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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 11, issue 29</text>
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            <text>Student life faces reorganization</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>^University of Wisconsin - P arkside Student Life faces&#13;
reorganization&#13;
Injunction prevents full&#13;
enforcement of "Act"&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
Students applying for Federal&#13;
financial aid for college will not be&#13;
required to provide information&#13;
anymore as to their compliance&#13;
with Selective Service&#13;
registration requirements, according&#13;
to Jan Ocker, Director of&#13;
the Financial Aids office. Ocker&#13;
received word last week in a letter&#13;
from the U.S. Department of&#13;
Education, stating that students&#13;
would not be required to provide&#13;
information concerning Selective&#13;
Service registration status.&#13;
The letter came after the U.S.&#13;
District Court for the District of&#13;
Minnesota has issued a&#13;
pre lim inar y injunctio n&#13;
prohibiting the Department of&#13;
Education and the Selective&#13;
Service System from enforcing&#13;
section 1113 of the Department of&#13;
Defense Authorization Act for&#13;
1983.&#13;
The Act states that with the&#13;
1983-84 award year, any student&#13;
who is required to register for the&#13;
draft and who fails to do so is&#13;
ineligible for student financial aid&#13;
under Title IV of the Higher&#13;
Education Act of 1965.&#13;
If you are applying for Federal&#13;
financial aid (Pell Grant, Supplemental&#13;
Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant, College Work -&#13;
Study, National Direct Student&#13;
Loan, Guaranteed Student / PLUS&#13;
Loan, and State Student Incentive&#13;
Grant Programs), until further&#13;
notice you are not required, as a&#13;
condition for receipt of such aid, to&#13;
provide information as to your&#13;
compliance with Selective Service&#13;
registration requirements.&#13;
This means that you need not&#13;
complete the portion of the&#13;
"Statement of Educational&#13;
Purpose / Registration Compliance"&#13;
in the "1983-84 Student&#13;
Aid Report" which inquires as to&#13;
your Selective Service&#13;
••••••&#13;
registration status. In addition,&#13;
you need not provide such information&#13;
(Mi any other form&#13;
which asks about your Selective&#13;
Service registration status as a&#13;
condition for receipt of Federal&#13;
aid.&#13;
Depending on the outcome of a&#13;
court case, however, you may be&#13;
required to provide information&#13;
concerning your Selective Service&#13;
registration status at a later date.&#13;
Should such a requirement take&#13;
effect, your receipt of Federal&#13;
financial aid could be delayed if&#13;
you have not, by that time,&#13;
provided information as to your&#13;
registration status. For this&#13;
reason, you are encouraged to&#13;
provide this information voluntarily&#13;
now.&#13;
Depending on the outcome of the&#13;
court case, however, students&#13;
may be required to provide information&#13;
concerning their&#13;
Selective Service status in what is&#13;
called a "Statement of&#13;
Educational Purpose /&#13;
Registration Compliance" at a&#13;
later date.&#13;
Should the injunction be&#13;
revoked, however, possible delay&#13;
later of a student's receipt of Title&#13;
IV financial aid could occur, so.the&#13;
student can voluntarily supply the&#13;
Statement of Registration&#13;
Compliance this year.&#13;
The injunction prevents the Act&#13;
from being enforced, so students&#13;
are not required to provide any&#13;
information which asks for&#13;
Selective Service status as a&#13;
condition for receipt of financial&#13;
aid.&#13;
Financial aid under Title IV&#13;
includes the Pell Grant, Supplemental&#13;
Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant, College Work -&#13;
Study, National Direct Student&#13;
Loan, Guaranteed Student / PLUS&#13;
Loan, and State Student Incentive&#13;
Grant Programs. Counting that&#13;
pniiRTH ANNUAL Students Awards Banquet had about&#13;
* M!«+c in attendance. Student Organizations selected two&#13;
tefs frl wmn their organizations for Distinguished&#13;
ic A „«h Q and Luis Vallde uli was given the campus - ®. Awar^, and LUIS AWARD OTHER AWARD WJN.&#13;
RANGER - Andy Buchanan and Pat Hensiak; PSGA -&#13;
are: RANGER Anay ^ Va||dejulj/ PAB . Chrjs&#13;
ne&#13;
,&#13;
BuenM u Npkon and Jim Reeves, PEER SUPPORT -&#13;
imelev, Neil ana and SOC - Carla Thomas,&#13;
Mulligan and chroeder. The Presidents Award was&#13;
rie Olson and Dave S Advlsor 0f the Year was given to&#13;
i to Terry Tunks, andthe^Adv.s ^ rjght/ rQW one# Terry&#13;
ilyn Bugenhagen. Pitfurea ^ paf Hensjak/ Rat&#13;
:ker, Dave "Schroeder.&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Office of Student Life is&#13;
being reorganized to bring it in&#13;
line with other UW-System&#13;
campuses and to make the accountability&#13;
of some organizations&#13;
normally a part of Student Life&#13;
clearer, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Carla Stoffle said.&#13;
The reorganization will make&#13;
the Union administration directly&#13;
responsible to Stoffle, and move&#13;
services like the Child Care&#13;
Center and the Student Health&#13;
Office to Community Student&#13;
Services.&#13;
The position of dean of student&#13;
life will be frozen after the contract&#13;
of the current dean, Dave&#13;
Pedersen, expires. The freeze and&#13;
the Union reorganization will be in&#13;
effect for a one - year "interim&#13;
period," Stoffle said.&#13;
The move of the Child Care&#13;
Center and the Student Health&#13;
Office are expected to be permanent&#13;
changes. They will continue&#13;
to be funded by SUFAC,&#13;
however.&#13;
Stoffle said the Student Activities&#13;
Coordinator, Buddy&#13;
Couvion, and the Director of the&#13;
Union, Bill Heibuhr, will be taking&#13;
on additional duties.&#13;
"They're going to have to play&#13;
more of a campus role," she said.&#13;
"There are committees that the&#13;
dean of student life has served on&#13;
representing both and one or the&#13;
other will have to take over that&#13;
role."&#13;
The Bookstore and Food Service&#13;
will report to the Union during the&#13;
interim period.&#13;
and other state grants, loans and&#13;
scholarships, about one in three&#13;
Parkside students receive aid,&#13;
which totals more than 1.7 million&#13;
dollars.&#13;
DAVE PEDERSEN&#13;
Planning for next year is&#13;
proceeding along the new lines of&#13;
organization. "I've talked to some&#13;
people (in the Union) and I've&#13;
talked to some students and I'm&#13;
waiting for student government to&#13;
get a chance to think about it and&#13;
give me some input," she said.&#13;
"If they have some real&#13;
problems with it, I'll have to stop&#13;
and think about it and work it&#13;
through."&#13;
One of Pedersen's duties,&#13;
student discipline, will be taken&#13;
over by Jenny Price, Stoffle's&#13;
administrative assistant. Price&#13;
has a degree in law and held the&#13;
position of judicial officer on a&#13;
larger campus before coming to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"The responsibility is one which&#13;
is appropriate with Jenny's&#13;
background," Stoffle said.&#13;
Pedersen will be taking a&#13;
position as Dean of Student Affairs&#13;
at Southern Connecticut&#13;
University, a school with a&#13;
population of 11,000 to 12,000&#13;
students, located in New Haven,&#13;
CT.&#13;
UTIC teaching fellowship granted&#13;
Two Parkside assistant&#13;
professors, Laura Gellott, history,&#13;
and Michael Gurtman,&#13;
psychology, have been named&#13;
Lilly Post Doctoral Teaching&#13;
Fellows through a grant received&#13;
by the UW System Undergraduate&#13;
Teaching Improvement Council&#13;
(UTIC) from the Lilly Endowment,&#13;
Inc., of Indianapolis.&#13;
The fellowships, which were&#13;
granted to 10 UW System faculty,&#13;
are designed to provide professors&#13;
early in their teaching careers&#13;
released time from teaching&#13;
assignments to explore and&#13;
develop more effective teaching&#13;
methods.&#13;
Parkside Prof. Peter S. Hoff,&#13;
English and humanities, will&#13;
serve as project director for&#13;
Lilly's UW System fellowship&#13;
program. Hoff also is executive&#13;
director of UTIC.&#13;
The UW System is the second&#13;
state university system nationwide&#13;
to be awarded fellowships&#13;
from the Lilly endowment&#13;
program (Pennsylvania was the&#13;
first).&#13;
Gellott, who received her&#13;
master's degree from Marquette&#13;
University and her PhD from UWMadison,&#13;
and Gurtman, who&#13;
earned his master's and PhD&#13;
degrees at the University of&#13;
Connecticut at Storrs, joined&#13;
Parkside last fall.&#13;
Their fellowships total $7,440; a&#13;
total of nearly $50,000 has been&#13;
awarded to the UW System&#13;
through the program.&#13;
Both Gellott and Gurtman will&#13;
work on projects this summer that&#13;
will be the basis of new courses&#13;
here next fall.&#13;
Gellott, whose area of&#13;
specialization is the study of&#13;
authoritarian society in central&#13;
Europe in the 1930's, will develop&#13;
a multi - disciplinary approach to&#13;
that topic through application of,&#13;
among others, theories of&#13;
psychology and economics.&#13;
Gurtman will develop a&#13;
"building blocks" approach to&#13;
teaching theories of statistics to&#13;
psychology majors by implementing&#13;
innovative teaching&#13;
methods such as computer -&#13;
assisted instruction using bar&#13;
graphs and by focusing on small&#13;
group problem - solving.&#13;
Gellott and Gurtman will attend&#13;
UTIC's Faculty College in&#13;
Marinette, Wis. this June and a&#13;
two - week institute for teaching&#13;
improvement in Madison this&#13;
August as well as a number of&#13;
seminars.&#13;
Parkside Prof. Beecham&#13;
Robinson, education, will be an&#13;
instructor at the Madison institute.&#13;
History professor Thomas&#13;
C. Reeves and psychology&#13;
professor Donald A. Walter will&#13;
serve as summer project advisers&#13;
to Gellott and Gurtman. When&#13;
Gellott and Gurtman complete&#13;
their projects, an additional $600&#13;
will be awarded to Parkside for&#13;
teach ing impr ovem ent&#13;
workshops.&#13;
Scholarship day honors many&#13;
Nearly 70 students received&#13;
awards and honors during this&#13;
year's Scholarship Day, held last&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Sponsored by the Campus&#13;
Awards and Ceremonies Committee,&#13;
the program included an&#13;
address by professor of e ducation&#13;
Teresa Peck, and music by the&#13;
university's Chamber Singers,&#13;
directed by music professor&#13;
William Weinert.&#13;
The event also included&#13;
remarks by Parkside alumnus&#13;
Rodger DeRose, marketing&#13;
manager of over - the - counter&#13;
products for Rondelle&#13;
Laboratories, Inc., a subsidiary of&#13;
S.C. Johnson &amp; Son, Inc.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
presented the awards.&#13;
SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
« C. Tallent Scholarships&#13;
of $400 each, which memorialize&#13;
the former dean of the university's&#13;
Kenosha campus, went to&#13;
Todd Laszewski (Mathematics /&#13;
Applied Science), Caledonia;&#13;
Joanne M. Myers (Business&#13;
Management / Communication),&#13;
Racine; and Kenneth Wilhelm&#13;
(Psychology / Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations), Racine.&#13;
The Joanne M. Esser&#13;
Scholarship of $400, fo r a student&#13;
interested in ecology, went to&#13;
Thomas Siewert (Music / Earth&#13;
Science), Racine.&#13;
Kenneth L. Greenquist&#13;
Scholarships of $300 e ach, which&#13;
are named for the former&#13;
University regent and Racine&#13;
attorney and civic leader, were&#13;
awarded to Marijean Merrick&#13;
(Engineering Technology),&#13;
Kenosha; and Diane Vaccareilo&#13;
(Medical Technology / English),&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie scholarships of&#13;
$250 each, named for UWParkside's&#13;
founding chancellor,&#13;
went to Mary Barranco (Communication&#13;
/ Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations), Racine; and Joseph&#13;
Shea (Life Science), Racine.&#13;
William W. Petrie Labor and&#13;
Industrial Relations Scholarships&#13;
of $250 went to Bonnie McDonnell,&#13;
South Milwaukee; and Maria&#13;
Veronico, Burlington.&#13;
The Robert Bauer Scholarship&#13;
of $200, to memorialize the UWParkside&#13;
life science graduate&#13;
who drowned last year in&#13;
Hayward, Wis., went to Edward&#13;
Randle, Kenosha.&#13;
The Johnson Wax Award of $100&#13;
Continued On Page Eight &#13;
2 Thursday, May 5,1983 RANGER&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Custodians receive support&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
I am writing this letter for my&#13;
friends in the janitorial department&#13;
who work for us, the&#13;
students. I am concerned for our&#13;
school and their jobs here. We are&#13;
about to lose our janitors to the&#13;
night shift. I know that most of the&#13;
students here could care less&#13;
about that, but I am concerned&#13;
because this will affect us, the&#13;
students who attend Parkside.&#13;
There have been many comments,&#13;
some of them published in the&#13;
Ranger in the past, about how&#13;
dirty our school is. This is doomed&#13;
to be worse if the janitors go to&#13;
night shift. It isn't just that the&#13;
janitors won't do their jobs on&#13;
nights, but is instead, that there&#13;
won't be anyone here to do the job&#13;
during the day.&#13;
Many people don't realize how&#13;
much the janitors do during the&#13;
day. They are the ones that clean&#13;
up the messes in the halls, empty&#13;
the full trash cans during the day&#13;
and try to keep our school as clean&#13;
as possible. They are the ones that&#13;
you go to when there is no soap in&#13;
the restrooms or the paper towels&#13;
run out. They are also the ones&#13;
that you contact when you don't&#13;
know who else to see about no&#13;
lights in a classroom or when&#13;
someone has spilt something and&#13;
you want to have the mess cleaned&#13;
up before it makes a bigger mess.&#13;
I know that I have gone to the&#13;
janitors several times each&#13;
semester for minor things that&#13;
needed to be done. I don't feel that&#13;
it is fair for us, the students, to&#13;
have to put up with full trash cans&#13;
in the middle of the day, or&#13;
ashtrays that are running over, no&#13;
toilet paper in the bathrooms, or&#13;
no resource person who can help&#13;
us in a myriad of small problems.&#13;
I believe that this proposed&#13;
change should have been looked&#13;
into more thoroughly before being&#13;
done for the sake of the&#13;
cleanliness of Parkside.&#13;
The point of this letter is that we&#13;
students deserve a clean school.&#13;
This won't be possible if the&#13;
janitors are on night shift. There&#13;
won't be anyone here to keep it&#13;
clean. The only people who will be&#13;
able to seethe buildings clean will&#13;
be those who have classes early in&#13;
the mornings. The rest of the&#13;
students will have to deal with&#13;
mounting trash and accumulated&#13;
dirt. We need to become concerned&#13;
with the janitor's plight as&#13;
it does effect us as students.&#13;
Barbara Johnson&#13;
Threat to overthrow&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Through your newspaper I wish&#13;
to inform the students of this&#13;
University of a very active group&#13;
that is planning to overthrow part&#13;
of our bureaucracy. Following is&#13;
an explanation of the&#13;
revolutionary ideas of our group.&#13;
This group is adopting the name&#13;
"N.P.S.G.A." (the Not Parkside&#13;
Stu den t G o ver n m ent&#13;
Association). Anyone may join&#13;
our organization which is headed&#13;
by both members and ex -&#13;
members of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
which are discontent with the&#13;
current leadership of the Senate.&#13;
The President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. has forbid us from airing our&#13;
differences in public so we, the&#13;
N.P.S.G.A. members are&#13;
revolting against bureaucratic&#13;
censorship.&#13;
Here's to you Mr. President —&#13;
"Arriba, arriba the Revolution!"&#13;
In the past P.S.G.A., Inc. has&#13;
been known for "bending" the&#13;
rules in the Constitution. For&#13;
example, on the meeting of April&#13;
27, 1983, the Senate illegally appointed&#13;
a new Assistant President&#13;
Pro - Tempore. This decision was&#13;
mostly due to the ignorance of the&#13;
Senate about their own rules&#13;
which their Vice - President&#13;
neglected to clarify. While we're&#13;
discussing fishy issues within the&#13;
Senate, let's review Tammy&#13;
Millager's termination from&#13;
employment, or as the Senate&#13;
called it "temporary suspension."&#13;
Lack of communication at its best.&#13;
But the Vice - President says it's&#13;
all been legal. A likely story, Mr.&#13;
Spoon, have you read your Constitution&#13;
lately!&#13;
Some reporters in Ranger and&#13;
other sources of information&#13;
claim that the students don't know&#13;
who the President and Vice -&#13;
President of their P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
are. Well, those of us who belong&#13;
to the N.P.S.G.A. are reminded&#13;
every day who the people "in&#13;
power" are. We are the oppressed&#13;
!!&#13;
Soon will come the time for a&#13;
new era to begin. Fellow&#13;
revolutionaries of Parkside, the&#13;
coup d'etat will happen very soon.&#13;
Be ready to march down to the&#13;
Union Square (aka Red Square)&#13;
and justice at once will soon&#13;
return to this University.&#13;
Remember that the coup d'etat is&#13;
near and that you have been&#13;
warned. So, when you least expect&#13;
it . . . expect it. If you wish more&#13;
information, our source of contact&#13;
will be the Ranger. If you can't&#13;
find us, one of our soldiers of&#13;
revolution will find you.&#13;
Just one more point, to the&#13;
Executive Board of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc.: We can do this two ways —&#13;
either you surrender peacefully or&#13;
we will be forced to do it for you.&#13;
The Angry Oppressed!&#13;
More letters&#13;
Reader argues&#13;
To the Editors,&#13;
The Ranger seems to have a&#13;
double standard when it comes to&#13;
an individual's freedom. The&#13;
editor is appalled by government&#13;
restriction of sexual freedom, but&#13;
on the same page advocates&#13;
restrictions of e conomic freedom.&#13;
Apparently, in the Ranger's eyes,&#13;
it is alright for the government to&#13;
peer into one's bankbook, but not&#13;
into one's bedroom. My letter's&#13;
main issue of freedom in general&#13;
is clearly related to Senator&#13;
Hasten's important victory.&#13;
Freedoms must come together&#13;
as an inseparable group to have&#13;
any real long lasting value. As a&#13;
natural right they can't be doled&#13;
out here and there by government.&#13;
If freedoms can be denied singly&#13;
by government we risk losing&#13;
them all one by one. In the words&#13;
of David Hume, "It is seldom that&#13;
liberty of any kind is lost all at&#13;
once." The Ranger is wrong in&#13;
believing that we have the luxury&#13;
of selecting which freedoms are&#13;
important. The truth is that they&#13;
all are important. It is an all or&#13;
nothing situation in the long run.&#13;
On the specific issue of the&#13;
editorial I really can't understand&#13;
the Ranger's reasons or logic in&#13;
attacking Senator Hasten for&#13;
opposing the withholding tax. The&#13;
editorial's argument is full of&#13;
holes and hard to believe in&#13;
places. The tax is not new, but the&#13;
method of collecting is. There is&#13;
no evidence to suggest widespread&#13;
"cheating" on paying what the&#13;
government decides is owed.&#13;
There is no reason to believe,&#13;
either, that any more money will&#13;
be taken in with this new law.&#13;
Besides the government already&#13;
gets the same information from&#13;
the financial institutions. All they&#13;
have to do is match this information&#13;
with the tax return to&#13;
determine compliance. Finally,&#13;
the cost of this new law would be&#13;
borne, as always, by the consumer&#13;
in the form of higher loan interest&#13;
rates, less service, and tighter&#13;
restrictions on issuing loans. The&#13;
costs far outweigh any benefits.&#13;
The withholding issue concerns&#13;
everyone's freedom. Attacking a&#13;
minority makes it so much easier&#13;
to eventually rob us all of our&#13;
freedom. Whenever someone&#13;
wants to make an issue popular all&#13;
he has to do is say that it is against&#13;
the "rich". I wish somebody&#13;
would define "rich" for me and&#13;
please tell me why it is so terrible.&#13;
A premise of the Ranger's&#13;
argument is that one's income is&#13;
the government's first and the&#13;
individual's second. Shouldn't it&#13;
be the other way around?&#13;
Shouldn't people be "rewarded"&#13;
by keeping what they've earned?&#13;
It is a radical idea, but it just may&#13;
prove to be popular.&#13;
The term "unearned income" is&#13;
misleading and even derogatory&#13;
to those who have interest and&#13;
dividend income. (Incidently, only&#13;
an insignificant amount of my&#13;
almost nonexistent income is from&#13;
this source.) The government has&#13;
a lot of gall to say that an individual&#13;
did nothing to earn interest&#13;
and dividends. One has to&#13;
pay taxes over and over on the&#13;
same money. Government&#13;
taxation does nothing to encourage&#13;
working, saving, and&#13;
investing. Many of our problems&#13;
are linked to our economy. These&#13;
problems are too great to be&#13;
solved by government. It's best to&#13;
leave them to a more powerful&#13;
and effective force, the free&#13;
market. We will find that when&#13;
our economic ills are cured in this&#13;
manner we shall have relatively&#13;
few problems. More important,&#13;
we will still be free.&#13;
I really don't believe the Ranger&#13;
when they chide Senator Hasten&#13;
for his "unheard of behavior" in&#13;
the Senate. I'm sure that if a&#13;
freshman senator spoke strongly&#13;
against, say, U. S. intervention in&#13;
Latin America, you would have&#13;
praised him for his valiant stand&#13;
against the established tradition. I&#13;
also really doubt the statement&#13;
about the Senate never being quite&#13;
the same. I'm sure that it will&#13;
recover. As for your allusion to&#13;
Senator Joseph McCarthy, the two&#13;
are quite the opposite. McCarthy's&#13;
actions harmed the innocent and&#13;
attempted to control people.&#13;
Hasten's action helped people by&#13;
letting them hold on to some&#13;
economic freedom and stemming&#13;
the tide of government control&#13;
over more aspects of our lives. His&#13;
stand does fit in with the larger&#13;
scheme of things. When we have&#13;
kept this one freedom we have&#13;
helped to insure the rest. We&#13;
should thank Senator Hasten for&#13;
his uphill struggle.&#13;
My specific feelings on the&#13;
editorial bring me back to my&#13;
issue of freedom in general and&#13;
what we can do to preserve it. This&#13;
nation was founded on the ideal of&#13;
freedom for the individual. Our&#13;
Founding Fathers recognized that&#13;
any style of government oppresses&#13;
the individual. Thomas&#13;
Paine remarked, "Government,&#13;
even its best state, is but a&#13;
necessary evil; in its worst state&#13;
an intolerable one." Any government&#13;
act infringes on the freedom&#13;
of the individual. (Perhaps the&#13;
advantage of democracy is that&#13;
we get to choose our own oppressors.)&#13;
A minimalist view of&#13;
government was advocated and&#13;
accepted to best protect the individual.&#13;
&#13;
We seem to be slipping away&#13;
from our original ideals. It is not&#13;
due to some outside force. By&#13;
demanding more and more from&#13;
government we are slowly losing&#13;
control over our lives. By&#13;
believing that government makes&#13;
the best decisions for us and can&#13;
solve all of our problems robs us of&#13;
our individuality. In the process&#13;
we shall surrender all our personal&#13;
freedom and have it&#13;
replaced by the dictates of some&#13;
Big Brother. (Plato felt that of all&#13;
forms of government democracy&#13;
was the most prone to dictatorship.)&#13;
We just can't continue&#13;
to expect to receive government&#13;
benefits and say that they are&#13;
"free". In the long run the price is&#13;
just too high to pay. The only&#13;
limits to the oppression of&#13;
government is the power with&#13;
which the people show themselves&#13;
capable of opposing it. Think&#13;
about it.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Arnold S. Parise&#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;
ganger&#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;
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' Maureen Burke, Jeanne&#13;
Patriril r, mhP£;&#13;
CaJ7&#13;
a Cariell0&lt; Catherine Chaffee,&#13;
KortenHirL ^h&#13;
6&#13;
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Do«&#13;
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' Michael Kailas, Carol&#13;
Reuhnrn M ,&#13;
Kov&#13;
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' Rlck Luehr&#13;
-&#13;
Robb Luehr&#13;
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Tunkiec"' P ean Scarbr&lt;&gt;ugh, Dave Schroeder, Jennie&#13;
uw&#13;
-&#13;
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'&#13;
rksidc« «—»•&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER WlSCOnSi&#13;
°'&#13;
SEI KMIW Ranger!University of Wisconsin&#13;
s i ' r a r&#13;
s , a n d a r d s i z e&#13;
eluded for verification. signed and a telephone number inNames&#13;
will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserves a°l SiXr'a? pT^S^'n refusing fo^nt^lett" Thursday&#13;
" The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. print letters which contain false or &#13;
Thursday, May 5,1983&#13;
Kreuser talks about&#13;
his term as president&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
One of the most frequently used&#13;
comments people make about&#13;
student government is that they&#13;
don't know what goes on in PSGA.&#13;
Indeed, some people don't even&#13;
know who the current PSGA&#13;
president is. But the past&#13;
president knows what it's like, and&#13;
he was in office for two years, the&#13;
most anyone can be president. His&#13;
name is Jim Kreuser.&#13;
Kreuser, a junior majoring in&#13;
Political Science, was in PSGA his&#13;
freshman year, and ran for&#13;
president in 1981. He won over&#13;
three other candidates by a 281&#13;
vote margin. Last year he was re -&#13;
elected in a tight election, winning&#13;
by only 25 votes.&#13;
Kreuser had many priorities&#13;
when he took office. One was more&#13;
student involvement in government.&#13;
&#13;
"One of my biggest emphases&#13;
when I came in was to have&#13;
students sit on faculty committees,&#13;
because under the shared&#13;
governance concept, under law we&#13;
have rights as voting members on&#13;
faculty committees, and it wasn't&#13;
being done before I came into&#13;
office," Kreuser said. During his&#13;
administration, Jim states that all&#13;
committee seats available to&#13;
students were full, some of which&#13;
he sat on himself.&#13;
"There is an enormous amount&#13;
of committees that exist that&#13;
students can participate on, and&#13;
probably more students should be&#13;
made aware of it. But as long as&#13;
they were full, I really didn't&#13;
worry about it too much, just to&#13;
make sure that people were&#13;
reporting and the right things&#13;
were being done," he said.&#13;
While Kreuser was in office, two&#13;
seats were made available to&#13;
students on the Environmental&#13;
Concerns committee, two on the&#13;
Graduate Programming committee,&#13;
one on Campus planning&#13;
and in August, the president of&#13;
PSGA will sit on the Faculty&#13;
Senate as a non - voting member,&#13;
but a member nontheless. "This is&#13;
a big advance for the students&#13;
because they can now have more&#13;
input in matters that concern&#13;
them," says Jim. "That's the crux&#13;
of student government, to play an&#13;
active role in all the institutional&#13;
decision - making process that&#13;
goes on in an institution."&#13;
Kreuser also felt that he had to&#13;
play a role outside of Parkside. He&#13;
says that decisions in state and&#13;
local government affect students&#13;
more than many realize.&#13;
"I think state issues are important&#13;
because state legislators&#13;
are more accessible and we have&#13;
more influence," he said. "On the&#13;
national level, we have one vote.&#13;
In the state legislature, we have&#13;
two senate votes and six&#13;
representative votes that we can&#13;
affect, just in this area."&#13;
Kreuser sums up how he feels&#13;
student government should work&#13;
in three words: educate, agitate,&#13;
and legislate. "This is how student&#13;
government should work," he&#13;
says. Educate by letting senators&#13;
know who he has been talking to,&#13;
and what's going on with administration&#13;
and faculty. Agitate&#13;
on campus and outside the&#13;
campus when student issues arise.&#13;
Legislate by passing resolutions&#13;
against things that infringe on&#13;
student rights.&#13;
Some "tangible things" Kreuser&#13;
points to as accomplishments&#13;
while he was president is his work&#13;
with the Union Pad, infant care,&#13;
putting shelves in the bathrooms,&#13;
and a great deal of time and effort&#13;
in establishing the shared&#13;
governance concept with Walter&#13;
Feldt, Secretary of the Faculty. A&#13;
special task force was set up of&#13;
administrators, students and&#13;
faculty to work out a way to get&#13;
students involved with some of the&#13;
decision - making under shared&#13;
governance, signed into law under&#13;
Governor Lucey.&#13;
Also, Parkside played host to&#13;
two United Council meetings for&#13;
the first time.&#13;
Kreuser credits much of what&#13;
he has done this last year to his&#13;
vice - president, Chuck Betz. Betz&#13;
was the first V. P. to finish his&#13;
term in five years, Kreuser said,&#13;
"He's 10 times better than either&#13;
V. P.'s I had last year. He did a lot&#13;
of follow - up for me in the&#13;
senate."&#13;
When asked about criticism he&#13;
received that he was inaccessible,&#13;
he replied, "Why should I be&#13;
sitting in the PSGA office waiting&#13;
for students to come in - killing&#13;
time - when I could be at a faculty&#13;
meeting or studying?"&#13;
"I don't think there was a note&#13;
on my door or desk that I didn't&#13;
answer. I seemed like I always&#13;
had somewhere to go."&#13;
Kreuser pointed out that if&#13;
anything goes wrong with PSGA,&#13;
the president seems to always get&#13;
the blame. "Does the president&#13;
have to answer to all the problems&#13;
with PSGA? I think the Senators&#13;
can answer many questions that&#13;
come the president's way."&#13;
What does he think about the&#13;
future of PSGA? Get out of the&#13;
book business (book exchange),&#13;
and possibly hand it over to a&#13;
student organization for a money -&#13;
maker. Also, always keep student&#13;
seats in committees full, keep&#13;
fully aware of SUFAC reserves at&#13;
u *&#13;
A!"&#13;
ES&#13;
Rf&#13;
P&#13;
*&#13;
ES&#13;
,&#13;
ENJ&#13;
AT'YE demonstrates an Epson personal computer at the Computer Fair,&#13;
held last Saturday in Main Place. On the corner of the table is an Epson 8K desktop computer,&#13;
sitting on its carrying case.&#13;
all times, and get to know faculty&#13;
on committees better.&#13;
And what about the current&#13;
PSGA president and what advice&#13;
does he give to him? "Phil is&#13;
concerned, and I am glad&#13;
someone from PSGA won. He has&#13;
to develop his own style. If he can&#13;
mobilize the Senators to work on&#13;
issues and follow through, he'll&#13;
have a great deal less to do and&#13;
more time for the students."&#13;
If you could run again and did in&#13;
this last election, would you have&#13;
won?&#13;
"By 100 votes," Kreuser said.&#13;
Political science internships&#13;
The Public Service Internship&#13;
Program (PSIP) at Parkside has&#13;
summer and fall openings for&#13;
students who wish to earn political&#13;
science credits as interns in local,&#13;
state or national government&#13;
agencies.&#13;
PSIP students get practical&#13;
experience in working in political&#13;
campaigns, helping with legal&#13;
services for the poor, solving&#13;
constituent problems for&#13;
legislators, assisting local administrators&#13;
in providing comMadison&#13;
students reach dorm settlement&#13;
The owners of a private dormitory&#13;
have settled out - of - court&#13;
with a group of Madison students,&#13;
agreeing to reimburse, the&#13;
students $50,000 in security&#13;
deposits and to repay or replace&#13;
meal tickets.&#13;
The settlement ends one portion&#13;
of the students' suit against former&#13;
and current owners of&#13;
Wisconsin Hall, a private facility.&#13;
Students had been caught between&#13;
a former manager who declared&#13;
bankruptcy, former owners who&#13;
refused to honor dorm contracts,&#13;
but not their pre - paid meal&#13;
tickets. Under terms of the settlement,&#13;
Germantown Trust will&#13;
compensate students with new&#13;
meal tickets or pay for money&#13;
spent on food, says attorney Tom&#13;
Glowacki.&#13;
The bank, and Wisconsin Hall's&#13;
current manager, A1 Beauchaine,&#13;
aren't admitting legal responsibility,&#13;
says Glowacki, but don't&#13;
want to victimize innocent&#13;
students. The bank's action should&#13;
help restore Wisconsin Hall's&#13;
reputation, he says. (NOCR)&#13;
munity services, working with&#13;
planning agencies and assisting&#13;
local court agencies.&#13;
Students can earn from three to&#13;
six academic credits as interns.&#13;
In the past, PSIP interns have&#13;
worked for Congressman Les&#13;
Aspin, the city of Kenosha, the&#13;
Racine Jail Alternatives&#13;
Program, the Kenosha Police&#13;
Department, the Racine Police&#13;
Department, the Racine County&#13;
Public Defender's Office, the&#13;
Kenosha District Attorney's&#13;
Office, the Wisconsin Department&#13;
of Local Affairs and Development,&#13;
the Racine County Juvenile Court,&#13;
the Racine Clerk of Courts, the&#13;
Kenosha County Juvenile Court&#13;
and numerous other public and&#13;
private agencies.&#13;
Persons interested in enrolling&#13;
in the PSIP program can pick up&#13;
application forms in WLLC 344 or&#13;
phone the university's office of&#13;
Community Outreach at 553-2032.&#13;
Extension workshops:&#13;
cameras § edible plants&#13;
The University Extension at&#13;
Parkside is offering two&#13;
workshops this month, one on&#13;
gathering edible wild plants, and&#13;
the other on vacation&#13;
photography.&#13;
The photography class, taught&#13;
by Paul Flagg, will cover what&#13;
equipment to consider taking,&#13;
what films to take and how to care&#13;
for them, camera technique,&#13;
composition, and some measures&#13;
to take if and when photographic&#13;
disaster strikes.&#13;
The class will be taught on&#13;
Monday, May 16 and Monday,&#13;
May 23 in Tallent Hall. Fee for the&#13;
class is $7.&#13;
The course on edible plants will&#13;
show you how to use plants grown&#13;
in the wild in hundreds of dishes.&#13;
Easily recognized plants will be&#13;
identified by Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, a Parkside&#13;
professor of earth science.&#13;
The course will meet on&#13;
Thursday, May 12 and Thursday,&#13;
May 19, and includes two Saturday&#13;
field trips, on May 14 and 21.&#13;
Correction&#13;
Materials needed for the class&#13;
include a field notebook, pocket&#13;
knife, rucksack or plastic bags&#13;
and a sauce pan for cooking. Fee&#13;
for the class is $22.&#13;
Registrations for both classes&#13;
are being taken by the UW - Extension,&#13;
phone 553-2312.&#13;
^•attention^H&#13;
INTERESTED STUDENTS&#13;
PSGA IS LOOKING FOR STUDENTS&#13;
FOR SUFAC AND FACULTY COMMITTEES&#13;
ALSO FOR THE POSITION OF&#13;
PSGACHIEF JUSTICE&#13;
Contact - Phil Pogreba in PSGA Office&#13;
***•*•••****•••********************&#13;
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PROFESSIONAL&#13;
WORD PROCESSING&#13;
• Ideal for Cover Letters&#13;
and Resumes.&#13;
# Call — BETTER LETTERS&#13;
(312) 6620148&#13;
*&#13;
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•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A HAY 21&amp;22 &#13;
4 Thursday, May 5,1983 RANGER&#13;
THE ARMY ROTC 2-YEAR&#13;
PROGRAM. UP TO $1,000 A YEAR&#13;
PUIS A COMMISSION.&#13;
If you passed up Army&#13;
ROTC during your first two&#13;
years of college, you can&#13;
enroll in our 2-year proS&#13;
am before you start your&#13;
st two.&#13;
Your training will start&#13;
the summer after your&#13;
sophomore year at a six-week&#13;
Army ROTC Basic Camp.&#13;
It'll pay off, too. You'll&#13;
earn over $400 for attending&#13;
Basic Camp and up to&#13;
$1,000 a year for your last&#13;
two years of college.&#13;
But, more important,&#13;
you'll be on your way to earning&#13;
a commission in today's&#13;
Army—which includes the&#13;
Army Reserve and Army&#13;
National Guard—while you're&#13;
earning a college degree.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALLYOUCANBE.&#13;
Contact address&#13;
ENROLLMENT OFFICER&#13;
MARQUETTE UNIV.&#13;
ARMY ROTC&#13;
CALL COLLECT&#13;
(414) 224-7195/7229&#13;
Astronomer to speak&#13;
on planetary geology&#13;
Dr. Peter H. Schultz of the&#13;
Lunar and Planetary Institute in&#13;
Houston, Texas will be speaking&#13;
at Parkside on Thursday at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in GRNQ. 103 and Friday at 1&#13;
p.m. in Grq. 103. Dr. Schultz&#13;
focuses his research on planetary&#13;
surface processes, especially&#13;
impact cratering. Schultz who&#13;
took his doctorate from the&#13;
University of Texas in astronomy&#13;
with a strong background in&#13;
geology is also a member of the&#13;
Planetary Geology Speakers&#13;
Bureau. The Planetary Geology&#13;
Speakers Bureau is a national&#13;
lecturer program sponsored by&#13;
the National Aeronautics and&#13;
Space Administration and&#13;
coordinated by Arizona State&#13;
University.&#13;
Planetary geology is an interdisciplinary&#13;
science which has&#13;
been grown from infancy in less&#13;
than two decades. Unlike&#13;
traditional geologists who are&#13;
concerned with the development&#13;
of planet Earth, planetary&#13;
geologists address questions&#13;
about the origin and evolution of&#13;
the solid surfaces of planets and&#13;
their natural satellites and seek to&#13;
place terrestrial and extraterrestrial&#13;
geologic processes&#13;
into a unified framework of&#13;
knowledge. Planetary geologists&#13;
view extraterrestrial environments&#13;
as great geologic&#13;
experiments running under&#13;
conditions differing from those on&#13;
Earth which must inevitably&#13;
result in improvements to our&#13;
understanding of natural&#13;
terrestrial processes.&#13;
The talks Thursday, entitled&#13;
"Target Earth — Effects of Large&#13;
Body Impacts", and Friday,&#13;
entitl ed ''P lan eta ry&#13;
Catastrophes", are co - sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Geology and&#13;
Physics Programs and the Racine&#13;
Geological Society. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to attend either or both&#13;
of the talks.&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
The Parkside Challenge has&#13;
been postponed one week, because&#13;
none of the other schools in the&#13;
UW system have had enough&#13;
nerve to register yet. As a result,&#13;
we have begun a systematic&#13;
assault on the other schools good&#13;
names. We expect some sort of a&#13;
response very shortly. The&#13;
Parkside Challenge will take&#13;
place, in the Union Recreation&#13;
Center, on May 14. «&#13;
The Dart Team is also having a&#13;
fund raising drive. The let's buy a&#13;
real Dart Board fund has $8 so far.&#13;
Come on, folks. We have over 60&#13;
members. If you can't afford the&#13;
price of a large beverage from the&#13;
Union, you can't afford your&#13;
tuition. Go up to the Student Life&#13;
Office, Union 209, and give Marcy&#13;
75 cents. Help us save a sport that&#13;
has been around over 400 years. In&#13;
other words, cough up some&#13;
change you bunch of cheap college&#13;
- educated slime.&#13;
The UWPDT is planning a trip&#13;
to the Brewers game on May 27.&#13;
CLUB EVENTS^*********&#13;
Any interested members, or non&#13;
members, are encouraged to&#13;
attend the next Dart Team&#13;
meeting Monday at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro 126. We will be cooking&#13;
Johns on ville Brats before the&#13;
game. Good luck on your finals.&#13;
DST&#13;
Delta Sigma Theta, Inc. will be&#13;
holding a rush party on Thursday,&#13;
May 5 in Union 104, to open its&#13;
membership to women at&#13;
Parkside. Delta Sigma Theta is a&#13;
national public service sorority,&#13;
dedicated to the principles of&#13;
community service and academic&#13;
excellence.&#13;
Chess&#13;
The Chess Club would like to&#13;
thank everyone who entered our&#13;
Spring Tournament, and everyone&#13;
who helped make it happen. If you&#13;
didn't participate, you can show&#13;
up at our meetings next week and&#13;
we'll forgive you. The Chess Club&#13;
is also looking for groupies, so just&#13;
report to Union 207 fro m 6 to 10&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday or Moln D-133&#13;
between 1 and 4 p.m. on Wednesday.&#13;
You won't have to stay&#13;
four hours (it doesn't take long).&#13;
Our next meeting's agenda: The&#13;
Psychotherapy for Chess&#13;
Disorders Committees will report&#13;
on a new phobia — fear of entering&#13;
chess tournaments; 4-D chess&#13;
notation; and Applied Intimidation&#13;
Theory.&#13;
ET&#13;
All persons in Applied science&#13;
and engineering technology are&#13;
encouraged to join "the" club.&#13;
This will be an organizational&#13;
meeting to review and revise the&#13;
constitution, discuss a club name&#13;
and finalize plans for a picnic that&#13;
will be held May 21. The final&#13;
meeting of this semester will be&#13;
held on Wednesday, May 11 at l&#13;
p.m. in Moln D-139.&#13;
ISO&#13;
The International Students&#13;
Organization held their annual&#13;
election last Friday, April 29. The&#13;
following officers were elected:&#13;
Ziad Musaitif was elected&#13;
president, Depak as senior vice&#13;
president, Riz Yray as junior vice&#13;
president, Ed Francisco as&#13;
secretary, Beejan Beheshti as&#13;
treasurer and Patty as ISO's&#13;
advertising officer.&#13;
PSE&#13;
PSE, the Marketing Club, would&#13;
like to thank everyone that participated&#13;
and helped with the&#13;
Third Annual Loop 500. We wo uld&#13;
also like to congratulate the&#13;
winning teams: First place, Mike&#13;
Vania, Sue Meyer, Don&#13;
Matownski, Donna Driscoll;&#13;
Second place, Riz Yray, Jose&#13;
Yamat, Brenda, "Minge"; Third&#13;
place, Ron Jake, Ted Miller, Chris&#13;
Kunz.&#13;
Geology&#13;
Dr. Peter H. Schultz of the&#13;
Lunar and Planetary Institute in&#13;
Houston, Texas will be giving two&#13;
talks next week which will be co -&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Geology and Physics Clubs and&#13;
the Racine Geological Society.&#13;
The first talk will be held Thursday,&#13;
May 5 at 7:30 p. m. in Grq&#13;
103. The talk is titled "Target&#13;
Earth Effects of Large - Body&#13;
Impacts". The second talk,&#13;
"Planetery Catastrophes," will be&#13;
held Friday, May 6 at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Grq 103.&#13;
Write Ranger&#13;
INTELLECTUAL&#13;
SOFTWARE&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
% ISM&#13;
on the ******&#13;
by Jonathan D. Kantrowil&#13;
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instruction, featuring&#13;
automatic timing, scorin,&#13;
branching, extensive analysis&#13;
and documentation.&#13;
Apple, IBM PC disks-&#13;
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Queue, Inc.&#13;
5 Chapel Hill Drive&#13;
Fairfield, CT 06432&#13;
1-800-232-2224 or&#13;
(203)335-0908&#13;
Available exclusively from: &#13;
RANGER Thursday, May 5,1983 5&#13;
Sound Diggings&#13;
'Hollywood Henry' brings back the blues&#13;
'Something Wicked' brings Bradbury novel to life&#13;
by Napoleon Scarbrough&#13;
If the names T-Bone Walker,&#13;
Lead Belly, Lightning Hopkins&#13;
and the recently - late Muddy&#13;
Waters mean anything to you,&#13;
then you are undoubtedly aware of&#13;
an original American art form&#13;
called the blues. I happened to&#13;
catch a great veteran blues act&#13;
last evening at the Racine&#13;
Sheraton. Chester Henry Scarborough&#13;
and company (The Good&#13;
Bags) showed their American&#13;
blues heritage by performing&#13;
songs made famous by the immortals&#13;
mentioned above. Chester&#13;
Henry's blues guitar gave me a&#13;
feeling of joy, sadness, despair&#13;
and happiness, while his cousin&#13;
Lonnie Williams' blues bass lines&#13;
literally walked me across the&#13;
dance floor. L.G. Gill's drum work&#13;
was smooth and laid back, while&#13;
keyboardist Jo Jo Hayes ran the&#13;
gamut of riffs from Booker T. to&#13;
Jimmy Smith. Roy Williams, the&#13;
brother of Lonnie, crooned one&#13;
blues standard after another. At&#13;
times the silkiness of Sam Cooke&#13;
floated across the room on tunes&#13;
like "Love Me" and "What It Is,"&#13;
by Z.Z. Hill and Little Milton&#13;
respectively, while at other times&#13;
he displayed a raspyness in his&#13;
voice on "Things I Used To Do"&#13;
and "Blind, Cripple and Crazy,"&#13;
as well as other blues standards.&#13;
All in all, the band showed their&#13;
twenty year versatility of being&#13;
together in the blue.&#13;
Henry, as well as the other&#13;
members of the band, migrated to&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
to perform&#13;
The Parkside Wind Ensemble,&#13;
conducted by assistant professor&#13;
of music Mark Eichner, will&#13;
present its spring concert&#13;
featuring a guest performance by&#13;
adjunct dance professor&#13;
Katherine Zavada at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, May 10 in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission to the concert,&#13;
sponsored by the Fine Arts&#13;
Division, is $1 for all students,&#13;
Parkside staff and senior citizens&#13;
and $2 for others.&#13;
Proceeds will go to the&#13;
university's Music Scholarship&#13;
Fund.&#13;
Zavada, who will perform in&#13;
contemporary dance style to&#13;
Warren Benson's "Solitary&#13;
Dancer," has danced&#13;
professionally as a member of&#13;
several Milwaukee - based touring&#13;
companies, including "Dancecircus,"&#13;
with which she performed&#13;
for five years.&#13;
In addition to teaching several&#13;
dance forms at Parkside since&#13;
1977, Zavada teaches dance at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
The concert also will feature&#13;
Ingolf Dahl's "Sinfonietta," a&#13;
musical fabric of ban d sounds — a&#13;
parade, a concert in the park and&#13;
a serenade — woven into a&#13;
symphonic context; "Symphony&#13;
No. 3" by Vittorio Giannini,&#13;
America's popular neo - romantic&#13;
composer; and "Armenian&#13;
Dances," by Alfred Reed, who&#13;
draws heavily from the work of&#13;
Gomidas Vartabed, the founder of&#13;
Armenian classical music who&#13;
collected over 4,000 Armenian folk&#13;
songs.&#13;
Eichner, who joined the&#13;
Parkside music faculty last fall,&#13;
conducts wind and brass ensembles&#13;
in addition to teaching&#13;
applied trumpet. He received his&#13;
masters degree in music from the&#13;
University of T exas - Austin and&#13;
was director of instrumental&#13;
music at the University of Science&#13;
and Arts of Oklahoma before&#13;
coming to UW-P. He has studied&#13;
trumpet with Dr. J. Frank Elsass,&#13;
Terry Cravens and Wayne&#13;
Barrington at UW-Austin.&#13;
Racine from their native&#13;
Mississippi, bringing their&#13;
musical heritage with them.&#13;
Although they have never&#13;
released a record, they have been&#13;
successfully filling clubs in and&#13;
around the Racine area as well as&#13;
Chicago and Indiana.&#13;
When asked about his views on&#13;
the future of the blues, Henry&#13;
replied, "If the young musicians&#13;
don't reclaim their natural&#13;
heritage and stop chasing after&#13;
fads, the blues will slowly die out.&#13;
We are at present a dying breed."&#13;
Hollywood Henry and the Blues&#13;
Bags will continue to play clubs,&#13;
private engagements and hotels&#13;
such as the Racine Sheraton&#13;
mentioned above. They would also&#13;
like to play a few college campuses&#13;
to "enlighten the young&#13;
people to a basic, original&#13;
American art form."&#13;
I, as well as the other guests at&#13;
the hotel, certainly enjoyed this&#13;
rare act of au thenticity and, even&#13;
after the show was over, the&#13;
chandeliers dimmed, and the&#13;
amplifiers went hush, I could still&#13;
see and hear blues as it dawned on&#13;
me that I had uncovered yet&#13;
another clue to the real music that&#13;
I am looking for in my quest for&#13;
sound digging.&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Ever since the Disney Studios&#13;
started making PG films I have&#13;
been waiting for a film of theirs&#13;
that I would enjoy. I was disappointed&#13;
by "The Black Hole," and&#13;
bored by "Tron." So I was pleased&#13;
to find that Disney's latest&#13;
release, "Something Wicked This&#13;
Way Comes," was, in fact, a&#13;
pleasant surprise.&#13;
Based on the 1962 novel by Ray&#13;
Bradbury, the film takes place in&#13;
the tiny Greentown, Illinois, in the&#13;
early part of this century —&#13;
supposedly, the time and place of&#13;
Bradbury's childhood. The film&#13;
stars Vidal Peterson and Shawn&#13;
Carson as Will Halloway and Jim&#13;
Nightshade, two boys that inhabit&#13;
Greentown and first discover&#13;
"Dark's Pandemonium Carnival,'&#13;
as it roars into town one night on&#13;
the carnival train. The boys are so&#13;
eager to see the carnival, in fact,&#13;
that they sneak into it the night&#13;
before it opens, and find, to their&#13;
horror, a mystereious myriad of&#13;
fiendish beings, hellish rides and&#13;
other oddities. They find, for&#13;
example, a merry - go - round that&#13;
goes backwards, and, as it does it&#13;
turns back time for its riders,&#13;
turning adults into children.&#13;
By day the carnival is&#13;
seemingly 'normal', bringing to&#13;
LTO R: Vidal Peterson, Jason&#13;
Robards and Shawn Carson in&#13;
a scene from "Something&#13;
Wicked This Way Comes."&#13;
life the dreams of the inhabitants&#13;
of Greentown. But Will and Jim&#13;
know the truth, and when Mr.&#13;
Dark discovers that they know he&#13;
searches the town for them, using&#13;
whatever evil, supernatural&#13;
powers he has at his disposal.&#13;
One of the most striking things&#13;
about this film is its&#13;
cinematography. Greentown is a&#13;
Rockwellesque little place, from&#13;
the revolving barber pole to the&#13;
town saloon. The whole 'look' of&#13;
the film is pure Americana, as are&#13;
the film's characters.&#13;
Vidal Peterson and Shawn&#13;
Carson are two of the best child&#13;
actors I've seen in some time. Sort&#13;
of a Tom Sawyer - Huckleberry&#13;
Finn pair, there is simply nothing&#13;
put - on or exaggerated about their&#13;
performances. Jason Robards is&#13;
excellent as Charles Halloway,&#13;
Will's father, an aging librarian&#13;
who, in the course of the film,&#13;
discovers how to be young again.&#13;
Jonathan Pryce exudes a cool,&#13;
suave sort of evil as the sinister&#13;
Mr. Dark.&#13;
Surprisingly, the one problem&#13;
with the film is its screenplay,&#13;
which was done by Bradbury&#13;
himself. The early part of the film&#13;
is often disjointed and hard to&#13;
follow, a series of events only&#13;
loosely strung together in any&#13;
coherent way. The plot tightens up&#13;
later in the film, but the early part&#13;
is definitely weak. For the most&#13;
part though, "Something Wicked&#13;
This Way Comes" is a lively film&#13;
adaptation of Bradbury's novel —&#13;
Disney material yes, but good&#13;
Disney material, not corny. The&#13;
film's special effects are very&#13;
good, and several sequences in the&#13;
film are actually (believe or not!)&#13;
scary without being bloody or&#13;
violent. This is one of those films&#13;
that Disney used to be so well&#13;
known for, the film that most&#13;
anybody, of any age, could enjoy.&#13;
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SEPT. 1983 APARTMENT RENTALS&#13;
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Thursday, May 5,1983&#13;
Skylight Opera&#13;
to hold auditions&#13;
Skylight Comic Opera, Ltd. will&#13;
hold auditions for its 1983-84&#13;
season May 10,12 and 17 from 3 p.&#13;
m. to 7 p. m. Call 271-8815 to&#13;
arrange an appointment.&#13;
Auditioners should prepare two&#13;
selections (in English) either&#13;
from the productions slated for&#13;
the 83-84 season, or from a work&#13;
by the same composers. Bring&#13;
along a picture and resume if&#13;
available.&#13;
1983-84 Skylight Season:&#13;
Sept. 21 - Oct. 9 - TRIAL BY&#13;
JURY — Gilbert &amp; Sullivan;&#13;
JUMPING FROG OF&#13;
CALAVARAS COUNTY — L ukas&#13;
Foss&#13;
Oct. 26 - Nov. 13 - THE TURN&#13;
OF THE SCREW — Benjamin&#13;
Britten&#13;
Nov. 30 - Dec. 31 — H.M.S.&#13;
PINAFORE — Gilbert &amp; Sullivan&#13;
Jan. 25 - Feb. 12 - LA CALISTO&#13;
— F rancesco Cavalli&#13;
March 7 -11 — THE STUDENT&#13;
PRINCE — Sigmund Romberg&#13;
March 28 - April 22 — TINTYPES&#13;
— Revue of American&#13;
popular music&#13;
Oriana Trio to&#13;
present concert&#13;
The Oriana Trio, the Parkside's&#13;
resident chamber ensemble, will&#13;
present a free program for junior&#13;
and senior high school students in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha at 10 a.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, May 11 in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The trio will perform works by&#13;
Mozart and Brahms and will&#13;
discuss those composers and their&#13;
work as well as demonstrate individual&#13;
instruments.&#13;
Music teachers desiring more&#13;
information and reservations can&#13;
call the UW-P Fine Arts Division,&#13;
which is sponsoring the program&#13;
at 553-2581. Deadline for making&#13;
reservations is May 6.&#13;
A critic's critique of the Oscars&#13;
by Dave Schroeder&#13;
Nowthat a couple of weeks have&#13;
passed since the night of the&#13;
Academy Awards, I would like to&#13;
reflect upon Oscar night.&#13;
Overlooking the inferior entertainment&#13;
(I mean, who was the&#13;
sadist that inflicted that opening&#13;
number on the public?), the unprepared&#13;
presenters (Matt Dillon&#13;
and Kristi McNichol, for example,&#13;
who never bothered to try to&#13;
pronounce their nominees names,&#13;
let alone learn how to pronounce&#13;
them) and some heartrending&#13;
acceptance speeches (Mickey&#13;
Rooney and Richard Attenburough,&#13;
namely), I want to&#13;
focus on who deserved to win, and&#13;
who did not deserve to win. So&#13;
much for overlooking these&#13;
things.&#13;
Let's talk about those who richly&#13;
deserved their awards. Jessica&#13;
Lange, you may have received the&#13;
award for Frances rather than&#13;
Tootsie. Even though I picked&#13;
Kim Stanley as my choice, I still&#13;
predicted that the Academy would&#13;
pick you, and I say that you were a&#13;
good choice.&#13;
Lou Gosset, Jr. Congrats. You&#13;
deserved it, along with James&#13;
Mason. You both had superb&#13;
performances and I found that it&#13;
was hard to pick between the two.&#13;
Ben Kingsley, you made Gandhi&#13;
worth the ticket price. Single -&#13;
handedly you gave the movie life,&#13;
and made this sterile view of a&#13;
great man's life interesting.&#13;
John Williams once again&#13;
proved that he is the man to go to&#13;
for a fantastic musical score. He&#13;
earned his fourth Oscar for E.T.,&#13;
leaving the rest of the contenders&#13;
in the dust.&#13;
Probably the most deserved&#13;
award of the night went to Meryl&#13;
Street for Sophie's Choice. This is&#13;
probably the most flawless performance&#13;
ever brought to the&#13;
screen, by anybody. Frankly, I&#13;
think she deserves the award for&#13;
the next four years.&#13;
I really thought I was going out&#13;
cm a limb predicting that the&#13;
Academy would pick Missing for&#13;
Best Adapted Screenplay. It only&#13;
proves that there is justice hiding&#13;
somewhere in that Academy.&#13;
Now for those flicks that won for&#13;
political reasons rather than the&#13;
quality of work that was done for&#13;
that certain award. What I think&#13;
happened is that the Academy&#13;
decided that since it was going to&#13;
give Gandhi a lot of the awards&#13;
that E.T. deserved, that it would&#13;
give E.T. a lot of smaller awards&#13;
that it did not deserve.&#13;
Now I loved E.T., but the only&#13;
thing spectacular about the visual&#13;
effects was the little creature&#13;
itself. This is one of the many&#13;
technical awards that&#13;
Bladerunner deserved.&#13;
Best Art Direction and Costume&#13;
both to who? Gandhi!?!?! What&#13;
happened to awarding people with&#13;
vision who had to come up with&#13;
something from nowhere, who had&#13;
to translate that nothing into&#13;
something physical and tangible&#13;
and yet complimenting of the&#13;
story? My gripe is that most of the&#13;
sets from Gandhi were probably&#13;
taken right out of a book, same&#13;
with the costumes. And many of&#13;
the sets were already there. In&#13;
Bladerunner, a new vision of our&#13;
planet was created, unlike any&#13;
other brought to the screen, and&#13;
the imagination and the vision&#13;
that took is four times worth the&#13;
time it took to drape the cloth and&#13;
make the mud houses for the&#13;
thousands of people in Gandhi.&#13;
Fran Liebowitz says of Gandhi,&#13;
"Since when do they give Costume&#13;
Awards for diapers?" My&#13;
thoughts exactly, Fran.&#13;
Best Screenplay (Original),&#13;
Best Picture, Best Director. Why&#13;
did Gandhi win all these awards&#13;
when almost every nominee in&#13;
each category was superior in&#13;
their products? Here are some&#13;
answers given by critics and&#13;
Academy members alike:&#13;
"Gandhi has a great message;"&#13;
"E.T. has enough recognition&#13;
from the box office;" "E.T. was&#13;
too simple a movie;" "Anyone&#13;
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who can put that many people on a&#13;
screen deserves an award;" on&#13;
and on and on go the reasons. In&#13;
very few instances is it mentioned&#13;
that Gandhi is the best directed or&#13;
best written, or even the best&#13;
overall film.&#13;
My replies to these answers:&#13;
Gandhi had a message of peace,&#13;
love, and understanding. Doesn't&#13;
that sound an awful lot like E.T.'s&#13;
message? Box office receipts&#13;
don't mean diddly - squat when&#13;
your peers do not give you the&#13;
recognition you deserve. Isn't&#13;
taking something very complicated&#13;
and molding it into&#13;
something simple so it can reach&#13;
out to all people and touch their&#13;
lives one of the grandest parts of&#13;
filmmaking? Isn't the award&#13;
given for the quality of the work&#13;
and not the amount of p eople in it?&#13;
Here are some of the reasons&#13;
that I think Gandhi cleaned up in&#13;
so many categories (many critics&#13;
concur in these opinions). There is&#13;
a resentment in the Academy for&#13;
Steven Speilberg due to his&#13;
phenomenal success along with&#13;
his young age. Academy members&#13;
don't think that movies should be&#13;
commercialized as E.T. was.&#13;
"Serious" movies are the only&#13;
movies that should get the award.&#13;
Voting for Gandhi would make the&#13;
Academy look good. As one critic&#13;
from Hollywood put it, "Gandhi&#13;
stands for what every Academy&#13;
member would like to be. Moral,&#13;
tan, and thin."&#13;
You know something is fishy&#13;
when the man who wins the&#13;
directing honors, namely Richard&#13;
Attenburough, states in more than&#13;
one TV appearance that Steven&#13;
Spielberg is a more talented&#13;
director than he is, and&#13;
Speilberg's film is more finely&#13;
directed than his own. Some&#13;
critics even believe that Gandhi is&#13;
not even directed particularly&#13;
well in the first place.&#13;
My problem with Gandhi was&#13;
that the film was so totally&#13;
sterilized that it tended to bore&#13;
me. Attenburough could have&#13;
taken a good lesson from Franco&#13;
Zefferelli when he dealt with the&#13;
same message and a similar&#13;
character, Francis of Assisi, in&#13;
Brother Sun, Sister Moon. The&#13;
film was better written, directed,&#13;
and acted all around, and most&#13;
people have not even heard of it.&#13;
The top honor in the Academy&#13;
Awards, at least the last time I&#13;
had a look, was Best Picture, not&#13;
Best Message, nor Choice That&#13;
Would Make The Academy Look&#13;
Best. Must fine films be excluded&#13;
because they piss - off the&#13;
government (Missing), or they&#13;
are in a foreign language (Das&#13;
Boot), or they are lighthearted&#13;
and popular (Tootsie, E.T.)?&#13;
These were many of the reasons&#13;
given as to why these pictures did&#13;
not get certain awards. Now I'm&#13;
not saying Gandhi is a bad film,&#13;
but I can name at least a dozen&#13;
pictures from 1982 that are far&#13;
more worth the money.&#13;
If you want to see the "Must&#13;
See" pictures of 1983, they were,&#13;
in order of quality:&#13;
1. Sophie's Choice&#13;
2. E.T.&#13;
3. Moonlighting&#13;
4. Missing&#13;
5. The Verdict&#13;
6. Diner&#13;
7. The World According to Garp&#13;
8. The Four Friends&#13;
9. An Officer and a Gentleman&#13;
10. Bladerunner&#13;
11. Tootsie&#13;
12. Tex&#13;
13. Poltergeist&#13;
14. Das Boot&#13;
15. Frances&#13;
If I were to go on, Gandhi would&#13;
come in around 25th. Many of&#13;
these movies you may not have&#13;
seen, or even heard of, but all&#13;
have something very important to&#13;
say and are highly entertaining,&#13;
much more than Gandhi. I'm not&#13;
saying that these were the only&#13;
movies worth seeing, but they are&#13;
the cream of the crop.&#13;
Write Ranger a l etter&#13;
Taste the difference Kraeusening makes.&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE &#13;
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RANGER Thursday, May 5,1983&#13;
Men's Baseball&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
On Wed., April 27, the men's&#13;
baseball team lost a doubleheader&#13;
to Madison. The first game was a&#13;
very good game, according to&#13;
Coach Oberbrunner, even though&#13;
the Rangers lost in the last inning&#13;
7-6. The losing pitcher was Mark&#13;
Schmitz. In that game the hitters&#13;
were Joe Krisik (2 for 3) with 1 urn&#13;
and John Hyatt (2-2-1) with 2 runs.&#13;
In the second game, the losing&#13;
pitcher was Scott Hartnell&#13;
Parkside lost 4-2, but received&#13;
some good hitting from Scott&#13;
Gerhartz, Scott Breznk and Tom&#13;
Tatge. The Rangers lost this game&#13;
on a controversial call where the&#13;
Madison leftfielder trapped the&#13;
ball. Coach Oberbrunner said,&#13;
"The umpire just didn't have a&#13;
good look at it, but we all knew it&#13;
was trapped. Even the player&#13;
himself said he trapped it."&#13;
On Thursday, April 28, the team&#13;
faired much better, beating&#13;
Carroll College 14-1. The winning&#13;
pitcher was Jack Rubach. "He&#13;
should get all the credit," said&#13;
Oberbrunner. Rubach had hit and&#13;
no runs through 9 innings. This is&#13;
the second time in Parkside&#13;
history that this has been done.&#13;
The last time was in 1974. There&#13;
were 3 home runs for the Rangers.&#13;
They were by Krisik, Rich&#13;
Salisbury and Hyatt.&#13;
On Sat., the team lost a&#13;
doubleheader to Lewis (2-1) and&#13;
(5-1).&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
This past weekend, the&#13;
Women's Track team was suppose&#13;
to travel to Eau Claire for a meet.&#13;
Because of transportation&#13;
problems (the team wasn't&#13;
supplied with a van), many team&#13;
members ran the Bonne Bell 10k&#13;
race in Milwaukee on May 1 instead.&#13;
&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
Sue Meyer was the top finisher&#13;
for Parkside, placing fifth out of a&#13;
field of 800. Donna Driscoll was&#13;
not far behind finishing eighth.&#13;
Official times could not be obtained.&#13;
"The first part of the race&#13;
was against the wind and uphill.&#13;
The second part was downhill and&#13;
with the wind," commented&#13;
Driscoll.&#13;
Linda Pfilestifer ran the 10k&#13;
course in 49 minutes flat and was&#13;
closely followed by teammates&#13;
Carol Romano (49:44) and Sandy&#13;
Pellegrino (49:49). Pellegrino,&#13;
who is a 300 meter sprinter&#13;
commented, "I just wanted to&#13;
finish under 50 minutes, which I&#13;
did."&#13;
Women's Softball&#13;
The Women's Softball team&#13;
finished second in the Whitewater&#13;
Tournament losing only to the host&#13;
school, 1 - 0. The team defeated:&#13;
NE Illinois 4-1&#13;
Platteville 6-3&#13;
Oshkosh 1-0&#13;
The Warhawks didn' t score the&#13;
winning run until the seventh&#13;
inning. "It was a very disappointing&#13;
loss. We played extremely&#13;
well against Oshkosh and&#13;
Whitewater. We seem to play&#13;
better against the tougher&#13;
teams," commented Coach Linda&#13;
Draft. Their overall record is 27-7.&#13;
Today, at Petrifying Springs&#13;
Park the team plays against UI -&#13;
Chicago (3 p. m.). Tomorrow, the&#13;
first round playoffs for the&#13;
District 14 championship begins.&#13;
Parkside will host Superior. The&#13;
playoffs are a best two out of&#13;
three. Game times are 12 noon and&#13;
2 p. m. If the team splits the&#13;
doubleheader, they will also play&#13;
Saturday at 11 a. m.&#13;
These games are very important&#13;
for the Women's team,&#13;
because if they lose their season is&#13;
finished. But if they win they go on&#13;
to play the Minnesota champions.&#13;
National Qualifiers&#13;
With only three weeks&#13;
remaining of the season, the track&#13;
team members are trying to get&#13;
qualifying throws, heights and&#13;
times for Nationals.&#13;
Walkers Will Preischel and&#13;
Mark Manning have qualified in&#13;
the 10k walk. Rod Condon this&#13;
weekend walked a 10k in 50:41,&#13;
which is only about 11 seconds off&#13;
the qualifying time.&#13;
Manning and Tim McMillian&#13;
tied for first place in a 20k race&#13;
this weekend, both qualifying for&#13;
the TAC Nationals to be held this&#13;
summer. Their time was 1:36.56.&#13;
Both Manning and McMillian&#13;
bettered their personal bests (by 5&#13;
minutes and 1-1/2 minutes&#13;
respectively). "It was a good race&#13;
— a real confidence builder,&#13;
because we didn't kill ourselves,&#13;
yet we both qualified," commented&#13;
Manning.&#13;
Thus far, Coach Lucian Rosa is&#13;
considering taking pole vaulter&#13;
John Anderson to Kansas City if&#13;
he can vault 15-6. "If John can&#13;
jump 15-6 then I feel he has a good&#13;
chance of becoming an NAIA All&#13;
American, stated Rosa.&#13;
Rosa is also considering taking&#13;
marathon runner Ted Miller.&#13;
Miller recently competed in the&#13;
Boston Marathon but Rosa doesn't&#13;
feel this will hinder Miller. "Ted's&#13;
a very gutsy runner. Last week at&#13;
a meet against Whitewater, he&#13;
was having blister problems and I&#13;
told him to drop out if he was&#13;
feeling bad, but he wouldn't. He&#13;
should do well at Nationals."&#13;
For the women's track team,&#13;
Deb Spino qualified for the 10,000&#13;
meter run two weeks ago in a&#13;
meet at Carthage. Although the&#13;
wind was very strong, she led for&#13;
much of the race. Then her knee&#13;
began to bother her and she was&#13;
forced to relinquish her lead.&#13;
Spino finished second in 37:45.&#13;
Anderson vaults to new heights&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
There is always an exception to&#13;
every rule. Most people's image of&#13;
a college athlete includes the word&#13;
young — a recent high school&#13;
graduate. John Anderson is the&#13;
exception to that rule.&#13;
Anderson, a 30 - year - old&#13;
Communication major has been a&#13;
pole vaulter on Parkside's track&#13;
team for three and a half years.&#13;
Before Anderson came to&#13;
Parkside, he attended Milwaukee&#13;
Area Technical College (MATC)&#13;
where he received a degree in&#13;
Barbery. He then spent 4 years in&#13;
the Marines. In '77 he enrolled at&#13;
MATC to obtain a degree in&#13;
Cosmotology. He worked in a&#13;
salon for 2 years before enrolling&#13;
at Parkside in the fall of '79. He&#13;
took two classes — a philosophy&#13;
and a business class.&#13;
"I was a pole vaulter in high&#13;
school and I always had the desire&#13;
to vault in college but I didn't&#13;
think I was eligible. One day&#13;
before semester break, I was in&#13;
the gym and I asked Bob Lawson&#13;
(the track coach at the time) how&#13;
do you join the track team? He&#13;
said to take 12 credits next&#13;
semester and asked what I did. I&#13;
told him I vaulted and he said&#13;
okay, come on out," said Anderson.&#13;
&#13;
His first season at Parkside,&#13;
Anderson found tremendous&#13;
improvement in himself. In high&#13;
school, the highest he ever vaulted&#13;
was 11 - 6, but after a few months&#13;
of getting back into shape, he&#13;
vaulted 13 - 0. He now has a personal&#13;
best of 15 - 0 indoors and 14 -&#13;
6 outdoors. He is only one inch&#13;
from beating the school record in&#13;
the pole vault. "I progressed a lot&#13;
that first year, I learned a lot from&#13;
Lawson, plus I had someone to&#13;
work with. Bob Meekma really&#13;
pushed me. Now it's like I'm MI a&#13;
plateau," commented Anderson.&#13;
Although Anderson has been&#13;
jumping higher than his first&#13;
season, he feels he hasn't improved&#13;
at the same rate. "I was&#13;
very consistent about a year and a&#13;
half ago. I would place at every&#13;
meet. This year I wasn't very&#13;
consistent. I feel this is due to the&#13;
lack of practice. During indoors,&#13;
we would only get the gym once a&#13;
week. Outdoors, the weather&#13;
hasn't been that great for&#13;
vaulting," he said.&#13;
Coach Rosa admits Parkside&#13;
does not have the best facilities for&#13;
vaulting but acknowledged that&#13;
Anderson will go to high school&#13;
gyms in the Racine - Kenosha&#13;
area to practice.&#13;
Anderson feels he works as hard&#13;
as someone who vaults at 17 or 18&#13;
feet. His workouts certainly&#13;
reflect this. Monday is overdistance&#13;
running (300's) and&#13;
weights. Tuesday is sprints (165,&#13;
100, 50 yards) and vaulting.&#13;
Wednesday is a pace workout&#13;
(200's) and again vaulting.&#13;
Thursday is basically the same&#13;
workout as Tuesday, but includes&#13;
rope climbs also. Friday, Anderson&#13;
does 15 - 20 sprints. He also&#13;
tries to get in the pool, so that he&#13;
can vault in the pool. This is&#13;
something he has been doing&#13;
recently and he feels it has helped&#13;
him greatly in mental preparation&#13;
for the meets. Anderson also does&#13;
30 minutes quick walking at least&#13;
every other day.&#13;
"John is very hardworking - one&#13;
of the most hardworking men I've&#13;
ever seen. He tries to help the&#13;
whole team and me by recruiting.&#13;
We've gotten a couple from the&#13;
Basketball team because of him,"&#13;
commented Rosa.&#13;
After this season, Anderson has&#13;
one more outdoor season left. (A&#13;
Bone spur made him redshirt a&#13;
season). He feels that it is very&#13;
feasible that he will be jumping&#13;
close to 17 feet. &#13;
8 Thursday, May 5,1983 RANGER&#13;
*"0 BOTTLED UNDER U S BMW"*&#13;
1,1&#13;
B* JOSEPH [ S EAGRAM &amp; SONS !U«C IN O BALTIMORE MO SO S»" t&#13;
JSO ML • SO PROOf&#13;
Scholarships&#13;
Continued From Page 1&#13;
for science went to Janet Rohde,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The Sam Poerio Award of $100,&#13;
named for the late Kenosha&#13;
educator and athletic coach, went&#13;
to Terry Ann Ferraro, a&#13;
Psychology major, Kenosha.&#13;
Three "Big Eight" Milwaukee&#13;
accounting firms sponsored&#13;
scholarships for three UWParkside&#13;
business management&#13;
students in accounting. (The&#13;
awards were funded by the firms&#13;
and their employees who are&#13;
Parkside graduates): The Ernst&#13;
and Whinney Scholarship of $500&#13;
went to Donella Elsen, Kenosha;&#13;
the Deloitte, Haskins and Sells&#13;
Scholarship of $250 went to Barbara&#13;
West, Kenosha; and the&#13;
Peate, Marwick, Mitchell&#13;
Scholarship of $125 went to Henry&#13;
Gondeck, Kenosha.&#13;
Earlier, the Milwaukee Chapter&#13;
of the Financial Executives Institute&#13;
scholarship in accounting&#13;
and finance of $200 w as awarded&#13;
to Ms. Elsen.&#13;
CERTIFICATE AWARDS&#13;
Certificates of recognition citing&#13;
students for academic excellence&#13;
and creative achievement and&#13;
awarded by the academic&#13;
disciplines went to:&#13;
Kim Bowen, Kenosha&#13;
(Education); Natalie Bredek,&#13;
Kenosha (Applied Computer&#13;
Science); Dino A. Druding,&#13;
Kenosha (Mathematics); Brian&#13;
Ebener, Kenosha (Political&#13;
Science); Donella F. Elsen,&#13;
Kenosha (Business Management -&#13;
Accounting); Gary Jonker,&#13;
Kenosha (Eng inee ring&#13;
Technology); Susan Marcinkus,&#13;
Kenosha (Psychology); Sandra A.&#13;
Milligan, Kenosha (Geography);&#13;
Ronald Parker, Kenosha&#13;
(English); Dan Rock, Kenosha&#13;
(Philosophy); Sharon L. Shaver,&#13;
Kenosha (Earth Science); Brian&#13;
Todd, Kenosha (Medical&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
EARN $500 OR MORE each school year.&#13;
Flexible hours. Monthly payments for&#13;
placing posters on campus. Bonus based on&#13;
results. Prizes awarded as well.• 600-526-&#13;
0883.&#13;
PIANO PLAYER WANTED for rock / blues&#13;
band. Call 654-4456 or 654-3624.&#13;
TYPING: For professional and speedy&#13;
service, call Debbie, 681-3522.&#13;
WANTED: Editor for lengthy, complex&#13;
novel. Work needed on grammer, spelling&#13;
and re-typing. Paper, etc. supplied. Pay&#13;
negotiable. Call Pam, 553-9819 or 552-9435.&#13;
WANTED: Motorcycle helmet, used and in&#13;
good condition. Call Karen in the Ranger&#13;
office, ext. 2295.&#13;
RUMMAGE SALE: Books, plants, rummage.&#13;
Unitarian Church, 625 College Ave., Racine,&#13;
Saturday, May 7, 8-4 p.m. Wide selection.&#13;
Cheap!&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED in becoming an&#13;
R.A. for 83-84 please call the housing office&#13;
at 553-2320.&#13;
FOR SUMMER SUBLET: Professor's 5 room&#13;
apartment in Racine, 2 bedrooms and&#13;
baths, well furnished, indoor swimming&#13;
pool, tennis courts, air conditioned. June,&#13;
July, August, $400 a month. Call 553-2320.&#13;
SUMMER ROOMMATE NEEDED: Wood&#13;
Creek, non - sm oker. Dick O., 552-9175.&#13;
SITTER NEEDED, Fall semester, a.m. only,&#13;
my home, West Racine. Schwaabs, 637-1921.&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
SEASON&#13;
PARKSIOE ONION&#13;
CAMPING&#13;
RENTALS&#13;
• 2 MAN TENTS&#13;
• 4 MAN TENTS&#13;
• SLEEPING BAGS&#13;
• GROUND PADS&#13;
• GAS HEATERS&#13;
• GAS LANTERNS&#13;
• COOK STOVES&#13;
• COOKING KITS&#13;
• ICE CHESTS&#13;
• WATER JUGS&#13;
• CANTEENS&#13;
• VITTLE KITS&#13;
• CAMP SHOVELS&#13;
• BELT AXES&#13;
• HUNTING KNIVES&#13;
• POCKET KNIVES .&#13;
• COMPASSES&#13;
• FIRST AID KITS&#13;
• FLASHLIGHTS&#13;
• CAMP STOOLS&#13;
• FISHING RODS&#13;
• FISHING NETS&#13;
• FISH BASKETS&#13;
ADVANCE&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
NECESSARY&#13;
CALL: SS3-2409&#13;
PART TIME HELP WANTED - Kenosha&#13;
professional woman needs someone to do&#13;
light housekeeping in home, $5 per hour,&#13;
flexible schedule. Call 658-4746 evenings for&#13;
details.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
IS EVERYBODY IN? The ceremony is about&#13;
to begin, the Mindless voice&#13;
LEAVE THE TREES ALONE Barking Duck •&#13;
The Termites&#13;
TO ALL CLOSET CHESS PLAYERS: Stay&#13;
there.&#13;
BARKING DUCKS wear combat boots - Sole&#13;
Surviving Termite&#13;
BARKING DUCKS are warm, considerate,&#13;
loving and kind - If you remember the soap.&#13;
BDL&#13;
MAUREEN &amp; CARA: We've never seen a&#13;
better highway pickup technique than what&#13;
we saw Tuesday. Had much practice&#13;
before?&#13;
Technology); Kristine S. Wendt,&#13;
Kenosha (Business Management -&#13;
Marketing); Barbara West,&#13;
Kenosha (Business Management -&#13;
A c cou nti ng) ; M a ril yn&#13;
Weschenefski, Kenosha (Art);&#13;
Wendy Westphal, Kenosha (Earth&#13;
Science).&#13;
Gary Albright, Racine&#13;
(Business Management / Applied&#13;
Computer Science); Ray Anderson,&#13;
Racine (Applied Computer&#13;
Science); Rosalind&#13;
Auberry, Racine (Economics);&#13;
Karen Bolander, Racine (Art);&#13;
Judith L. Braun, Racine&#13;
(Business Management&#13;
Produ ction Opera tions&#13;
Management); Carol Burns,&#13;
Racine (English); David Carls,&#13;
Racine, (Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene); Michael&#13;
Curtis, Racine (Chemistry);&#13;
Joanne F. Drewek, Racine&#13;
(Business Management&#13;
Finance); Eugene Dunk, Racine&#13;
(Political Science); Paul&#13;
F r e d e r i c k s o n , R a c i ne&#13;
(Engineering Technology); Mary&#13;
Ginther, Racine (Communication);&#13;
Anne Gontek,&#13;
Racine (Communication); Giam&#13;
Xuan Hoang, Racine (Applied&#13;
Science); Rachel King, Racine&#13;
(Communication); Suzanne&#13;
Landis, Racine (Music); Robert&#13;
Ludwig, Racine (Art); Jennifer&#13;
Meisner, Racine (Political&#13;
Science); Patricia Mulligan,&#13;
Racine (Economics); Sandra&#13;
Pishney, Racine (Psychology);&#13;
Kathleen Pomaville, Racine&#13;
(Communication); Linda Randelzhofer,&#13;
Racine (Music); John&#13;
Reese, Racine (Industrial and&#13;
Environmental Hygiene).&#13;
Marie Baronowski, Oak Creek&#13;
(Medical Technology); Julian&#13;
Brown, Milwaukee (Dramatic&#13;
Arts); Jon Corson, Elkhorn&#13;
(Mathematics); Joy Hegemann,&#13;
Waterford (Psychology); Greg&#13;
Irwin, Lindenhurst, 111.&#13;
(Engineering Technology);&#13;
Judith A. Larsen, Gurnee, 111.&#13;
(Business Management - Administrative&#13;
Management); Todd&#13;
L. Laszewski, Caledonia&#13;
(Mathematics); Bonnie L. McDonnell,&#13;
South Milwaukee&#13;
(Business Management - Personnel&#13;
Administration / Labor &amp;&#13;
Industrial Relations); Regina&#13;
Montgomer y, Caledonia&#13;
(English); Irene Vilona, Fontana&#13;
(Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene).&#13;
THFE IRESIDE&#13;
RESTAURANT &amp; L OUNGE&#13;
OPEN DAILY 11:00 A.M.&#13;
Complete American • Italian Menu&#13;
Fri. Fish Dinner $250&#13;
Sun. Special Turkey Dinner *3&#13;
95&#13;
Featuring Deep Pan or Thin Crust Pizza&#13;
NEW SPECIALS COMING:&#13;
• Deep Fried Breaded Rabbit&#13;
• Bar - B - Q Ribs&#13;
Complete Carry Out Service&#13;
Food • Beer • Wine • Liquor&#13;
2801 30th Ave., Kenosha&#13;
Ph. 551-0600&#13;
th the exciting taste of&#13;
uiith Rock n roll stirs mm&#13;
Seven &amp; Seven&#13;
' 1982 SEAGRAM MUSK CO., NYC A MERICAN WHSKEV. A BLEND 80 PROOF "Sa*HJp" and "7UP" are trademafc of t he Se^Up Company&#13;
Seagrams </text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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