the team&#13;
captain. Art Shannon is the&#13;
number five player this year. Jim&#13;
Women's Softball&#13;
The Women's Softball Team&#13;
finally saw some game action last&#13;
week. April 5, the team soundly&#13;
defeated Platteville 16-2.&#13;
Freshman Lee Hammen hit for&#13;
a cycle (single, double, triple and&#13;
a homerun.) Sophomore Michele&#13;
Martino was the winning pitcher,&#13;
allowing only three hits. The&#13;
second game of the doubleheader&#13;
was called after four innings.&#13;
On April 7, the Rangers beat the&#13;
Whitewater Warhawks, 1-0. Kathy&#13;
Tobin scored the run on a RBI&#13;
single by Ann Althaus. The game&#13;
was a first of a doubleheader but&#13;
the Rangers dropped the second&#13;
game 7-1. Pitcher Martino improved&#13;
her record 5-1. The team's&#13;
overall record is 7 - 3.&#13;
This week the team plays in the&#13;
College of St. Francis Tournament&#13;
on Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
The men's track team traveled&#13;
all the way to Stevens Point, only&#13;
to turn around and come home&#13;
SPORT NEWS&#13;
last Saturday. Because of stormy&#13;
weather, the meet was cancelled.&#13;
This Friday, the team will&#13;
travel to North Central in&#13;
Naperville, IL. Coach Lucian&#13;
Rosa hopes that the distance&#13;
runners can perform to their&#13;
potential.&#13;
Rosa hopes that the weather will&#13;
cooperate this week so that pole&#13;
vaulter John Anderson can jump&#13;
and make the National Qualifying&#13;
height of 15' 6". "He can jump&#13;
higher, but he has been jumping&#13;
inside. If John can get out two or&#13;
three times this week, he'll do&#13;
good," commented Rosa.&#13;
Ted Miller, one of the marathon&#13;
runners for Parkside, will be&#13;
competing in the Boston Marathon&#13;
on Monday. Miller qualified for&#13;
Boston earlier this year in&#13;
Chicago's America Marathon. He&#13;
is hoping to qualify for the NAIA&#13;
Marathon by running under the&#13;
qualifying time in Boston. "About&#13;
four days ago, his achilles tendon&#13;
had a flare up, but with this week&#13;
(of training) being easy, he should&#13;
be alright," said Rosa.&#13;
Dart Team&#13;
The Parkside Dart Team has&#13;
challenged every other UWUniversity&#13;
to compete in the first&#13;
ever state - wide Collegiate Dart&#13;
Tournament. The Parkside&#13;
Challenge will take place on May 6&#13;
- 8. If you want to play for the&#13;
Parkside Dart Team, please enter&#13;
the qualifying tournament that&#13;
will be held the week before the&#13;
Parkside Challenge.&#13;
There is a Dart League forming&#13;
in Racine. If any students want to&#13;
play for Parkside in this ten week&#13;
league, come to the Dart Room in&#13;
the Rec Center and sign up.&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
Shooting Team Standings&#13;
National Guard&#13;
CMI&#13;
Parkside II&#13;
Bodven's&#13;
Alfredo's&#13;
Railroad Products&#13;
18-5 Marty's&#13;
16-4 Parkside I&#13;
14-9 Hole Crew&#13;
14-9 Colonial Liquors&#13;
12-3 Western Publishing&#13;
12-11 Southway Supply&#13;
12-11&#13;
11-12&#13;
10-13&#13;
10-13&#13;
10-13&#13;
9-14&#13;
The first Intramural swim meet&#13;
was held last Friday. Winners in&#13;
the events were as follows:&#13;
100 Medley Relay, 1.03.1, Mike&#13;
Daniels, Dona Driscoll, Steve&#13;
Upthagrove and Tammie Burdick&#13;
100 Freestyle, 1.008, Mark Flynn&#13;
25 Corkscrew, 15.2, Steve Upthagrove&#13;
&#13;
50 Breaststroke, 35. 7, Mike&#13;
Daniels&#13;
Sweatshirt Relay, 50.4, Steve&#13;
Wiese, Julie Heckl&#13;
Individual Medley, 1.11.3, Joe&#13;
Upthagrove&#13;
Kickboard Relay, 124.3, Steve&#13;
Upthagrove, Ed Wallen, Gail&#13;
Starks, Carol Kazarian&#13;
100 Freestyle Relay, 54.0, Dona&#13;
Driscoll, Ed Wallen, Steve UpKENOSHA&#13;
&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
SV.% Interest If Your Daily |jgg {jj «&#13;
Balance It *500.00 or More! W ~&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street-Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis.&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
IE HEI RE&#13;
CALL 1 IR&#13;
TO HELP YOU OROW!&#13;
STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
Wynstra is the number six player.&#13;
"He is the strongest sixth man&#13;
that I've ever had," commented&#13;
Frecka. Mike Brinen is the&#13;
number seven player. He is&#13;
ranked number three in doubles&#13;
and plays only doubles. Frecka&#13;
feels Brinen possesses strong&#13;
leadership qualities.&#13;
Presently, the three top players&#13;
are Singleton, Cruz and Wynstra.&#13;
Frecka feels that they are playing&#13;
advanced tennis, (playing how a&#13;
player would be expected to play&#13;
around the middle to the end of the&#13;
season.)&#13;
Coach Frecka feels the team's&#13;
performance is very good for this&#13;
early in the season. "The team is&#13;
playing so well this soon," Frecka&#13;
commented. "This probably has&#13;
to do with the over - enthusiasm of&#13;
practices and the lack of injuries."&#13;
&#13;
Frecka's seasonal record last&#13;
year was 9-6, which he hopes to&#13;
improve this year and he is off to a&#13;
good start with a record of 3-0. The&#13;
Rangers won 7-2 over Carroll&#13;
College on April 4 in a home game.&#13;
In singles, Singleton defeated&#13;
Tom Heyrman, (6-0) (6-4). Cruz&#13;
defeated John Wirth, (6-2) (4-6)&#13;
(6-2). Tony Nielsen defeated Rich&#13;
Ross, (6-2) (6-2). Art Shannon&#13;
defeated Skip Crutchfield (6-2) (6-&#13;
1). Jim Wynstra defeated John&#13;
Anderson (6-2) (6-2).&#13;
In the doubles matches&#13;
Singleton and Wynstra defeated&#13;
Tom Heyrman and John Anderson&#13;
(6-4) (6-2). Nielsen and Brinen&#13;
thagrove&#13;
25 Backstroke, 17.1, Steve&#13;
Upthagrove&#13;
50 Butterfly, 31.7, Ed Wallen&#13;
50 Freestyle, 28.3, Mark Flynn&#13;
Congratulations to all participants&#13;
for creating a fun event.&#13;
THE&#13;
defeated Rich Ross and John&#13;
Schultz (6-3) (6-0). On April 6, The&#13;
Rangers won over Lake County&#13;
College, 8-1. In singles, Singleton&#13;
defeated Mike Mallory (6-3) (64).&#13;
Cruz defeated Mike Kierman (6-4)&#13;
(6-2). Nielsen defeated Mark&#13;
Mohr (6-3) (6-2). Shannon&#13;
defeated Alan Brothers (6-4) (6-1).&#13;
Wynstra defeated Doug Niemi (6-&#13;
0) (6-0).&#13;
The doubles teams of Mejia and&#13;
Shannon defeated Dan Razin and&#13;
Mike Kierman (6-4) (6-3).&#13;
Singleton and Wynstra defeated&#13;
Mark Mohr and Alan Brothers (6-&#13;
2) (6-1). Nielsen and Brinen&#13;
defeated Mike Mallory and Doug&#13;
Niemi (6-1) (6-3).&#13;
On April 9 the Rangers took on&#13;
Moraine Valley College and won,&#13;
7-2. In the Singles matches, Cruz&#13;
defeated Dave Urban (6-2) (7-5).&#13;
Singleton defeated John Anderson&#13;
(6-1) (6-4). Nielsen defeated Vince&#13;
Simos (6-0) (6-1). Shannon&#13;
defeated Seria Rao (6-1) (6-1).&#13;
In the doubles matches, Mejia&#13;
and Shannon defeated Jeff Nickel&#13;
and John Anderson (6-3) (6-2).&#13;
Singleton and Wynstra defeated&#13;
Gene Smyth and Vince Simos (6-3)&#13;
(6-0). Nielsen and Brinen defeated&#13;
Dave Urban and Seria Rao (6-1)&#13;
(4-6) (6-3).&#13;
The Rangers were very busy&#13;
this week. On April 11, they took&#13;
on Beloit College. April 13, they&#13;
played against Carthage College&#13;
Today, at 3 p.m., they will take on&#13;
Northeastern University at the&#13;
Parkside tennis courts. On Apr.&#13;
15, they will compete against Lake&#13;
County College in an away match.&#13;
Then on Saturday, they will go up&#13;
against Concordia College in a&#13;
home match which starts at 1 p.m.&#13;
:••••••••••••••&#13;
* An affordable evening&#13;
on the townI&#13;
LOUNGE&#13;
| Hick Demos. Manager&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
M CUSTOMER • *&#13;
4c APPRECIATION HOURS J&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
* *&#13;
4c&#13;
4&lt;&#13;
*&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
4c&#13;
7:00 'til 11:00 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday thru Sunday&#13;
Join us for an evening of "affordable&#13;
good times" at the Lounge! Featuring&#13;
a large dance floor, new sound system,&#13;
cozy corners and generous cocktails,&#13;
all at a truly affordable price!&#13;
Highballs only 25&lt;&#13;
Tap Beer 0nly 25&lt;&#13;
Top Shelf Co cktails Only 50C&#13;
Prem. Top Shelf Cocktails . .Only $1.00&#13;
Admission: $3.00&#13;
7-11 p.m. Only&#13;
We reserve the right to refuse service at anytime.&#13;
OP E N 6 PM ' TIL 1 AM WE D . - S U N .&#13;
A V A I L A BLE F O R P R I V A TE&#13;
P A R TI ESMON . &amp; T U ES. ^&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
THIS COUPON GOOD FOR&#13;
ONE FREE DRINK&#13;
Valid 7-1J p.m. Wed. - Sun . Only&#13;
I I2&#13;
4&#13;
* 5HEWDAN ROAD, KENOSHA&#13;
• (Hvuy. 32 Kenosbe&amp;Racm©)&#13;
Phon* 552'7 569 </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70628">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 11, issue 26, April 14, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70629">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70630">
              <text>1983-04-14</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70633">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="70634">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="70635">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70636">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70637">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70638">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70639">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70640">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70641">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1726">
      <name>building maintenance</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4401">
      <name>protestors</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
