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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 15, issue 21</text>
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            <text>Clergy debates the moral aspects of AIDS</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>sexual harassment, to increase&#13;
their sensitivity to it,&#13;
and to publicize the procedures,&#13;
sanctions and remedies&#13;
available against it."&#13;
Despite the Board's directive,&#13;
the Sexual Harassment&#13;
Advisory Committee that was&#13;
started here "has fallen&#13;
through the cracks," according&#13;
to former committee&#13;
chair Teresa Peck-McGovern,&#13;
associate professor of education&#13;
and director of women's&#13;
studies.&#13;
Wayne Johnson, associate&#13;
professor of philosophy and&#13;
formerly on the committee,&#13;
stated that the committee has&#13;
"been ineffective for two or&#13;
three years." He believes&#13;
that the intentions of the committee&#13;
were good, but that it&#13;
never followed through, nor&#13;
did it properly educate the&#13;
university population about&#13;
sexual harassment.&#13;
"It was an annual appointment&#13;
and these people (formerly&#13;
of the committee) have&#13;
not been reappointed, so&#13;
we're waiting for the Chancellor&#13;
to appoint a new committee,"&#13;
stated Peck-McGovern.&#13;
Despite the absence of a&#13;
committee, Peck-McGovern&#13;
currently has several students&#13;
who have come to her&#13;
Sex see page 7&#13;
" Inside...&#13;
Affirmative Action reestablished.....page 4&#13;
PSGA endorses water petition page 5&#13;
Students earn Admin Council seat..page 6&#13;
OAS trip planned page 9&#13;
Alumnus succeeds as writer page 13&#13;
Kaplan wants to reintroduce harassment committee&#13;
Clergy debates the&#13;
moral aspects of AIDS&#13;
by Amy H. Hitter&#13;
The moral issue associated&#13;
with Acquired Immune Deficiency&#13;
Syndrome (AIDS) is a&#13;
frequently avoided topic, as it&#13;
provokes an analysis of deeprooted&#13;
beliefs.&#13;
Associate Pastor Ron Auch,&#13;
of First Assembly of God in&#13;
Kenosha, offered one explaination.&#13;
"People don't want to&#13;
deal with the moral issues&#13;
surrounding AIDS because&#13;
the subject of God inevitably&#13;
comes up," he said. "But&#13;
Scripture infers that could be&#13;
the cause."&#13;
Auch does not believe that&#13;
AIDS is a direct infliction&#13;
from God. Rather, he said&#13;
that AIDS came about "ultimately&#13;
because of sin, because&#13;
of man's not living according&#13;
to God's standards."&#13;
The book of Deuteronomy, he&#13;
said, "says that if you follow&#13;
God's laws, He will keep disease&#13;
from you. It is the best&#13;
alternative we have.&#13;
"Deuteronomy talks about&#13;
the law of God and how a&#13;
man should not be with a&#13;
man," he continued. Auch&#13;
quoted Deut. 28:60 (RSV),&#13;
which reads, "And he will&#13;
bring upon you again all the&#13;
diseases of Egypt, which you&#13;
were afraid of, and they shall&#13;
cleave to you." This verse&#13;
refers to the consequences of&#13;
disobeying God's laws.&#13;
"Living in Egypt symbolizes&#13;
living outside of God's&#13;
grace," Auch expalined. "In&#13;
the Old Testament, God says,&#13;
'1 will bring disease upon you&#13;
because of your error.'"&#13;
Tony Larson, minister of&#13;
the Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Church in Racine, does not&#13;
accept this view. "If (you follow&#13;
that argument), God has&#13;
the power to cause disease&#13;
and punish homosexuals, but&#13;
not the power to limit it to&#13;
that group," he said. "Disease&#13;
is not punishment; it is&#13;
just the way the natural&#13;
world works.&#13;
"The Bible acutally has few&#13;
passages that condemn homosexuality,"&#13;
he added. "The&#13;
most common story is that of&#13;
Sodom and Gomorrah, which&#13;
seems not to relate at all. It&#13;
AIDS see page 5&#13;
by Kimberlie Kranich&#13;
News Editor&#13;
First in a three-part series&#13;
Have unwelcome jokes&#13;
been made about your gender?&#13;
Has someone made you&#13;
feel uncomfortable or intimidated&#13;
by whistling at you or&#13;
pinching and patting you?&#13;
Have you been subtly or&#13;
explicitly pressured by a professor,&#13;
superior or peer for&#13;
sexual activity? The UW-System&#13;
defines these and other&#13;
incidents as sexual harassment.&#13;
Chancellor Sheila Kaplan&#13;
believes sexual harassment is&#13;
"an action that cannot be tolerated,"&#13;
and said she will&#13;
take steps to formulate a&#13;
small committee that "would&#13;
address solely issues or allegations&#13;
of sexual harassment"&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
The recommendation for&#13;
such a committee came from&#13;
many women faculty who&#13;
have repeatedly expressed&#13;
their concerns about sexual&#13;
harassment on campus. In&#13;
1981 Parkside formulated a&#13;
Sexual Harassment Advisory&#13;
Committeee made up of students,&#13;
faculty and staff after&#13;
a "Sexual Harassment Policy&#13;
Statement and Implementation"&#13;
brochure by the Board&#13;
of Regents of the UW-System&#13;
in the same year directed&#13;
that "each institution within&#13;
the System shall have or develop&#13;
a disciplinary process&#13;
Presidential and vice-presidential hopefuls discussed the issues at a Ranger&#13;
sponsored candidate debate on Monday in Main Place. Story, see page 5.&#13;
to address allegations of sexual&#13;
harassment."&#13;
The Board also directed&#13;
that "each institution within&#13;
the System shall establish&#13;
educational programs designed&#13;
to inform employees&#13;
and students of the nature of&#13;
Election time&#13;
perspectives RANGER 2&#13;
Thursday, March 5, 1987&#13;
our view&#13;
Ranger endorses&#13;
Pettit, Anderson&#13;
Recognizing a newspaper's commitment to leading public&#13;
opinion on important issues, we at the Ranger discussed&#13;
at length which candidates in the upcoming PSGA&#13;
executive elections deserved our endorsement.&#13;
After weighing all criteria, including experience, ideas&#13;
and attitude, we enthusiastically endorse the ticket of&#13;
Alex Pettit for president and Corby Anderson for vicepresident.&#13;
While all candidates, we feel, have the best interests of&#13;
the university and its students at heart, we are especially&#13;
impressed with the fresh approaches and ideas advanced&#13;
by Pettit and Anderson. Although neither has had extensive&#13;
PSGA experience, both have been involved in numerous&#13;
aspects of Parkside life, illustrating their commitment&#13;
to helping their fellow student.&#13;
Of all tiie candidates who have spoken on issues such as&#13;
tuition hikes, financial aid cuts and the rising cost of textbooks,&#13;
Pettit and Anderson are the only ones who've&#13;
made more than a passing attempt to explain not just&#13;
what they'd do about the problems, but how they'd go&#13;
about doing it as well.&#13;
Their plans for establishing a used-book co-op and devising&#13;
a more equitable deferred tuition program are but&#13;
two examples which exhibit their desire to substantively&#13;
deal with problems and concerns of Parkside's students.&#13;
Above all else, Pettit and Anderson possess the willingness&#13;
to learn needed of PSGA officials. That, coupled with&#13;
the policy ideas they've formulated, make them the candidates&#13;
most qualified to serve the needs and wants of the&#13;
students of this university.&#13;
Harassment issue&#13;
needs publicity, support&#13;
We support ChanceUor Kaplan in her desire to formulate&#13;
a small committee on campus to handle allegations of&#13;
sexual harassment. In fact, it is the Chancellor^ duty to&#13;
appoint such a committee.&#13;
In 1981, t he Board of Regents of the UW System passed&#13;
a resolution ordering the elimination of sexual harassment&#13;
of students and employees of the UW System. In October,&#13;
1981, the Parkside Faculty Senate approved the&#13;
same resolution.&#13;
To put it bluntly, Parkside has fallen short on its commitment&#13;
to eliminate sexual harassment. The Sexual Harassment&#13;
Advisory Committee which was formulated in&#13;
1981 to educate the campus community about sexual harassment&#13;
and to provide counsel and help for those who believe&#13;
they've been sexually harassed, has been inactive&#13;
for the past two or three years.&#13;
The blame cannot be placed on Kaplan alone. She has&#13;
promised to formulate a committee. When she took office&#13;
in July, the Committee had already been dead. Former&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin is largely responsible for not&#13;
providing impetus for the Committee during his last few&#13;
years in office. Guskin is gone and the rebuilding of such&#13;
a program cannot be started too soon.&#13;
Students, faculty and staff cannot be asked to wait any&#13;
longer. Sexual harassment does not stop because there&#13;
isn't a committee to handle charges; it increases.&#13;
^ THIS REPORT IS TOO IMPORTANT ^8&#13;
TO SUBJECT IT TO INSTANT ANALYSIS.&#13;
I INTEND TO STUDY IT THOROUGHLY&#13;
BEFORE ISSUING ANY STATEMENT.&#13;
Nobody asked me. but...&#13;
Involvement, voting are important&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
During my first three years&#13;
at Parkside, I was uninvolved&#13;
with a capital "U". Sure, I&#13;
went to class, did homework,&#13;
aced tests and said all the&#13;
right things to my professors,&#13;
but when I completed my&#13;
curricular activities, I'd completed&#13;
my school day.&#13;
I never had time for, or interest&#13;
in, extra-curricular activities-&#13;
be it joing a club, attending&#13;
a dance or voting in a&#13;
PSGA election like the one&#13;
that takes place Monday and&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
For the last two years, however,&#13;
I've become involved&#13;
outside the classroom as well&#13;
as inside it, and that experience&#13;
has altered my outlook&#13;
on the importance of extracurricular&#13;
involvement to the&#13;
success of a university and&#13;
the people attending it. In&#13;
working with other student&#13;
leaders as editor of this newspaper,&#13;
I've discovered just&#13;
how vital the work they do is&#13;
to ail students, even those&#13;
who are too busy, or too&#13;
stupid to care.&#13;
This year, I've worked&#13;
especially closely with the executives&#13;
of PSGA, and I've&#13;
come away with a respect for&#13;
the group and the people who&#13;
comprise it. An organization&#13;
which exists to represent student&#13;
concerns to the administrations&#13;
of the campus, the&#13;
city, the state and the nation,&#13;
it is the average student's primary&#13;
voice to reach the ears&#13;
of those who make decisions&#13;
on issues such as tuition increases,&#13;
financial aid cuts,&#13;
bookstore policy and the like.&#13;
For PSGA to truly represent&#13;
the student body and address&#13;
its interests, it is imperative&#13;
that the president and&#13;
vice-president be the most&#13;
qualified candidates seeking&#13;
the positions. But this can&#13;
only happen if students who&#13;
are traditionally uninvolved,&#13;
or unconcerned, take the initiative&#13;
to assure that the race&#13;
doesn't become a popularity&#13;
contest.&#13;
By taking two minutes out&#13;
of your day to vote on Monday&#13;
or Tuesday, you'll be accomplishing&#13;
two important&#13;
tasks: 1) you'll be showing interest&#13;
and concern about&#13;
what happens at Parkside&#13;
when classes are over; and 2)&#13;
you'll be making it more&#13;
likely that the best person for&#13;
the job does indeed get it.&#13;
ftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftfrftftft&#13;
ft&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Ranger says be sure to&#13;
VOTE&#13;
on March 9 and 10&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
ft&#13;
ftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftfrftfrfrfrft&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Gary L. Schneeberger Editor&#13;
Kimbertie Kranich News Editor&#13;
Kelly McKissick Asst. News Editor&#13;
Jenny Can Feature Editor&#13;
Juke L. Pendleton Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur Entertainment Editor&#13;
Tyson Wilda Asst. Entertainment Editor&#13;
Robb Luehr Sports Editor&#13;
Michael J. Rohl Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Amy H. Ritter Copy Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bornhuetter Photo Editor&#13;
Leo Bose Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manager&#13;
Don Harmeyer Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan ...Business Staff Assistant&#13;
Dave Roback Advertising Manager&#13;
Steven Picazo Distribution Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Bernie Doll. Michelle Eirich, Christina&#13;
Lojeski, Rick Luehr, Doug McEvoy. Michelle&#13;
Petersen, Ted Price, Andy Tschumper,&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside, who are solely responsible for its editorial policy&#13;
and content. It is published every Thursday during the academic year except over breaks and noli- d/taaiy/cs .&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted only if they are typed, double-spaced and 350 words or less All&#13;
letters must be signed, with a telephone number included for verification purposes. Names will be wi thheld&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or defamatory.&#13;
Deadline for a ll letters, and classified ads. is Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Ranger, UW-Parkside. Box 2000 Kenosha&#13;
Wl 53141. Telephone 414/553-2287 (Editorial) or 414/553-2295 (Adv ertising).&#13;
Membrr of the&#13;
aisooaieo&#13;
toneciare&#13;
«•«£» iS BP&#13;
3 RANGER&#13;
Thursday, March 5, 1987 perspectives&#13;
PSGA here to help students&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Was $693 e nough to pay for&#13;
tuition each semester this&#13;
year? Do you want to pay&#13;
$765 per semester next year?&#13;
Tuition during the 1983-84&#13;
school year was $519 per&#13;
semester. At $765 next year,&#13;
tuition will have gone up&#13;
47.4% in four years!&#13;
Are you ready to do something&#13;
about it? We are!&#13;
Isn't it nice to see your financial&#13;
aid reduced? Have&#13;
you looked at the new financial&#13;
aid forms? To be an independent&#13;
student next year&#13;
you have to be 24 years old,&#13;
or be married, or have kids,&#13;
or meet one of the few other&#13;
exemptions.&#13;
Federal support of financial&#13;
aid has declined drastically in&#13;
the last few years. The administration's&#13;
1988 budget&#13;
calls for a 45% cut in student&#13;
aid. This budget has been attacked&#13;
by Republicans and&#13;
Democrats alike in Congress.&#13;
However, we could still see&#13;
up to a 25% cut in student&#13;
aid.&#13;
Are you ready to do something&#13;
about it? We are!&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, through&#13;
formal resolutions, stands&#13;
adamantly opposed to tuition&#13;
increases and financial aid&#13;
cuts. We have worked&#13;
through the fall semester into&#13;
the spring, and will continue&#13;
to stand for these principles.&#13;
On the tuition issue we are&#13;
working with United Council&#13;
of UW Student Governments&#13;
and the other UW schools&#13;
across the state. On Feb. 10,&#13;
eight Parkside students attended&#13;
a United Council&#13;
Lobby Day in Madison. These&#13;
students met with all eight of&#13;
our local state legislators.&#13;
Most of the legislators in this&#13;
area are sympathetic to&#13;
issues on education. However,&#13;
they need pressure put on&#13;
them to vote against tuition&#13;
increases.&#13;
On the financial aid issue,&#13;
we are working with the&#13;
United States Student Association&#13;
and hundreds of other&#13;
schools across the country.&#13;
On March 16, six Parkside&#13;
students will be attending the&#13;
United States Student Association&#13;
Lobby Day in Washington&#13;
D.C. These students will&#13;
meet with federal legislators&#13;
from Wisconsin. We need to&#13;
put pressure on these legislators&#13;
to get them to vote&#13;
against financial aid cuts.&#13;
What is this pressure? The&#13;
pressure is the strength of&#13;
our numbers. In order to&#13;
show our strength we must&#13;
create a united front and&#13;
make our legislators listen to&#13;
us. Parkside students, other&#13;
students in the state, and&#13;
other students across the nation&#13;
have to work together&#13;
and show our numbers.&#13;
United, we can make legislators&#13;
listen to our needs.&#13;
They need our votes for reelection,&#13;
and we need them to&#13;
work for us in keeping education&#13;
available for everyone.&#13;
Let your legislators know how&#13;
you feel! Call them. Write to&#13;
them. Let them know you're&#13;
watching them. Let them&#13;
know you're a student who&#13;
thinks tuition is high enough.&#13;
Let them know you think&#13;
there should be more, not&#13;
less, financial aid.&#13;
We can help you write and&#13;
call. On the tuition issue you&#13;
can call the Wisconsin Legislative&#13;
Hotline and leave a&#13;
message for your state legislators.&#13;
This toll free number&#13;
is 1-800-362-9696. I f you don't&#13;
know your state legislators or&#13;
want to use our phone, stop&#13;
by the PSGA office. On the financial&#13;
aid issue we can help&#13;
you write letters and give you&#13;
the addresses of your federal&#13;
legislators.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association will be&#13;
holding a few events throughout&#13;
the semester to raise&#13;
awareness and get students&#13;
involved.&#13;
The tuition increases are&#13;
real and the financial aid decreases&#13;
are real. We must do&#13;
something about them now.&#13;
It's money out of your own&#13;
pocket.&#13;
Adrian Serrano&#13;
P.S.G.A. President&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie&#13;
story had errors&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The article entitled&#13;
"Chiwaukee zoning dispute&#13;
goes on" in the Feb. 12 issue&#13;
of Ranger contained a few&#13;
inaccuracies worth noting.&#13;
The article refers in several&#13;
instances to the "Kenosha&#13;
County Planning and Development&#13;
Committee," (also to&#13;
a "Zoning and Development&#13;
Committee.") There are actually&#13;
two entities of county&#13;
government involved in the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie planning&#13;
process. One is the Office of&#13;
Planning and Development&#13;
(formerly known as the "Office&#13;
of Planning and Zoning"),&#13;
and the other is the&#13;
Land Use Committee of the&#13;
County Board.&#13;
The staff in the Planning&#13;
and Development Office is&#13;
comprised of salaried professional&#13;
urban planners, who&#13;
are doing the actual work of&#13;
drawing maps and working&#13;
out the details of the land use&#13;
plan for the area. The Land&#13;
Use Committee is comprised&#13;
of five County Board Supervisors,&#13;
who hold hearings and&#13;
deliberate, and then recommend&#13;
policy changes to the&#13;
full County Board.&#13;
Thus, it was the County&#13;
Board's Land Use Committee&#13;
who held the Jan. 26 public&#13;
hearing, not the "Planning&#13;
and Development Committee."&#13;
The staff of the Office of&#13;
Planning and Development&#13;
were present and assisted the&#13;
Land Use Committee by responding&#13;
to technical questions.&#13;
Another error worth noting&#13;
is the name of the private&#13;
non-profit corporation dedicated&#13;
to raising funds to purchase&#13;
land for preservation in&#13;
the Chiwaukee Prairie-Carol&#13;
Beach area. It was referred&#13;
to as the "Chiwaukee Prairie&#13;
Preservation Front'' The&#13;
word "Front" implies a radical&#13;
political organization,&#13;
which the CPPF is not. The&#13;
CPPF is a non-political fundraising&#13;
organization. The tax&#13;
exempt status of the CPPF&#13;
could be jeopardized if it appears&#13;
to the Internal Revenue&#13;
Service that the CPPF is engaged&#13;
in political activity.&#13;
The CPPF would appreciate&#13;
your printing this clarification.&#13;
On the whole the article&#13;
was interesting and informative,&#13;
and it's good to see the&#13;
"Ranger" deal with this precedent-&#13;
setting community&#13;
issue.&#13;
David Hewitt&#13;
Nobody asked me. but...&#13;
Wisdom of the ages can be found with the aged&#13;
"I can't really know what it&#13;
feels like to be old, but I can&#13;
listen to what my&#13;
grandmother is saying. I&#13;
understand that her tears&#13;
weren 't only tears of worry&#13;
over her health."&#13;
By Kimberlie Kranich&#13;
Listen to the aging. I came&#13;
to understand what that&#13;
meant when my grandmother&#13;
told me she wouldn't be able&#13;
to attend the class, "Introduction&#13;
to Women's Studies,"&#13;
that she had been taking with&#13;
me and my mother any more.&#13;
My grandmother is 80 years&#13;
old.&#13;
People used to think it was&#13;
cute that all three of us were&#13;
taking a class together, and I&#13;
was proud that we were.&#13;
When I first started at Parkside&#13;
three years ago, we did&#13;
the same thing, although I&#13;
didn't appreciate the experience&#13;
of being in a class with&#13;
my mother and grandmother&#13;
then.&#13;
Just before the spring&#13;
semester began, grandmother&#13;
had a terrible pain in her&#13;
chest and had to be admitted&#13;
to the hospital. She went&#13;
home a few days later. By the&#13;
time school started, grandmother&#13;
felt better and attended&#13;
two clases, but then the&#13;
same pain occurred again.&#13;
She spent three days in the&#13;
hospital. Mom and I visited&#13;
her and talked about when&#13;
she'd get better so we could&#13;
all be in class again. She said&#13;
that she'd attend if she felt&#13;
well enough. I was sure that I&#13;
could convince her to go.&#13;
With my mother's and my&#13;
busy schedules, class was the&#13;
only guarantee that we could&#13;
all three be together on a&#13;
regular basis.&#13;
Recently, grandmother&#13;
called me and said she wasn't&#13;
going to class anymore. She&#13;
said she was just too tired&#13;
and was worried about her&#13;
health. As I listened, I knew&#13;
that there would be no changing&#13;
her mind this time. She&#13;
began to cry and said that&#13;
she reads "too damn slow"&#13;
for the rate of the class but&#13;
would continue to read at&#13;
home and wanted to discuss&#13;
the readings with me. She'd&#13;
hope mother and I would understand&#13;
and mentioned that&#13;
the class always made her&#13;
feel welcome.&#13;
I can't really know what it&#13;
feels like to be old, but I can&#13;
listen to what my grandmother&#13;
is saying. I understand&#13;
that her tears weren't only&#13;
tears of worry over her&#13;
health, but she was also&#13;
afraid that she had disappointed&#13;
me and my mother.&#13;
Grandmother had said the&#13;
main reson she took the class&#13;
was to be with us.&#13;
I also suspect that grandmother&#13;
feels a little uncomfortable&#13;
in class and doesn't&#13;
want to re-examine the life&#13;
she had with my grandfather,&#13;
to whom she had been married&#13;
for over forty years. Her&#13;
reluctance is understandable.&#13;
She was happy with my&#13;
grandfather except she had&#13;
wished that he would have&#13;
talked more. Often, what can&#13;
surface in the process of reinterpreting&#13;
a past situation is&#13;
a feeling of anger and a&#13;
blaming of oneself or others.&#13;
Few people like to have their&#13;
rose-colored glasses smashed.&#13;
Although grandmother is&#13;
not a chronic complainer, she&#13;
has always told her grandchildren&#13;
not to get old. She&#13;
always puts us first and listens&#13;
to what we have to say.&#13;
She says that we are her livelihood.&#13;
I know that the long&#13;
walk to the building in the&#13;
cold, the two and one-half&#13;
hours of sitting in a small&#13;
plastic desk and the vast&#13;
amount of reading are added&#13;
, pressures that she doesn't&#13;
need now. Even if I am correct&#13;
in my assumption that&#13;
grandmother is uncomfortable&#13;
with re-examining her&#13;
life and the lot of women yesterday&#13;
and today, my main&#13;
concern is to understand her&#13;
feelings.&#13;
I commend my grandmother&#13;
for her efforts and her willingness&#13;
to want to learn about&#13;
my world so much that she&#13;
took two classes at Parkside.&#13;
I've learned a valuable lesson&#13;
from her - it's time that we&#13;
as students and youth make&#13;
the effort to listen and learn&#13;
about the world of the aging.&#13;
4 Thursday, March 5, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Eaual employment opportunity and affirmative action&#13;
Chancellor sends memo reaffirming Parkside's commitment&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
Chancellor Sheila Kaplan&#13;
sent a letter to all faculty on&#13;
Feb. 11, stating "I am reaffirming&#13;
my personal committment&#13;
and the university's&#13;
commitment to the priciple of&#13;
equal employment opportunity&#13;
and affirmative action at&#13;
UW-Parkside."&#13;
Presently, the Affirmative&#13;
Actin plan states that "the&#13;
University is committed to&#13;
providing an educational and&#13;
work enviromment free from&#13;
discrimination and harassment&#13;
on the basis of race,&#13;
sex, age, national origin and&#13;
handicap." One reason Kaplan&#13;
gives for sending her letter&#13;
so far into the semester is&#13;
that presently there is not an&#13;
Assistant to the Chancellor&#13;
for Affirmative Action (AA).&#13;
Interviews were conducted&#13;
last week and this week for&#13;
the three candidates for this&#13;
position: Linda Andrey, Ruby&#13;
Smith an F. Marvin Hannah.&#13;
"There are several things&#13;
we need to do," Kaplan explained.&#13;
"I have delayed taking&#13;
some of these steps because&#13;
we're recruiting for the&#13;
assistant to the chancellor for&#13;
AA. We need someone here to&#13;
carry out policies before we&#13;
start doing things. First priority&#13;
was filling that position.&#13;
I'm optimistic that by the beginning&#13;
of March, we will&#13;
have a permanent appointee.&#13;
Once that's been completed,&#13;
we will be reviving (AA)."&#13;
She continued, "I will be&#13;
appointing a university-wide&#13;
AA committee that will have&#13;
on it students, faculty and&#13;
staff. Their job primarily will&#13;
be to review the university's&#13;
compliance with our AA plan&#13;
to make sure we do the things&#13;
we have said we will do in&#13;
areas of AA and equal opportunity&#13;
and to review and update&#13;
our plan to monitor our&#13;
success rates."&#13;
One of Kaplan's reasons for&#13;
sending the letter is "I think&#13;
clearly we have a problem at&#13;
Parkside in terms of recruiting&#13;
and maintaining minorities&#13;
at all levels-in faculty,&#13;
staff and civil service positions.&#13;
We make enormous efforts&#13;
to recruit minorities.&#13;
The number of minority&#13;
Ph.D. candidates in various&#13;
disciplines is not very great&#13;
nationally and so the pool&#13;
from which you're recruiting&#13;
is a limited pool. We are&#13;
making every contact we can&#13;
possibly make with minority&#13;
groups and organizations to&#13;
attempt to increase the number&#13;
of minorities in the pool.&#13;
"On the area of employment,&#13;
recruitment and retention&#13;
of women, I think we do&#13;
better," Kaplan continued.&#13;
"One of the reasons is, unlike&#13;
the minority situation in most&#13;
professional positions, the&#13;
pool of available women is&#13;
growing. The percentage of&#13;
women in any given discipline&#13;
area has increased over&#13;
the last couple of years so&#13;
that when you recruit for a&#13;
On Board Employees and Goals-University Summary&#13;
Classified and Unclassified Employees&#13;
November 1,1984 - October 31,1986&#13;
UNIVERSITY TOTALS&#13;
Females&#13;
Racial—Ethnic Minorities&#13;
Persons with Disabilities&#13;
10-31-84&#13;
ON-BOARD EMPLOYEES&#13;
10-31-86&#13;
AA GOALS&#13;
252&#13;
52&#13;
12&#13;
%&#13;
43.0&#13;
8.9&#13;
2.0&#13;
#&#13;
260&#13;
61&#13;
17&#13;
44.8&#13;
10.5&#13;
2.9&#13;
position (teaching or adminstrative)&#13;
chances are much&#13;
better now than they were&#13;
five years ago that there will&#13;
be women who have the appropriate&#13;
credentials who can&#13;
apply for it."&#13;
Statistics taken from an On-&#13;
Board Employees and Goals-&#13;
University Summary dated&#13;
from Nov. 1, 1984 to Oct. 31,&#13;
1986, seem to prove that AA's&#13;
goals are close to being&#13;
reached (see chart).&#13;
Comments on Kaplan's letter&#13;
are mixed. Chong-Maw&#13;
Chen, professor of Bio&#13;
science, said, "I strongly support&#13;
AA. At Parkside I don't&#13;
feel that I'm discriminated&#13;
(against). It's not an issue at&#13;
Parkside at all."&#13;
Willie Curtis, assistant professor&#13;
of political science,&#13;
stated, "Proclamations and&#13;
statements are great. It's&#13;
'How do you go about implementing&#13;
that?' and it's a difficult&#13;
job because it's controversial.&#13;
A lot of people have&#13;
objections to AA and equal&#13;
employment opportunities&#13;
based upon their perception&#13;
as it advocates a quota system.&#13;
I withhold judgment on&#13;
things like this (Kaplan's letter)&#13;
until I see exactly what&#13;
the university does.&#13;
"The record, from my perspective,&#13;
Curtis added,&#13;
"hasn't been very good.&#13;
'.There may be extenuating&#13;
circumstances, but all you&#13;
have to do is survey the faculty&#13;
and the students, and obviously&#13;
there is a problem.&#13;
The only thing we can do at&#13;
this stage of the game is see&#13;
how it works out. I do believe&#13;
the vice chancellor was serious&#13;
about her statement that&#13;
she made to the newspaper&#13;
when she came on trying to&#13;
increase the number of&#13;
women and minorities. I&#13;
think she was serious about&#13;
that. I think that creates a&#13;
type of environment."&#13;
Curtis also said that&#13;
success will depend on the&#13;
role of the AA officer. "Is it a&#13;
part-time or a full-time postion?&#13;
If it's a full-time position,&#13;
then it seems to me that&#13;
at least there's a commitment&#13;
to expend resources in&#13;
that area. If it's a part-time&#13;
position, it seems to me that&#13;
in so many cases I've known,&#13;
it's a facade. You bring a person&#13;
in one or two days a&#13;
week, and then you overload&#13;
them with other activities so&#13;
they can't devote their time&#13;
to this. Obviously, it's going&#13;
to have negative effects."&#13;
Curtis is wary to accept Kaplan's&#13;
statement because&#13;
"I've seen this written before&#13;
and no action was taken at&#13;
all. That's basically where&#13;
we're at.&#13;
"I would automatically&#13;
take it that she (Kaplan)&#13;
would be (committed to AA)&#13;
anyways," he went on, "but it&#13;
has to be proven to me. It's&#13;
the policy results that are important&#13;
to me. I think this is a&#13;
good first step, for her to&#13;
make her position known.&#13;
That should set the tone. But&#13;
she has to prove it. I'm basically&#13;
concerned about increasing&#13;
the number of&#13;
minorites on the faculty. I&#13;
think that's something that&#13;
has to be done."&#13;
Carole Vopat, an English&#13;
professor said, "I believe that&#13;
the Chancellor is sincere. I'm&#13;
glad to see it (Kaplan's letter)."&#13;
Vopat was the Chairman&#13;
for AA from 1974-82. She&#13;
concluded, "I think with this&#13;
Chancellor, it's a real priority."&#13;
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RANGER Thursday, March 5, 1987 5&#13;
Maior issues focus on and off campus&#13;
Tuition hikes, aid cuts, textbooks hot topics&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
The role of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) both on-campus&#13;
and in dealing with state and&#13;
federal student groups was&#13;
the focus of the president and&#13;
vice-president candidate debate&#13;
held Monday in Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
The debate, sponsored by&#13;
the Ranger, featured the five&#13;
presidential and three vicepresidential&#13;
hopefuls discussing&#13;
their views and answering&#13;
questions both from students&#13;
and the PSGA Election Committee.&#13;
Two campus-oriented issues&#13;
addressed by nearly all the&#13;
candidates were SOC's bid for&#13;
major status and therein&#13;
statement of a book exchange&#13;
to offset the soaring cost of&#13;
textbooks.&#13;
Rich Borkowski, who's&#13;
seeking the presidency,&#13;
echoed the sentiments of&#13;
other speakers when he said,&#13;
"It is my firm belief that this&#13;
(SOC attaining major status)&#13;
is the best way to begin an&#13;
upswing in the student solidarity&#13;
that we desperately&#13;
need."&#13;
Another presidential hopeful,&#13;
Jim La well, agreed, saying&#13;
that SOC "has worked&#13;
long and hard for this, and&#13;
they deserve it."&#13;
With regard to recreating a&#13;
book exchange, a service discontinued&#13;
some years ago by&#13;
PSGA, presidential candidate&#13;
Alex Pettit beleived such an&#13;
operation should work "as a 7&#13;
Mile Fair type of thing, an&#13;
open, free market where students&#13;
could barter about how&#13;
much a book was worth."&#13;
Corby Anderson, a vicepresidential&#13;
candidate, concurred&#13;
with his running mate&#13;
and other panelists, characterizing&#13;
the current book program&#13;
as too expensive and&#13;
detrimental to students.&#13;
On other campus issues.&#13;
vice-presidential candidate&#13;
Fred Monarch believes that&#13;
PSGA should "continue working&#13;
on grass roots organizing,&#13;
continue to lobby local legislators"&#13;
through its Legislative&#13;
Affairs Committee.&#13;
On issues affecting college&#13;
students in general, financial&#13;
aid cuts and rising tuition&#13;
costs concerned all candidates,&#13;
although only two —&#13;
Pettit and Anderson — offered&#13;
plans to ease the bur-&#13;
Debate see page 8&#13;
PSGA endorses water AIDS&#13;
and ice petition&#13;
by Christina Lojeski&#13;
The petition protesting&#13;
Food Service's discontinuation&#13;
of the sale of water and&#13;
ice has been endorsed by the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA).&#13;
The PSGA has also set up&#13;
the "Parkside Student Watering&#13;
Hole and Spoon Dispensary."&#13;
The "Watering Hole," located&#13;
in the PSGA office,&#13;
(WLLC-D139A), provides students&#13;
with free water, ice and&#13;
plastic utensils. Students may&#13;
make a donation.&#13;
The service was started by&#13;
Sue Brudvig, PSGA vice&#13;
president, with twenty dollars&#13;
from the private account of&#13;
the PSGA, and if donations&#13;
exceed the initial cost, these&#13;
profits will be donated to the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center&#13;
Scholarship Fund.&#13;
The petition bears nearly&#13;
300 signatures, and its authors&#13;
have said they could&#13;
possibly take further action&#13;
such as a total boycott of&#13;
Food Service establishments&#13;
on campus, or picketing the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe.&#13;
"With so many people behind&#13;
this petitin, I thought the&#13;
Student Government should&#13;
be involved,'' explained Brudvig.&#13;
"One of the rules of organizing&#13;
is for students to see&#13;
real improvements in their&#13;
lives, and this is one way of&#13;
doing it. By doing this, we&#13;
can expose problems in the&#13;
Food Service and Bookstore&#13;
contract, which is that students&#13;
don't have any input in&#13;
the formulation of those contracts."&#13;
Brudvig continued.&#13;
"And also, the last resolve&#13;
clause in the bill on the&#13;
watering hole is to use this as&#13;
an opportunity to inform students&#13;
about tuition and financial&#13;
aid, which are very important&#13;
issues. We're going to&#13;
try to take this energy and direct&#13;
it to something else,"&#13;
Brudvig stated.&#13;
Although Adrian Serrano,&#13;
PSGA president, has stated&#13;
that he will stand behind the&#13;
"Watering Hole" and the Senate's&#13;
endorsement of the petiton,&#13;
not all Senators agree.&#13;
"I think that the Food Service-&#13;
water issue is so trivial,&#13;
so small, that I couldn't justify&#13;
it with any words-but it&#13;
has been blown out of proportion,"&#13;
Senator Brian Hogan&#13;
explained, "Anything that&#13;
students are concerned about&#13;
should not be considered trivial,"&#13;
Brudvig replied.&#13;
Hie "Watering Hole and&#13;
Spoon Dispensary" will remain&#13;
in business unil the end&#13;
of the semester.&#13;
AIDS from page 1&#13;
never even says they wanted&#13;
to know them sexually." Larson&#13;
told the story of God's destruction&#13;
of a town whose&#13;
members wanted to have sexual&#13;
relations with several&#13;
angels who were staying in&#13;
the house of a man named&#13;
Lot. He said the fact that the&#13;
men wanted to "know" the&#13;
angels could mean to know&#13;
them sexually, or just to&#13;
know them. "It is not likely&#13;
that the whole town was&#13;
gay," Larson said. "Even so,&#13;
this would be homosexual&#13;
rape. To say that God's condemnation&#13;
of homosexual&#13;
rape is a condemnation of&#13;
homosexuality is to say that&#13;
God's condemnation of heterosexual&#13;
rape is a condemnation&#13;
of hetersexuality."&#13;
Auch cited a New Testament&#13;
reference to God's forbiddance&#13;
of homosexuality,&#13;
Romans 1:26-27 (RSV): "For&#13;
this reason (turning away&#13;
from God's laws) God gave&#13;
them up to dishonorable passions.&#13;
Their women exchanged&#13;
natural relations for&#13;
unnatural and the men like-&#13;
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wise gave up natural relations&#13;
with women and were&#13;
consumed with passion for&#13;
one another, men committing&#13;
shameless acts with men and&#13;
receiving in their own person&#13;
the due penalty for their&#13;
error."&#13;
"When we violate natural&#13;
laws," Auch said, "we suffer&#13;
the consequences. Just as if&#13;
you violate the speed limit on&#13;
an icy road, and your car&#13;
slides off the road and&#13;
crashes, and you ask, 'Why&#13;
didn't Got protect me?' If I&#13;
violate a natural law, I don't&#13;
think God hates me; I accept&#13;
the consequences of the violation.&#13;
There are laws and divine&#13;
orders presented in the&#13;
Bible. If a person violates&#13;
these laws, that person must&#13;
suffer the consequences. God&#13;
is not judging the person-He&#13;
THE FAR SIRE&#13;
is judging the sin in their life.&#13;
Auch acknowledged that&#13;
lesbians are rarely victims of&#13;
AIDS, because their activities&#13;
do not involve penetration.&#13;
"Lesbians don't get AIDS,"&#13;
said Larson. "If God is using&#13;
disease to punish, then les&#13;
bians must be God's choser&#13;
people."&#13;
Auch disagreed, "Throughout&#13;
the Bible, God has chosen&#13;
men to be leaders," he said,&#13;
"and judgement falls on men&#13;
first. The women's rights&#13;
movement has come about&#13;
becasue men have failed to&#13;
be men, and failed to be spiritual&#13;
leaders.&#13;
"God is not out against&#13;
man," Auch emphasized. "He&#13;
is out against sin. God does&#13;
not hate man-He hates the&#13;
sin in his life."&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
Deer grandmothers&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Admin Council&#13;
Students appointed to committee&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
Disagreement led to compromise,&#13;
which resulted in a&#13;
policy where student representatives&#13;
will be invited to&#13;
attend the chancellor's "cabinet"&#13;
meetings when student&#13;
issues are being discussed.&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA)&#13;
President Adrian Serrano&#13;
suggested to Chancellor&#13;
Sheila Kaplan that students&#13;
be represented in the Administrative&#13;
Council, a group of&#13;
six advisors to the chancellor.&#13;
The group now is comprised&#13;
of the vice chancellor, two assistant&#13;
chancellors, an ad hoc&#13;
representative to be replaced&#13;
when a third chancellor is&#13;
hired, the chairperson for the&#13;
university committee, and the&#13;
chairperson for the academic&#13;
staff.&#13;
On Feb. 19, Serrano received&#13;
a memo from Kaplan&#13;
which read: "Your suggestion&#13;
that a representative of&#13;
PSGA and/or SUFAC be invited&#13;
to attend the meeting s&#13;
of the Administrative Council&#13;
when that group is discussing&#13;
relevant issues is an excellent&#13;
one. I have asked Assistant&#13;
Chancellor Gary Grace to invite&#13;
a representative from&#13;
PSGA and/or SUFAC to these&#13;
meetings when appropriate.&#13;
The attendance of student&#13;
representative at these meetings&#13;
will assist with the exchange&#13;
of ideas and information.&#13;
I appreciate your suggestion&#13;
and look forward to&#13;
its implementation."&#13;
The Administrative Council&#13;
"is the chancellor's cabinet,"&#13;
Kaplan said during an interview&#13;
last week. "It is not a&#13;
policy committee. It's a&#13;
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group that serves an adminstrative&#13;
function in oversight&#13;
of the budget, and other details&#13;
of that kind. It's an advisory&#13;
group that advises me&#13;
on issues that require my decision.&#13;
And, finally, it's a&#13;
very efficient way to share information."&#13;
"It's not a policy-making&#13;
body," Serrano agreed, "but&#13;
a lot of what it advises the&#13;
chancellor on becomes policy.&#13;
We believed that true shared&#13;
goverance, and student involvement&#13;
in shared governance,&#13;
means we had to be&#13;
involved at this level. Since&#13;
all the other groups are represented&#13;
on Admin. Council&#13;
(administration, faculty,&#13;
staff), we felt it was our right&#13;
to be admitted."&#13;
"Nobody sits on that council&#13;
by a right," Kaplan said.&#13;
"It is my personal group of&#13;
advisors. That is one group I&#13;
can change at will.&#13;
"Nevertheless," she continued,&#13;
"when we are discussing&#13;
issues that are of major concern&#13;
to PSGA or SUFAC, or&#13;
the students in general, we&#13;
have agreed that we will invite&#13;
the student government&#13;
president and/or the SUFAC&#13;
president to sit with us while&#13;
(those issues) are being discussed.&#13;
I believe that will&#13;
give another dimension to the&#13;
group."&#13;
Serrano understands the&#13;
hestitancy of the council's acceptance&#13;
of student members.&#13;
"At times," he said, Admin.&#13;
Council discusses personnel,&#13;
and those are closed session&#13;
meetings. A lot of (the members)&#13;
just felt it would be bet-&#13;
Council see page 9&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
UW System asks labor to help&#13;
UW-System President Kenneth Shaw spoke to representatives&#13;
of Wisconsin labor unions and university faculty&#13;
recently, reminding them that "as the university has&#13;
helped labor deal with changes over the years, the university&#13;
is now asking labor to assist it with preparing for and&#13;
adapting to change," reported the Madison Daily Cardiflfljl&#13;
Shaw said the UW System is about to undergo some big&#13;
changes, referring to the Board of Regents' proposed&#13;
budget. Included in the report are two recommendations&#13;
of concern to organized labor -economic developement&#13;
and Extension coordination.&#13;
"The university's commitment to Wisconsin will not&#13;
occur at the expense of labor," Shaw explained.&#13;
Admission standards tighten&#13;
About half of all students entering the University of&#13;
Wisconsin campuses graduate with bachelor's degrees,&#13;
and UW administrators are proposing tightened admission&#13;
standards as a way to get more students through college,&#13;
reported the Wisconsin State Journal.&#13;
The graduation rate of 50.3 percent during a seven-year&#13;
period by UW students is short of the national average of&#13;
53 percent graduating after five years of college, UW administrators&#13;
said.&#13;
Rates range from 67 percent at Madison to 28 percent of&#13;
entering students at Parkside.&#13;
Student busted for ID fraud&#13;
A student accused of selling blank birth certificates to&#13;
classmates to help obtain false identification cards has&#13;
been placed on two years probation at UW-Madison, according&#13;
to the Wisconsin State Journal.&#13;
Dean of Students Paul Ginsberg said recently the student&#13;
will also be required to perform 75 hours of volunteer&#13;
work and any further violation of UW rules will result in&#13;
the student's suspension.&#13;
Forty-two other students who allegedly applied for&#13;
fraudulent ID cards will receive letters of reprimand, and&#13;
future rules infractions will lead to probation, he said.&#13;
Parkside Celebrates Women's&#13;
History Week&#13;
A number of events, free&#13;
and open to the public, are&#13;
scheduled for Women's History&#13;
Week observance at Parkside&#13;
from Tuesday, March 3&#13;
through Thursday, March 12.&#13;
GRADUATE NURSES&#13;
Your education will not end with graduation. As a graduate&#13;
nurse at Rochester Methodist Hospital, you will receive a&#13;
comprehensive twelve-week-long, fully-paid orientation&#13;
where you will further develop your professional skills.&#13;
Beyond orientation, you will have the challenges and the&#13;
growth opportunities that a world-class medical center can&#13;
provide.&#13;
Graduates apply now for positions available in 1987. Starting&#13;
salary $23,681. Attractive benefit package.&#13;
Rochester Methodist Hospital is an 800-bed acute care Mayo&#13;
Foundation Hospital. Choose challenge. Choose growth.&#13;
Choose Rochester Methodist Hospital.&#13;
Rochester Methodist Hospital&#13;
Personnel Services&#13;
Nursing Recruitment Section&#13;
201 West Center Street&#13;
Rochester, MN 55902&#13;
Call Collect: (507) 286-7091&#13;
* ROCHESTER METHODIST&#13;
p HOSPITAL&#13;
A MAYO FOUNDATION HOSPITAL&#13;
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F&#13;
Events, times, and dates&#13;
are:&#13;
• UW-Parkside history lecturer&#13;
Angela Howard Zophy&#13;
will present a talk titled&#13;
"Sarah Joseph Hale-Matron&#13;
of Victorian Womenhood" at&#13;
1 p.m. on Monday, March 9 in&#13;
Molinaro Hall Room D-113.&#13;
• ' 'Metropolian Avenue,''&#13;
an inspiring film about the&#13;
changing roles of women, will&#13;
be shown from 12:30 to ^1:30&#13;
p.m. in Union Room 104 on&#13;
Tuesday, March 10. Also&#13;
Tuesday, at 7 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema theater, the&#13;
award-winning Australian&#13;
feature film "By Brilliant&#13;
Career" will be shown followed&#13;
by a discussion, led by&#13;
UW-Parkside humanitites lecturer&#13;
Frances Kavenik, of the&#13;
film's feminist themes.&#13;
• Northern Light, a wellknown&#13;
Wisconsin folk group,&#13;
will present a concert from&#13;
noon to 2 p.m. in Main Place&#13;
of the Wyllie Library-Learning&#13;
Center on Wednesday,&#13;
March 11. The concert covers&#13;
the history of women through&#13;
music and was developed&#13;
especially for Women's History&#13;
Week.&#13;
• The film, "The Emerging&#13;
Woman," will be shown from&#13;
12:30 to 1:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Room 104 on Thursday,&#13;
March 12.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 5, 1987 7&#13;
Problem persists, new committee in the making&#13;
Sex from pag e 1&#13;
with complaints. "Over the&#13;
last year," she said, "I've&#13;
had six women come to me&#13;
with complaints that I consider&#13;
to be legitimate sexual&#13;
harassment circumstances ...&#13;
a couple of these women left&#13;
Parkside." Although Peck-&#13;
McGovern said that she is&#13;
willing to continue to listen to&#13;
people with sexual harassment&#13;
complaints, she needs&#13;
other support.&#13;
According to the Chancellor,&#13;
her immediate concern is&#13;
to fill the vacant position of&#13;
Assistant to the Chancellor&#13;
for Affirmative Action. "I&#13;
hope in the next couple of&#13;
months, once the staff situation.&#13;
is settled down, then we&#13;
can move ahead on these two&#13;
fronts (affirmative action and&#13;
sexual harassment)," said&#13;
Kaplan.&#13;
The January UW-System&#13;
Administration report, "University&#13;
Women," from the Office&#13;
of Women, urged universities&#13;
to review their sexual&#13;
harassment policies. According&#13;
to the report, "the American&#13;
Council on Education&#13;
(ACE) cited a Harvard University&#13;
study that found 32&#13;
percent of tenured female&#13;
professors, 49 percent of&#13;
women without tenure, 41&#13;
percent of female graduate&#13;
students and 34 percent of undergraduate&#13;
women had encountered&#13;
some form of sexual&#13;
harassment at least once&#13;
at the university."&#13;
University men have also&#13;
alleged sexual harassment,&#13;
although on a smaller scale.&#13;
Dr. Joan Pedro of the Office&#13;
of Women and Equal Opportunity&#13;
Programs in Madison&#13;
cited a sexual harassment&#13;
study of men and women published&#13;
in September 1985 by&#13;
the University of Pennsylvania&#13;
out of the office of the&#13;
Vice-Provost for Research,&#13;
which found "the percentage&#13;
of male respondents (783) reporting&#13;
types of harassment&#13;
going back in time no more&#13;
than five years, are 14.7 of&#13;
undergraduates, 7.5 of graduates&#13;
and 3.5 of standing and&#13;
associate faculty, compared&#13;
to 75.7, 45.5 and 48.7, respectively,&#13;
of t he percentage of female&#13;
respondents (1,446) reporting."&#13;
In the one and one-half&#13;
years that Linda Andrey has&#13;
held the position of Acting Affirmative&#13;
Action Officer,&#13;
there have been no sexual&#13;
harassment complaints, either&#13;
formal or informal, reported&#13;
to her office, she said.&#13;
However, many are concerned&#13;
that sexual harassment&#13;
is a problem at Park-&#13;
Help available&#13;
for sexual&#13;
harrassment&#13;
Desi •&amp;. of&#13;
fbeen harassed, there are&#13;
• •- « - vifm&#13;
you. You may contact the following&#13;
professors and * st«dt&#13;
•&#13;
'&#13;
: -&#13;
Tumor Jl§|i father Wi&#13;
. • " • ; : •' • • :&#13;
' &lt; - • : '" ' T V ' - VTaiient&#13;
H&amp;ll1,&#13;
•€m- rns'A m®.&#13;
f §82-1&amp;4-8}.&#13;
side. Faculty, staff and students&#13;
support Kaplan's efforts&#13;
to revive the Sexual&#13;
Harassment Advisory Committee&#13;
or create a new one.&#13;
"When the new chancellor&#13;
was appointed," said Peck-&#13;
McGovern, "I wrote to her&#13;
and requested that she reconstitute&#13;
it (Sexual Harassment&#13;
Advisory Committee) with a&#13;
new chair and keep it going&#13;
and give it the charge to clarify&#13;
the method of reporting&#13;
and handling of sexual harassment&#13;
complaints."&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffioti, active&#13;
member of the Committee on&#13;
the Campus Environment and&#13;
associate professor of English,&#13;
said that she is "concerned&#13;
about procedures and&#13;
that we keep a process going&#13;
so that individuals who do report&#13;
cases have some access&#13;
more than just reporting to&#13;
someone they feel close to.&#13;
"We could be doing things&#13;
Hoy nature club to meet&#13;
The RACINE-KENOSHA&#13;
HOY NATURE CLUB will&#13;
meet on Thursday, March 5&#13;
at the Gas Company, 233&#13;
Lake Avenue at 7:00 pm. A&#13;
film, "The Last Stronghold of&#13;
Eagles," will be shown. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
and the public is invited. Also&#13;
coming up on March 19, Hoy&#13;
Nature Club is co-sponsoring&#13;
a program at the Golden Rondelle.&#13;
Ryan Walden will talk&#13;
on "Birds of Prey" and feature&#13;
some live birds. Watch&#13;
for more details.&#13;
like workshops and educating&#13;
as well," continued Saffioti,&#13;
"but we first of all need to&#13;
have that committee going&#13;
again."&#13;
Just before Kaplan left&#13;
Minnesota to fulfill her duties&#13;
as chancellor at Parkside,&#13;
she drafted a statement of&#13;
policy on sexual harassment&#13;
and said that she "would&#13;
share that statement here&#13;
and hope that we can come&#13;
up with something that would&#13;
be workable at Parkside.&#13;
"I think we have to make a&#13;
distinction between an informal&#13;
complaint, which can&#13;
and should be handled quietly,"&#13;
continued Kaplan, "and&#13;
a formal complaint. Once a&#13;
complaint is formalized, it&#13;
usually means being put in&#13;
writing. We do have policies&#13;
and procedures to use if such&#13;
a complaint (formal) were&#13;
brought up. We will pursue&#13;
allegations of harassment to&#13;
discern the proof and we will&#13;
take all appropriate steps&#13;
against all individuals who&#13;
were found to be harassers."&#13;
Susan Walborn, political&#13;
science major and formerly a&#13;
student representative on the&#13;
Sexual Harassment Advisory&#13;
Committee, said that she is&#13;
"real supportive" of revising&#13;
the committee, but hopes that&#13;
it will handle formal complaints&#13;
better than when she&#13;
was on it.&#13;
"In the issues we felt very&#13;
valid in, there were several&#13;
women involved, several testimonies,&#13;
but they did not&#13;
want to come before a board&#13;
of people," explained Walborn.&#13;
"I think the committee&#13;
should have the Chancellor on&#13;
it," continued Walborn.&#13;
"These people are in a crisis&#13;
situation. They're not going to&#13;
go through the committees,&#13;
the people, the filters. The&#13;
more filters there are, the&#13;
more embarrassed these people&#13;
are."&#13;
In 1981 the committee printed&#13;
a brochure entitled "Flirting&#13;
and Sexual Harassment:&#13;
What's the Difference?"&#13;
According to the brochure,&#13;
"Flirting is a shared activity&#13;
between two persons when&#13;
both persons approve of the&#13;
activity. Flirting ends and&#13;
sexual harassment begins&#13;
when one person disapproves&#13;
of the activity and the other&#13;
person persists.''&#13;
The brochure lists numerous&#13;
examples of sexual harassment&#13;
situations and states&#13;
that "Individuals are victims&#13;
of sexual harassment if unwelcome&#13;
sexual advances or&#13;
comments interfere with any&#13;
part of their life, be it study,&#13;
work or leisure time, and if&#13;
saying 'no' or 'yes' to sex&#13;
might influence a grade or an&#13;
evaluation, affect their status&#13;
... in some other way, or&#13;
cause them to lose their job&#13;
or leave school."&#13;
Sexual harassment can occure&#13;
between the same or&#13;
other sex, and often "contains&#13;
elements of coercion - as&#13;
when compliance with requests&#13;
for sexual favors becomes&#13;
a criterion for granting&#13;
work, study or grading&#13;
benefits," read the UW-System&#13;
Sexual Harassment Policy&#13;
Statement and Implementation.&#13;
"However," continued the&#13;
statement, "sexual harassment&#13;
may involve relationships&#13;
among equals, as when&#13;
repeated sexual advances or&#13;
demeaning verbal behavior&#13;
have a harmful effect on a&#13;
person's ability to study or&#13;
work in the academic setting."&#13;
One example of sexual harassment&#13;
listed in the Parkside&#13;
brochure is that of a female&#13;
probationary employee&#13;
on the maintenance staff who&#13;
loses sleep and is thinking&#13;
about quitting her job, though&#13;
she likes her work, because&#13;
one of her co-workers often&#13;
posts pornographic pictures&#13;
on her locker.&#13;
In another example, a male&#13;
student doesn't like the atten-&#13;
We Call It&#13;
Special Checking&#13;
• Free Printed Checks&#13;
• Unlimited Checkwriting&#13;
• Safekeeping of Checks&#13;
• No Minimum Balance&#13;
• Nominal Flat Monthly Fee&#13;
• 24 Hour Access with TYME&#13;
A&#13;
0 Bank of Elmwood&#13;
Motor Bank&#13;
Durand at Kentucky&#13;
@U&lt;/ Service&#13;
554-5321&#13;
• Main Office&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine, WI 53405&#13;
• Green Acre Office&#13;
Hwys. 31 &amp; 38&#13;
FOtC&#13;
tion he's been getting from an&#13;
instructor in his survey&#13;
course. He receives a low&#13;
grade on an exam and is&#13;
asked to schedule an appointment&#13;
with the instructor to&#13;
discuss the test. The appointment&#13;
results in the instructor&#13;
asking the student out to din-&#13;
•ner to get to know him better&#13;
and says that this would help&#13;
the student's grade.&#13;
When the committee is&#13;
reinstated, Kaplan said that it&#13;
will "protect the rights of&#13;
. both the individual who&#13;
makes the complaint and also&#13;
the individual against whom&#13;
the complaint is made."&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Platteville&#13;
Emphases in&#13;
Libera] Arts&#13;
Internationa] Business&#13;
Courses available in Spanish&#13;
and in English&#13;
Fluency in Spanish not required&#13;
Ail courses approved by UW-Platteville&#13;
and validated on an official&#13;
UW-Plattevilie transcript&#13;
$2725 per semester for Wisconsin 6&#13;
Minnesota residents&#13;
$2973 per eemester for non-resident*&#13;
Costs include&#13;
Tuition and Fees&#13;
Room and Board with Spanish families&#13;
Fiddtrips&#13;
All financial aids apply&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Study Abroad Programs&#13;
308 Warner Hall&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Plattevilk&#13;
i University Plata&#13;
Platteville, WI 33811-3099&#13;
(608) 342-1724&#13;
8 Thursday, March 5,1987 RANGER&#13;
Counseling offered by&#13;
Health Services&#13;
Student Health Services offers&#13;
contraceptive counseling.&#13;
To receive this service, stop&#13;
by or call Student Health&#13;
(MOLN D115, 553-2366) and&#13;
set up an appointment to see&#13;
the nurse. She will review the&#13;
major contraceptive methods&#13;
with you and help you to&#13;
choose the one that's best for&#13;
your lifestyle. Next she will&#13;
set up an appointment for you&#13;
to be seen by a physician at&#13;
Southeastern Family Practice&#13;
Center in Tallent Hall. After&#13;
you see the physician, you return&#13;
to Student Health and&#13;
the nurse will fill your prescription.&#13;
The nurse will also&#13;
monitor your tolerance to&#13;
oral contraceptives every few&#13;
months.&#13;
Student Health Services&#13;
charges $1.00 per cycle for&#13;
oral contraceptives. They&#13;
also sell condoms to any student,&#13;
4 for $1.00. Contraceptive&#13;
foam is available at $1.50&#13;
per can and diaphragms are&#13;
$4.00 each.&#13;
Please feel free to utilize&#13;
this valuable service.&#13;
MUMPS VACCINE&#13;
With the recent outbreak of&#13;
mumps in the Milwaukee&#13;
area, specifically at Marquette,&#13;
Student Health Services&#13;
will now be offering&#13;
Mumps Immunizations.&#13;
Check your immunization record&#13;
and if you find that you&#13;
need the Mumps Vaccine,&#13;
stop in Student Health Services&#13;
during office hours.&#13;
Dorm students be especially&#13;
aware I&#13;
OFFICE HOURS: 8:00-4:30&#13;
Monday-Thursday-Friday,&#13;
8:00-7:00 Tuesday-Wednesday,&#13;
Molinaro D115.&#13;
P.S.G.A ELECTION BALLOT&#13;
SPRING 1987 (SAMPLE)&#13;
PRESIDENT (Check One):&#13;
O Daniel Galbraith EH Rich Borkowski&#13;
• Alex Pettit EH Jim Lawell, Jr.&#13;
EH Kay C. Rouse EH (write-in)&#13;
VICE PRESIDENT (Check one):&#13;
EH Corbett James Anderson EH Daniel Vogt&#13;
EH Fred Monardi * EH&#13;
(write-in)&#13;
S.U.F.A.C&#13;
EH Steve (Rocky) Donovan EH Bev Landreman&#13;
EH (write-in)&#13;
P.U.A.B.&#13;
EH Lynn Lipor EH (write-in)&#13;
SENATE (Check up to nine)&#13;
EH Jan Kratochvil EH Kevin Zirkelbach&#13;
EH J.J. Masterson&#13;
CD Blake Topel&#13;
•&#13;
O Sandra Villareal&#13;
G Jeannie A. Brandel&#13;
G&#13;
Initial at Polls Initial at Count&#13;
Vote in the PSGA&#13;
Election Monday and&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
Molinaro Concourse&#13;
9:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.&#13;
New campus design&#13;
No, just a new perspective on the familiar view of the Union hallway.&#13;
Pbolo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
HELP sponsors Mexican Folklore&#13;
Dance Co.&#13;
H.E.L.P. (Hispanics Easing&#13;
Laden People), a Kenosha&#13;
group founded by Roberto&#13;
Delgadillo, who is the current&#13;
president, is sponsoring a 90&#13;
minute performance of the&#13;
Mexican Folkloric Dance Co.&#13;
of Chicago, at 7 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
March 7 in the Communications&#13;
Arts Theatre at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Mexican Folkloric&#13;
Dance Co. of Chicago, a non&#13;
profit organization, has been&#13;
performing in the Midwest&#13;
for the last 12 years.&#13;
Three directors, Jose Luis&#13;
Ovalle, Ofelia Solano and&#13;
Serafin Vargas, all experienced&#13;
dancers, have brought&#13;
about what they feel is a&#13;
joyous celebration of Mexican&#13;
history.&#13;
The company has performed&#13;
at the International&#13;
Folk Fair of Chicago, Chicago&#13;
Fest, Illinois State University&#13;
and the Museum of Science&#13;
and Industry, among other&#13;
places.&#13;
Dances from several regions&#13;
of Mexico are performed&#13;
by the Folkloric&#13;
group, whose 50 members&#13;
wear authentic costumes.&#13;
Their repertoire illustrates&#13;
the Columbian dances, those&#13;
with European influence and&#13;
others that represent the fusion&#13;
of Indian and Spanish&#13;
cultures.&#13;
Advance tickets can be purchased&#13;
for a donation of $5.00&#13;
at the Kenosha Spanish Center,&#13;
1212 57th St. or at the&#13;
door the night of the performance&#13;
for $6.00. The number&#13;
for the Spanish Center is 658-&#13;
1063.&#13;
IMPORTANT MEETING!&#13;
"SPECIAL STUDENT STATUS IN EDUCATION"&#13;
Monday, March 9,1987&#13;
1:00-2:00 p.m.&#13;
Union 207&#13;
AGENDA&#13;
'Matriculant vs. Non-Matriculant&#13;
'Course Offerings&#13;
PSGA&#13;
election&#13;
debate&#13;
Debate from page 5&#13;
den on students. If elected,&#13;
they intend to push for a different&#13;
deferred tuition plan,&#13;
one which changes the 40-30-&#13;
30 percent breakdown to 30-&#13;
25-25-20 breakdown.&#13;
Also discussed at the debate&#13;
was Parkside's involvement&#13;
in statewide and national&#13;
lobbying organization.&#13;
Kay Rouse," presidential&#13;
candidate, indicated that "the&#13;
key word here is balance:&#13;
when we need to go off&#13;
campus to get something&#13;
done, we should, but when&#13;
there's a problem right here,&#13;
we should look into that problem&#13;
right here."&#13;
Another presidential candidate,&#13;
Dan Galbreath, disagreed,&#13;
indicating more than&#13;
once that what was truly important&#13;
was being a president&#13;
who stayed on campus.&#13;
On more general matters,&#13;
vice-presidential hopeful Dan&#13;
Vogt saw more comprehensive&#13;
communication between&#13;
organizations as a number&#13;
one priority.&#13;
"Open communication between&#13;
organizations is important&#13;
on any issues," Vogt explained.&#13;
"I see that right now&#13;
organizations are acting by&#13;
themselves, but if we join together&#13;
we can do more for&#13;
students."&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 5,1987 9&#13;
Internat'l studies students&#13;
given chance of a lifetime&#13;
Chorale spring concert&#13;
by Christina Lojeski&#13;
Ten Parkside students will&#13;
leave on March 21 to take&#13;
part in the eighth annual&#13;
Model Organization of American&#13;
States (OAS), held in&#13;
Washington, D.C., from&#13;
March 30-April 3.&#13;
In December, Parkside&#13;
hosted a high school-level&#13;
Model OAS, in which Parkside&#13;
students acted as mentors&#13;
to the high school students.&#13;
The chief difference between&#13;
the two models is the&#13;
level at which they operate,&#13;
according to Gerald Greenfield,&#13;
international studies director.&#13;
In the college-level OAS,&#13;
there are graduate as well as&#13;
undergraduate students' and&#13;
committee chairs. The President&#13;
and the Secretary General&#13;
were elected last year.&#13;
In the college-level OAS,&#13;
"There is a high level of discourse&#13;
and expertise. An&#13;
awful lot of them speak Spanish,&#13;
and a tremendous number&#13;
are natives of Latin&#13;
America," Greenfield stated.&#13;
Another major difference&#13;
between the models is that&#13;
the college-level OAS "operates&#13;
under a strict set of rules&#13;
of procedures. They take all&#13;
of the decorum more seriously&#13;
than we do here. They&#13;
really try to get people to&#13;
have the sense that they are&#13;
diplomats.&#13;
"The major dissimilarity is&#13;
that the college-level model&#13;
occurs in the Organization of&#13;
American States headquar-&#13;
THE FAR SIDE&#13;
ters. That's really neat, because&#13;
you're not pretending&#13;
you're somewhere, you are&#13;
there. It is in a gorgeous&#13;
room called 'The Hall of the&#13;
Americas.* and you know that&#13;
the diplomats have been&#13;
there before, discussing some&#13;
of these things," said Greenfield.&#13;
As in the high school OAS,&#13;
each school represents a&#13;
country, and participants are&#13;
divided into different committees,&#13;
develop resolutions, and&#13;
try to gain others' support for&#13;
those resolutions.&#13;
Some of the other schools&#13;
participating in this model&#13;
OAS will be: the University of&#13;
Notre Dame, Ohio University,&#13;
Youngstown State University&#13;
and Providence College. The&#13;
only other UW-System school&#13;
participating will be Oshkosh.&#13;
"When you look at the list&#13;
of schools participating, the&#13;
names are pretty impressive,"&#13;
expalined Greenfield.&#13;
"It's usually only large&#13;
schools, East Coast schools,&#13;
private schools, that regularly&#13;
provide these kind of opportunities&#13;
for their students.&#13;
Parkside students have not,&#13;
historically, at least, had an&#13;
opportunity to do these kinds&#13;
of things very much, and it's&#13;
something that puts them at a&#13;
disadvantage.&#13;
"I do think that has been&#13;
changing over the last few&#13;
year. The bottom line is,&#13;
when I took a group last year&#13;
and asked them what they&#13;
thought, the important thing&#13;
was to find that they could&#13;
easily hold their own against&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
these schools, and that a good&#13;
student here is as good as a&#13;
good student there."&#13;
This is not a class activity,&#13;
according to Greenfield, and&#13;
with a cost of approximately&#13;
$2800-$3000 for the ten-student&#13;
team, Greenfield says there&#13;
will be fund-raising activities&#13;
to help pay this cost.&#13;
One planned activity is a&#13;
bowl-a-thon, on Feb. 21, for&#13;
which students went around&#13;
with pledge sheets, asking&#13;
people to pledge a certain&#13;
amount per pin.&#13;
Students are also going&#13;
around to service clubs and&#13;
businesses asking for donations,&#13;
and they may sell&#13;
M&amp;M's and hold a rummage&#13;
sale at an armory.&#13;
Any students who may be&#13;
interested in the OAS trip&#13;
may contact Greenfield,&#13;
MOLN 280, 553-2103.&#13;
The Parkside Chamber&#13;
Singers, directed by Prof.&#13;
Robert Campbell, will present&#13;
its winter concert at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, March 8 at St.&#13;
Peter's Church, 2224 30th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
Admission is $2 for Parkside&#13;
students, faculty and&#13;
staff, $4 for the general public.&#13;
The choir will present a&#13;
concert of short works set for&#13;
a cappella voices in a variety&#13;
of styles. Elizabethan madrigals&#13;
and lute songs will open&#13;
the program, with works by&#13;
Dowland, Farmer and Wilbye,&#13;
among others.&#13;
These will be followed by&#13;
two chamber works by composer&#13;
Paul Chihara and the&#13;
"Magazine Madrigals" by&#13;
Oscar Haugland.&#13;
After a series of French&#13;
chansons, two lighter numbers&#13;
and a spiritual will complete&#13;
the program.&#13;
Admin Council&#13;
Council from page 6&#13;
ter not to have students in&#13;
there, instead of dealing with&#13;
a student leader being involved&#13;
in personnel discussions,&#13;
or asking the student to&#13;
leave. I think they're worried&#13;
that a student being up there&#13;
would stifle discussion on certain&#13;
issues. The chancellor is&#13;
new and wants to develop a&#13;
good working team-a strong&#13;
cabinet.&#13;
"It's a foot in the door," he&#13;
continued. "I think once the&#13;
people on Admin. Council&#13;
realize that the process can&#13;
still work with students up&#13;
there, eventually, if PSGA&#13;
works on It next year, it could&#13;
become an official standing&#13;
member."&#13;
'See Dick run. See Jane run. Run run ru n.&#13;
See the wolves chase Dick and Jane.&#13;
Chase chase chase...."&#13;
TRAIN WITH THE&#13;
NUCLEAR INDUSTRY'S LEADER&#13;
AND YOU COULD END UP&#13;
LEADING THE INDUSTRY.&#13;
Over half the nuclear reactors in&#13;
America are operated by one&#13;
organization. The United States&#13;
Navy.&#13;
The technology is the most&#13;
advanced in the world. The men in&#13;
charge are the industry's best.&#13;
That's why the Navy Nuclear&#13;
Propulsion Officer Candidate&#13;
Program is among the most&#13;
sophisticated training available.&#13;
It has to be!&#13;
College juniors and seniors who&#13;
qualify for the program can earn&#13;
$1,000 month while still in school.&#13;
In addition, you get a $4,000 bonus&#13;
upon entrance into the program and&#13;
an additional $2,000 when you&#13;
complete your Naval studies.&#13;
And, as an officer in today's&#13;
Nuclear Navy, you receive a year of&#13;
paid graduate-level training-gaining&#13;
the experience and credentials that&#13;
can put you at the forefront of the&#13;
nuclear industry.&#13;
You must be a U.S. citizen, 27&#13;
years of age or younger upon&#13;
commissioning, working toward a&#13;
bachelor's or master's degree. You&#13;
must also have completed a&#13;
minimum of one year each of&#13;
calculus and calculus-based physics&#13;
with a "B" average or better.&#13;
If you're thinking about a career&#13;
in the nuclear field, start at the top.&#13;
And lead the adventure as a Navy&#13;
officer. You can apply your&#13;
sophmore year. Call Navy&#13;
Management Programs for more&#13;
information. 1-800-242-1569.&#13;
Navy representatives will be on campus this month, watch for them&#13;
in the Student Union.&#13;
NAVY OFFICER&#13;
- *- J-L c-;HT.ti&#13;
•&#13;
LEAD THE ADVENTURE&#13;
10 Thursday, March 5,1987 RANGER&#13;
P.S.G.A, Constitution paid advertisement&#13;
We, the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside do hereby organize&#13;
ourselves pursuant to Wisconsin Statute&#13;
36.09(5) and the Parkside Student Govern&#13;
ment Association inc. Constitution Art. 4 t in&#13;
the manner set forth in this constitution and&#13;
select our representatives to participate in&#13;
institutional governance in the manner set&#13;
forth below. We invest the powers of this&#13;
constitution in the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. All previous&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
constitutions shall be null and void upon&#13;
ratification of this constitution on March $&#13;
•and 6. t980. This constitution shall be the sole&#13;
constitution of Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association inc. and the student body and&#13;
subject only to amendments.&#13;
The parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. shall be responsible to the&#13;
students of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association inc. shall have the power to en&#13;
force and protect the following articles by&#13;
passing motions, resolutions or taking legal&#13;
action to insure that no student's rights are&#13;
violated.&#13;
Those students seeking positions in the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc (P.S.G.A., inc.) must fulfill all&#13;
requirements of that office in accordance&#13;
with Student Life Eligibility Criteria specified&#13;
in the Senate Rules.&#13;
ARTICLE I&#13;
Section 1. All legislative powers granted&#13;
herein shall be vested in the Senate of the&#13;
.P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section J. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall consist of IB student members, half of&#13;
which will be elected in the spring and half in&#13;
the fall, whose term shall be tor one year.&#13;
Section J. The Senate of the P.S.G'.A., Inc.&#13;
shall choose their own officers and also a&#13;
President Pro Tempore.&#13;
Section 4. In the absence of the Vice&#13;
President of P.S.G.A., Inc. who shall be the&#13;
president of the Senate, the President Pro&#13;
Tempore shall be the President of the Senate.&#13;
The President Pro Tempore shall be a&#13;
Senator and shall be a member of all Senate&#13;
Committees.&#13;
When vacancies happen in the representation&#13;
from any at large seat, the President&#13;
Pro Tempore shall fill such vacancies with&#13;
the concurrence of a simple majority of the&#13;
entire legislative branch of the P.S.G.A., inc.&#13;
Section 5. A simple majority of the total&#13;
Senate shall constitute a quorum to do&#13;
business.&#13;
Section 6. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall have the power to determine the rules of&#13;
its proceedings, censure its members for&#13;
disorderly conduct and. with the concurrence&#13;
of two thirds of the entire Senate, expel a&#13;
member. The Senate shall keep a journal of&#13;
its proceedings, and publish the same mon&#13;
thly at the minimum, a copy of the journal&#13;
shall be available for review by the public in&#13;
the P.S.G.A., inc. offices.&#13;
The Senate of the P.S.G.A.. Inc. shall meet&#13;
at an established place and time no less than&#13;
once a week during the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, and no less than once a month&#13;
during the summer session.&#13;
Upon presentation of a petition by a simple&#13;
majority of the entire Senate a meeting shall&#13;
be called by the Vice-President or in the case&#13;
of the Vice President's absence the President&#13;
Pro Tempore shall have the responsibility to&#13;
call a meeting within 48 hours&#13;
Section 7. Bills may eitner originate in the&#13;
Senate or be sent to the Senate from the&#13;
executive branch of the P.S.G.A.. Inc. Every bill,&#13;
order, resolution or vote on which the concurrence&#13;
of the Senate is necessary shall have&#13;
passed the Senate by a simple majority and&#13;
shall be presented to the President of the&#13;
P S.G.A-, Inc. before it takes effect It the President&#13;
does not approve, he/she shall send It&#13;
back to the Senate for reconsideration with&#13;
his/her reasons for rejection.&#13;
If. after such reconsideration, a simple&#13;
majority of the entire Senate shall agree to&#13;
pass the bffl. it shall become law. But in all such&#13;
cases the votes of Senate shall be determined&#13;
by a roM ca ll vote, and the names of persons&#13;
voting for and against the bill shall be entered&#13;
in the journal of the Senate. If an y bill shall not&#13;
be returned by the President within ten school&#13;
days after it has been presented to him/her. the&#13;
same shall become law. in the manner as if&#13;
he/she had signed it. All proceedings of the&#13;
Senate of the P.S.G.A. Inc.. shall be sent to the&#13;
executive branch for incorporation purposes. H&#13;
the President vetoes the legislation, he/she&#13;
shall send it back to the Senate. A two-thirds&#13;
vote of the entire Senate shall be required to&#13;
override the Veto&#13;
powers,- and all other powers vested by this&#13;
constitution in the P S.G.A , Inc&#13;
Section •. The Senate of the P S G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall have the power to amend this constitution&#13;
by a two thirds vote of the entire&#13;
Senate in the event of an amendment being&#13;
passed by the Senate, said amendment shall&#13;
be placed on the ballot of the next election, if&#13;
the students confirm the amendment by a&#13;
simple majority vote, it shall be added to the&#13;
Constitution if the students vote against if,&#13;
the amendment will be deleted. In the event&#13;
the Senate does not confirm the proposed&#13;
amendment, said amendment will not appear&#13;
on the ballot. The proponent of an amendment&#13;
that is turned down may. if he or she so&#13;
chooses, follow the procedures set up in Article&#13;
V, Section 2.&#13;
When amendments are up for approval they&#13;
shall appear on the October and March&#13;
ballots In cases of urgency, a special&#13;
referendum may be held at any time.&#13;
Section 10. The Senate shall have the sole&#13;
power of impeachment and the power to fry&#13;
all impeachments When sifting for that&#13;
purpose they shall be of oath or affirmation.&#13;
When the President of the P S.G.A, Inc. is&#13;
fried the Chief Justice of the Judicial court&#13;
shall preside, and no person shall be convicted&#13;
without the concurrence of two thirds&#13;
of the entire Senate. Judgement in cases of&#13;
impeachment shall not extend further than&#13;
removal from office and disqualification to&#13;
hold and enjoy any office or position that the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. has jurisdiction over, appointment&#13;
to, or election for. Impeachment&#13;
shall not begin until two thirds of the entire&#13;
Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc. have voted to hold&#13;
an impeachment hearing.&#13;
Section II. Roberts Rules of Order shall&#13;
govern the proceedings of all Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association, inc.&#13;
meetings except when inconsistent with the&#13;
Constitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section I. The Senate shall have the power&#13;
to make motions, resolutions, or take legal&#13;
actions which shall be necessary and proper&#13;
for carrying into execution the foregoing&#13;
ARTICLE II&#13;
Section I. All executive powers, within this&#13;
article, shall be vested in the President of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Section 2. The President shall hold office&#13;
during the term of one year together with the&#13;
Vice-President who will be chosen for the&#13;
same term. They shall be eligible for reelection&#13;
and shall not serve more than 2&#13;
consecutive terms.&#13;
Before the President and the Vice&#13;
President elect enters on the execution of tre&#13;
office of the Presidency or Vice Presidency,&#13;
he or she shall take the following oath:&#13;
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will&#13;
faithfully execute the office of President (or&#13;
Vice President) of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association inc. and will to the&#13;
best of my ability preserve, protect and&#13;
defend the constitution and actions of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc."&#13;
The President of the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall&#13;
also be able to draw compensation while in&#13;
office, the amount of which shall be determined&#13;
by a majority vote of the entire&#13;
Legislative branch of the P.S.G.A.. Inc. This&#13;
compensation can be suspended by the Senate&#13;
while the President is on trial for purposes of&#13;
impeachment. If, however, after impeachment&#13;
proceedings the President is&#13;
found to be innocent, all benefits will be paid&#13;
to him/her retroactive from the date of&#13;
suspension. Increases in compensation will&#13;
not be awarded to a President while in office&#13;
unless he/she is re-elected to another term of&#13;
office or to his/her immediate successor, at&#13;
which time such benefits would begin to be&#13;
implemented. All Increases must be approved&#13;
by a majority of the entire Senate.&#13;
Upon resignation or removal from office or&#13;
Inability to discharge power and duties of the&#13;
Presidency, the Vice President shall assume&#13;
the office of President of the P.S.G.A., inc.&#13;
and shall meet the constitutional&#13;
requirements of the Presidency of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section J. The President shall have the&#13;
power by and with the advice and consent of&#13;
the majority of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate to&#13;
nominate and appoint the treasurer,&#13;
corresponding secretary and all other officers&#13;
of the executive branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
and all student |udges with the consent of twothirds&#13;
of the entire Senate.&#13;
The President shall have the power to lineitem&#13;
veto specific portions of Senate bills.&#13;
He/she may line item veto the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
budget, but shall not line-item veto the&#13;
Segregated Fee Budget. The President may&#13;
not veto legislation or any portion of It, passed&#13;
by the Senate which deals with the Senate&#13;
Procedural Rules, Regulations or Senate&#13;
appointments.&#13;
The President shall have the power to&#13;
require written reports from all standing or&#13;
special committees and individuals to whom&#13;
responsibilities have been delegated within&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. and shall be required to&#13;
furnish written reports on his/her executive&#13;
activities to the legislative branch of the&#13;
P S G A., inc. by a majority vote of the&#13;
Senate Any required written reports shall be&#13;
requested in writing and shall be received&#13;
within one week of the presentation of such&#13;
request to th» P.S.G.A., inc. member being&#13;
required to furnish the report.&#13;
The President shall have the power, by and&#13;
with the advice and consent of the Legislative&#13;
branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. to sign contracts,&#13;
provided that a majority of the entire Senate&#13;
concurs.&#13;
The President shall draw up the P.S G.A.,&#13;
Inc. budget and send it to the Legislative&#13;
branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. tor approval.&#13;
The President shall take care that the&#13;
constitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc. and its bylaws&#13;
be faithfully executed.&#13;
The President, vice President and all of&#13;
ficers of the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be removed&#13;
from office for dereliction qf duty or failure to&#13;
take care that the constitution of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc and its by-laws be faithfully executed.&#13;
Section 4. The Vice-President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. sholl nominote student appointees to oil&#13;
faculty codified committees with simple majority&#13;
of the entire Senate needed for approval and&#13;
shall publish such vacancies in the student&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
Section $. The treasurer of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. shall keep records and recipts on all&#13;
expenditures of all P.S.G.A.. Inc. monies and&#13;
shall make such records public.&#13;
ARTICLE III&#13;
Section 1. All judicial powers of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be vested in judiciary&#13;
court, and in lower courts that the Senate of&#13;
the P.S G.A., inc. may establish. The judges,&#13;
of all courts, shall maintain good behavior&#13;
and character during their terms of office.&#13;
Section 2. The judicial court shall consist of&#13;
four judges and one Chief Justice. Student&#13;
members of the judicial branch of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., inc. shall be University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside students, and must be&#13;
confirmed by the Chancellor of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin Parkside after a two thirds&#13;
approval by the entire Senate of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. Appointments to the judicial branch of&#13;
the P.S.G.A., inc., shall be for three years.&#13;
Section 3. in the case of deciding the constitutionality&#13;
of the actions of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. the decisions shall be binding on all&#13;
parties involved, and shall be forwarded to&#13;
the designated disciplinary head of the ad&#13;
ministrative branch of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside on to the appropriate&#13;
authorities for implementation.&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
Section I. The P.S.G.A., Inc., subject to the&#13;
responsibilities and powers of the Board of&#13;
Regents, the President of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Parkside, and the&#13;
faculty of the University of Wisconsin .&#13;
Parkside shall be active participants in the&#13;
immediate governance of and policy&#13;
development for such institutions. As such,&#13;
the P.S.G.A. shall have primary responsibility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life, services, and&#13;
interests. As such, the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be&#13;
the sole representative student group of the&#13;
students of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside allowed to participate in in&#13;
stitutionai governance.&#13;
• SUB—ARTICLE I&#13;
Section I. The P.S.G.A., Inc., in consultation&#13;
with the Chancellor of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside and subject to the&#13;
final confirmation of the Board of Regents&#13;
shall have the responsibility for the&#13;
disposition of those student fees which constitute&#13;
substantial support for campus&#13;
student activities&#13;
Section 2. An Allocation Committee shall be&#13;
established as a subcommittee of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate. The committee shall&#13;
review requests for program support and&#13;
budget allocations of the allocable portion of&#13;
the segregated University fee. All action of&#13;
said committee shall be subject to the final&#13;
approval of the P.S.G.A., Inc. in conjunction&#13;
with the Chancellor of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
A. MEMBERSHIP. The Allocations Committee&#13;
shall consist o( 8 voting members. There ore 6&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senator seats. The remaining 2&#13;
shall be chosen by the student body of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Porkside. one elected In&#13;
the spring, one elected in fall. Three P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. Senators sholl be chosen in the foil and&#13;
three in the spring by vote of the Senate of interestec&#13;
P.S.G.A.. Inc. Senators. If there are&#13;
more thon three interested Senotors. the Senate&#13;
will vote by secret ballot listing 3 choices. The&#13;
voting shall be conducted by the Judicial Bronch&#13;
of the P.S.G.A.. Inc. The term of office shall be&#13;
one year. The committee sholl elect its own&#13;
chairperson after each spring election. In addition.&#13;
the Assistant Chancellor who serves os&#13;
chief student affairs officer or their designee&#13;
and the Campus Controller may sit with the&#13;
committee os non-voting members. Should a vacancy&#13;
' occur on the Allocation Committee the&#13;
following procedures sholl be used:&#13;
1) The President Pro Tempore of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. Senate. In consultotion with the Chancellor&#13;
or designee, will fill any unoccupied Senatorial&#13;
seat with the confirmation of the P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
Senate. The vacant seats need not be filled with&#13;
Senotors. However P.S.G.A. Inc. Senotors&#13;
should be given first consideration.&#13;
2 The President of the P.S.G.A., Inc., in&#13;
consultation with the Chancellor or designee,&#13;
shall appoint to any at-large seat on the&#13;
Allocations Committee, the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Senate does not need to approve the&#13;
President's appointment.&#13;
B. PROCEDURES. Upon the call of the&#13;
Chancellor and the President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. the Committee shall annually prepare&#13;
recommendations on the disbursal of the&#13;
Segregated University Fee. Should the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. concur in the recommendation,&#13;
the President of P.S.G.A., inc. shall so advise&#13;
the Chancellor and Chairperson of the&#13;
Allocations Committee. Should the Chan&#13;
cellor concur in the P.S.G.A., Inc. recommendation.&#13;
he/she shall arrange for its implementation.&#13;
Should the Chancellor not&#13;
concur, the provisions under negotiations&#13;
shall be used The Senate may not amend the&#13;
Allocations Committee recommendation.&#13;
Rejection cf the Committees' recommendation&#13;
takes a 2/3 vote of the entire&#13;
Senate in the case of rejection by the Senate,&#13;
the reasons for rejection shall be agreed to&#13;
and forwarded to the Chairperson of the&#13;
Allocations Committee. The Allocations&#13;
Committee shall reconsider its recommendation&#13;
and again forward it to the Senate.&#13;
C. NEGOTIATIONS. The President of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc., the Chairperson of S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
and the President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., inc. Senate or their designees (who&#13;
must be members of the P.S.G.A., Inc.) shall&#13;
be representatives of the P.S.G.A., Inc. in any&#13;
consultation with the Chancellor or his/her&#13;
designee in dealing with the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Allocations Committee. If the President Pro&#13;
Tempore of the P.S.G.A., inc. Senate is a&#13;
member of S.U.F.A.C then the Senator with&#13;
the most seniority of the P.S.G.A., inc. Senate&#13;
will assume the duties of the Pro Tempore fn&#13;
negotiations with the Chancellor.&#13;
If the P.S.G.A., Inc. and the Chancellor&#13;
cannot reconcile their differences in the&#13;
allocation of the allocable portion of&#13;
Segregated University Fees, each will submit&#13;
a set of recommendations to the Board of&#13;
Regents for final disposition.&#13;
D. DUTIES. The Allocations Committee&#13;
shall have primary responsibility in setting&#13;
the allocable portion of the auxiliary budget&#13;
and to insure proper monetary expenditures&#13;
in total and within budgetary categories. The&#13;
Allocations Committee shall meet year round&#13;
to review the allocable portion of the&#13;
Segregated Fees Budget according to the&#13;
procedures set up in the Senate Rules.&#13;
SUB ARTICLE II&#13;
Section 1. A standing Senate Committee,&#13;
the Student Organization Council, shall be&#13;
established consisting of the Presidents (or&#13;
their designees) of all student organizations&#13;
who choose to participate.&#13;
Section 2. No student shall be denied&#13;
membership to any on campus organization&#13;
for reasons of race, color, religious creed,&#13;
national origin, sex, past criminal record,&#13;
political belief, political action, or sexual&#13;
prefer ence.&#13;
Section 3. Students shall be free to&#13;
assemble, to demonstrate, to communicate,&#13;
and to protest individually or through a&#13;
student organization so long as no federal,&#13;
state, or municipal law is violated.&#13;
Section 4. Students shall be free to use&#13;
campus facilities for meetings of student&#13;
organizations, subject to uniform regulations&#13;
to time and manner governing the facility.&#13;
Section S. Students shall have the right to&#13;
invite and hear speakers of their choice and&#13;
approval shall not be witheld by the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. or university authorities for purposes of&#13;
censorship.&#13;
Section 6. Affiliation with an extramural&#13;
organization shall not in itself disqualify a&#13;
student organization from student govern&#13;
ment recognition or institutional recognition.&#13;
Section 7. The student press shall be free of&#13;
censorship and advance approval of copy,&#13;
and its editors shall be free to develop their&#13;
own editorial policies and news coverage&#13;
Section 8. The student press Shall be ac&#13;
corded all those rights as stated in the United&#13;
States Constitution.&#13;
Section f. Students shall have the right to&#13;
distribute or sell information of a printed&#13;
nature that does not conflict with University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside binding contracts.&#13;
ARTICLE V&#13;
Section I. Fall elections for the P.S.G.A.,.&#13;
Inc. shall be held the third week of October.&#13;
At that time, one half of the representatives&#13;
from the legislative branch as well as one at -&#13;
paid advertisement&#13;
large S.U.F.A.C. seat shall be elected. Spring&#13;
elections for the P.S.G.A., inc. shall be held&#13;
during the eighth week of the spring&#13;
semester. At that time the President, Vice •&#13;
President, remaining legislative seats, one at&#13;
large S.U.F.A.C. seat and five Union&#13;
Operating Board seats shall be elected.&#13;
Section 2. The students, upon requesting a&#13;
petition with 10 percent of the signatures of&#13;
the entire student body, shall have the right to&#13;
request a constitutionalreferendum to amend&#13;
this constitution, or to request an advisory&#13;
referendum The petition shall be presented&#13;
to both the President and the Vice President&#13;
and the President Pro Tempore of P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Section 3.&#13;
1) For recall against a Senator or officer of&#13;
P.S.G.A., inc., any University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside student may start the petition and&#13;
any Uniyersdy of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
student may sign it. Fifteen percent of the&#13;
Parkside student body must sign the petition.&#13;
2) The recall petition must have a&#13;
statement of the reason(s) for removal from&#13;
office. This must deal with actions committed&#13;
in the present term of office.&#13;
3) The student(s) shall present the petition&#13;
to the Senate. Upon receiving verification of&#13;
the petition, the Senate must immediately&#13;
notify the school paper that a recall is in&#13;
progress and a special election will take&#13;
place. There must be an election within IS&#13;
school days a'ter notification of the valid&#13;
petition is received by the Senate.&#13;
4) Upon receiving the recall petition the&#13;
Senate must immediately turn it over to the&#13;
election committee. The election committee&#13;
shall have five days to verify the names on the&#13;
petition, in the event that there is no election&#13;
committee, the Senate must appoint one&#13;
within five days&#13;
If illegal names are found on the petition,&#13;
and the number of legal names drop to less&#13;
than 15%. the election committee must notify&#13;
the sfudent(s) who presented the petition.&#13;
Upon notification, the students have five&#13;
school days to get the required number of&#13;
names, if they fail to do so, their recall&#13;
petition shall be declared null. At the request&#13;
of the student(s) who presented the petition,&#13;
the election committee must show that the&#13;
names are illegal.&#13;
No legal name can be removed from the&#13;
petition after filing. Once the petition is&#13;
presented to the Senate, it cannot be withdrawn.&#13;
A person can be recalled only once per&#13;
offense during his/her term in office. The&#13;
person who is cited in the recall petition shall&#13;
have his/her name placed on the ballot&#13;
automatically unless he/she resigns. Students&#13;
who wish to run for the position shall follow&#13;
normal election procedure.&#13;
5) If a Senator or Officer resigns and is&#13;
reappointed to a position within the term of&#13;
office he/she last held, it shall be considered&#13;
only a continuation of his term.&#13;
ARTICLE VI&#13;
Section 1 An applicant shall not be denied&#13;
admission to the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside for reasons of race, color, national&#13;
origin, religious creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record, political beliefs, political action, or&#13;
sexual preference.&#13;
Section 2. Financial aid shall not be denied&#13;
for reasons of race, color, national origin,&#13;
religious creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record, political beliefs, political action, or&#13;
sexual preference&#13;
Section 3. S'udenfs are free to take exception&#13;
to the da'a presented or views offered&#13;
in any course 0f study and may advocate&#13;
alternative ons to those presented within&#13;
the classroom&#13;
Section 4. A.i S'udent Disciplinary matters&#13;
will be processed through the University of&#13;
Wisconsin c-arkside Student Disciplinary&#13;
Procedures Chapter UWS 17.&#13;
Section 5. Students shall be evaluated only&#13;
on their knowledge of the subject and&#13;
academic performance and in turn are responsible&#13;
to maintain standards of academic performance&#13;
established for each course they have&#13;
enrolled in.&#13;
Section 6. Disclosure of students political or&#13;
personal beliefs m connection with course work&#13;
shall not be made public without express permission&#13;
of the student&#13;
Section 7. Student records on academic&#13;
performance and disciplinaary actions shall be&#13;
separate.&#13;
Section 8. Information from counseling and&#13;
disciplinary files shall not be made available&#13;
to persons on or off campus without the express&#13;
consent of the student involved, except&#13;
under legal compulsion.&#13;
Section f. All records and information kept&#13;
on file shall be readily accesible to the student&#13;
to whom they pertain.&#13;
Section 10. Students shall have the right to&#13;
be present at all committee meetings directly&#13;
affecting the students.&#13;
Section 11. The constitutional rights of any&#13;
student, as stated in the United States Constitution,&#13;
shall not be denied anyone, at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
P.S.G.A. ELECTIONS&#13;
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY, MARCH 9 &amp; 10&#13;
11 RANGER&#13;
Thursday, March 5, 1987 park's dept.&#13;
On© Year Ago&#13;
March 6,1986&#13;
Student hacker suspect in computer break-in&#13;
Charges have yet to be filed against a Parkside student&#13;
believed to have had access to student and faculty computer&#13;
files because an investigation into the matter is still&#13;
being conducted by campus security.&#13;
A. distributed last week by Computer Center Director&#13;
Bill Misamore disclosed that "since approximately&#13;
last September, a person or persons have been accessing&#13;
on a computer used for instruciton and research bv students&#13;
and faculty.&#13;
The Computer Center and Public Safetv Offw h,,,,,&#13;
shared information with the district attorney1?office but&#13;
no charges have been filed to date. office, but&#13;
Five Years Ago&#13;
March 4, 1982&#13;
Senate OKs budget, election referendums&#13;
In its Feb. 25 meeting, the PSGA Senate approved the&#13;
total SUFAC budget of $610,225.10 after twice voting down&#13;
a budget approximately $2700 lower.&#13;
Ironically, the third discussion on the budget took considerably&#13;
less time than did discussion on how to word a&#13;
referendum question concerning the Union Square jukebox.&#13;
The Senate voted to place five referendums on the&#13;
March 10 and 11 election ballots.&#13;
The five referendums are:&#13;
• Do you support a peace time military draft?&#13;
• Do you favor decriminilization of up to one ounce of&#13;
marijuana?&#13;
• Which do you favor in the Union Square-a jukebox,&#13;
more often changing the music on the jukebox, a stereo&#13;
system or others?&#13;
• Do you know if there is a housing system on campus?&#13;
• Do you agree to support the UW System Student&#13;
Lobby, United Council, through a mandatory fee, refundable&#13;
upon written request, of 50 cents per semester?&#13;
Ten Years Ago&#13;
March 2, 1977&#13;
Wrestlers go to nationals&#13;
The Parkside wrestlers will try to improve on Parkside's&#13;
sixth place finish last year in the NAIA National&#13;
Tournament listed on their schedule as Thursday, Friday&#13;
and Saturday at Eastern Washington State College near&#13;
Spokane.&#13;
The Rangers, ranked sixth in the nation, are led by Dan&#13;
O'Connell at 126 pounds, Bob Gruner at 150 pounds, and&#13;
John Gale at 190 pounds.&#13;
THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON&#13;
Thursday, March 5&#13;
Talk: "Writing as a Liberal&#13;
Art" by Marshall Gregory of&#13;
Butler University, Indianapolis,&#13;
Indiana, starts at 9:30&#13;
a.m. in Union 104. The event&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
Movie: "Ballad of Narayama"&#13;
will be shown at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tickets for the Thursday Foreign&#13;
Film Series will be available&#13;
at the door.&#13;
Friday, March 6&#13;
Workshop: "Problem Solving&#13;
in Human Relations" starts&#13;
at 8 a.m. in Union 207. Sponsored&#13;
by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
Talk: "The Humanities and&#13;
Sciences: Complementary&#13;
Under the Skin" by Prof.&#13;
Marshall Gregory starts at&#13;
11:30 a.m. in MOLN 111. The&#13;
talk is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Movies: "A Streetcar Named&#13;
Desire" will be shown at 1:30&#13;
p.m. and "On the Waterfront"&#13;
will be shown at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside&#13;
and Carthage students&#13;
and $2 for others. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Play: "The Diviners" starts&#13;
at 8 p.m. in Studio B. Call&#13;
ext. 2564 for ticket information.&#13;
Saturday, March 7&#13;
Workshop: "Difficult People&#13;
•A Week at the Park•&#13;
"He's got one shot left, Murray —&#13;
and then he's ours\"&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The Pi Sigma Epsilon Co-&#13;
Ed Marketing Fraternity will&#13;
hold meetings every Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Molinaro 116.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
The Accounting Club will be&#13;
sponsoring a presentation on&#13;
Auditing Simulation on Monday,&#13;
March 9 from 9-11 a.m.&#13;
in Union 200. All are welcome.&#13;
Computer Workshop&#13;
A computer orientation&#13;
class will be held on Thursday,&#13;
March 5 from 2-4 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC D117. R. Maleske will&#13;
be conducting the class which&#13;
will be an introduction into&#13;
the use of micro-computers&#13;
as terminals to the IBM 4341&#13;
CMS. DEC PDP-11/70 and&#13;
DEC VAX-11/750 systems.&#13;
Uploading and downloading&#13;
techniques will be presented&#13;
as well as a discussion of&#13;
popular communications&#13;
packages such as Smartcom&#13;
n, Crosstalk and Procomm.&#13;
Geology Club&#13;
The Geology Club will be&#13;
hosting a discussion on&#13;
Friday, March 6 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 113. Dr. Peter&#13;
Sheehan of Milwaukee will be&#13;
speak on "The Phanerozoic&#13;
History of Marine Communities"&#13;
which will cover the history&#13;
of marine plants and aniin&#13;
Your Life: Coping and&#13;
Winning" starts 9 a.m. in Tallent&#13;
Hall, room 281. Call ext.&#13;
2312 for details.&#13;
Play: "The Diviners" will be&#13;
repeated 8 p.m. in Studio B.&#13;
Movie: "Ballad of Narayama"&#13;
will be repeated at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema. All&#13;
seats are sold for the Saturday&#13;
Foreign Film Series.&#13;
Sunday, March 8&#13;
Movie: "Ballad of Narayama"&#13;
will be repeated at 2&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tickets for the Sunday Foreign&#13;
Film Series will be available&#13;
at the door.&#13;
Concert: featuring the University&#13;
Chamber Singers&#13;
starting at 3:30 p.m. at St.&#13;
Peter Church in Kenosha. Admission&#13;
at the door is $2 for&#13;
students and senior citizens&#13;
and $4 for others.&#13;
Movie: "The Godfather" will&#13;
be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission is&#13;
free for Parkside and Carthage&#13;
students and $2 for&#13;
others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Monday, March 9&#13;
Workshop: "A Winning Market&#13;
Plan" starts at 8 a.m. in&#13;
Union 106. Sponsored by the&#13;
Continuing Education Office.&#13;
Round Table: "Iran and the&#13;
Security of the United States"&#13;
by Prof. James Oliver of the&#13;
University of Delaware at&#13;
12:15 in Union 106. The event&#13;
Club Events&#13;
mais from about 245 to 570&#13;
million years ago. The talk is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
PAB&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
(PAB) will be sponsoring a&#13;
trip to the Brewers' home&#13;
opener (vs. Boston) on Monday,&#13;
April 6. The cost will be&#13;
$10 and includes transportation,&#13;
tailgate party and&#13;
bleacher tickets. The bus will&#13;
leave at 10 a.m. Tickets are&#13;
available at the Information&#13;
Desk in the Union Bazaar.&#13;
PAB will also be sponsoring&#13;
a trip to the Milwaukee Bucks&#13;
vs. the Detroit Pistons game&#13;
on Saturday, April 6. The cost&#13;
will be $13 and includes transportation&#13;
and tickets.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon will be&#13;
hosting a guest speaker on&#13;
Friday, March 6 in Molinaro&#13;
106. Larry Greb, Director of&#13;
International Marketing at&#13;
Johnson Wax, will be discussing&#13;
internationally marketing&#13;
consumer products. All students&#13;
and faculty are welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Computer Workshop&#13;
A computer orientation&#13;
class will be held on Wednesday,&#13;
March 11 from 2-4 p.m.&#13;
in WLLC D117. M. Dawkins&#13;
will be conducting the class&#13;
which will be an introduction&#13;
to the PC version of SPSS.&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
Video: "Springbreak" will be&#13;
shown at 1:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. All are welcome.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Tuesday, March 10&#13;
Workshop: "Personnel and&#13;
the Law s 'arts at 8:30 a.m.&#13;
in Union 2 7. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
details.&#13;
Video: "Springbreak" will be&#13;
repeated at 8 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
Wee 'ay, March 11&#13;
Workshop: "Career Development&#13;
for Volunteers" starts&#13;
at 9 a.m. in Union 207. Call&#13;
ext. 2312 for details.&#13;
Coffee House: featuring Preston&#13;
Reed from 12 noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6 p.m. to 8&#13;
p.m. in Union Square. The&#13;
event is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Workshop: "Introduction to&#13;
SPSS/PC" starts at 2 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC D117. Call ext. 2235 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Video: "Springbreak" will be&#13;
repeated at 3:30 p.m. hi&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
Short Course: "German for&#13;
Travelers" starts at 7 p.m. in&#13;
MOLN 165. Sponsored by the&#13;
Continuing Education Office.&#13;
Movie: "Dracula" will be&#13;
shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission is&#13;
free for Parkside and Carthage&#13;
students and $2 for&#13;
others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Biological Science&#13;
Club&#13;
On F; lay, March 6 at 1&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist Dill, a&#13;
slide presentation wall be&#13;
given bv Professor Omar&#13;
Amin e- lied "An Entomologist&#13;
in &gt; Persian Gulf: A&#13;
Cultur &lt;pose\" The presents&#13;
t is based on Dr.&#13;
Amin * ent trip to the Persian&#13;
C Everyone is welcome.&#13;
1 freshments will be&#13;
served.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
The A '•unting dub will be&#13;
sponsc ; an Auditing Workshop&#13;
or Monday, March 9&#13;
from 9-li a.m. in Union 207. It&#13;
wall be conducted by Mr. Patrick&#13;
Thomey, a manager with&#13;
Ernst &amp; Whinney.&#13;
Hall Council&#13;
The Hall Council wall&#13;
present its first annual Hall&#13;
Olympic Games this week.&#13;
The events are as follows:&#13;
Thursday, March 5, 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Goofy Games. 7 p.m. Family&#13;
Feud. Friday, March 6, 4&#13;
p.m. championships from&#13;
Thursday. Saturday, March 7,&#13;
2 p.m. County Fair, 4 p.m.&#13;
Pig Roast, 6 p.m. Closing&#13;
ceremonies. All events will be&#13;
held in the Union Square except&#13;
for Goofy Games (Main&#13;
Place) and Saturday's events&#13;
(Housing Patio).&#13;
12 Thursday, March 5,1987 RANGER&#13;
"Freshman's View of College" to be topic of new seminar&#13;
by Christina Lojesld&#13;
Freshman seminars "offer&#13;
students something different&#13;
than they're setting in another&#13;
classes. It's a chance to&#13;
establish a really good realtionship&#13;
with a faculty member...&#13;
You can do that in any&#13;
class, but the focus of this&#13;
class is the students, and in&#13;
my seminar, in particular,&#13;
the student in relation to&#13;
going to school. The student&#13;
is In a classroom two or three&#13;
times a week with a faculty&#13;
or staff member, and has a&#13;
chance to talk about issues&#13;
related to the student and&#13;
going to college, and what&#13;
their experiences are." Stuart&#13;
Rubner, director of student&#13;
counseling and development,&#13;
states&#13;
Next fall, Parkside will&#13;
offer a freshman seminar,&#13;
tentatively subtitled, "A&#13;
Freshman's View of Going to&#13;
College."&#13;
The purpose of the seminar&#13;
is to help students understand&#13;
the impact of their first&#13;
months in college on themselves&#13;
and their other committments,&#13;
such as work,&#13;
family, personal and social&#13;
activities, according to Rubner,&#13;
who will be instructing the&#13;
seminar.&#13;
This freshman seminar will&#13;
be different from others because&#13;
in addition to typical&#13;
assignments, the students will&#13;
be required to spend a week&#13;
taking photographs around&#13;
Parkside, telling the story of&#13;
how they view going to college.&#13;
When he taught his first&#13;
freshman seminar, Rubner&#13;
explained, "I kept asking&#13;
them almost weekly, how&#13;
things were going. I tried to&#13;
draw out what difficulties&#13;
they were encountering, what&#13;
good things were happening&#13;
to them because a lot of times&#13;
people talk about the problems&#13;
they're having, but not&#13;
the second time around. For&#13;
this coming fall, I wondered&#13;
if there wasn't a way to&#13;
translate those verbal expressions&#13;
of their experience into&#13;
more concrete terms, and I&#13;
came up with the idea of hav-&#13;
Stu Rubner&#13;
ing them take on this audiovisual&#13;
project," stated Rubner.&#13;
Rubner's idea was derived&#13;
from the book, A Day In the&#13;
Life of America, which is a&#13;
composite of photographs&#13;
taken one day last year by&#13;
200 photographers, all over&#13;
the country, telling the story&#13;
of how they viewed the&#13;
United States on that day.&#13;
Students who do not have&#13;
access to a camera may use&#13;
"tapes, they can use minicams-&#13;
put together a video&#13;
presentation," Rubner explained.&#13;
When the projects are completed,&#13;
they will be put up for&#13;
public viewing, "so that other&#13;
people may be sensitized to&#13;
what it is like, going to college,&#13;
through the eyes of a&#13;
freshman," Rubner continued.&#13;
However, if a student&#13;
does not wish to have his&#13;
project displayed, his wishes&#13;
will be respected.&#13;
Students attending Parkside&#13;
typically have more responsibilities&#13;
than students&#13;
who attend other colleges, according&#13;
to Rubner.&#13;
"Most of our students,&#13;
young or old, work. Most students&#13;
are employed full or&#13;
part-time, even five hours a&#13;
week, doing something, but&#13;
it's a work obligation that&#13;
they are getting paid for,"&#13;
said Rubner.&#13;
Students are also affected&#13;
by friends, family, cultural&#13;
heritage, social activities,&#13;
health, and their financial situations,&#13;
and their education,&#13;
in turn, affects all of these&#13;
things, Rubner further explained.&#13;
"I want them to tell me,&#13;
through this audio-visual activity,&#13;
what's happening&#13;
there," he stated.&#13;
The students will have two&#13;
months to "think about it, to&#13;
focus on these kinds of interactions,"&#13;
and then they will&#13;
actually work on putting the&#13;
project together for one week&#13;
in November.&#13;
Photography, according to&#13;
Rubner, is an excellent medium&#13;
for telling a story.&#13;
"When you look at a photograph,&#13;
it should express what&#13;
the photographer is feeling,"&#13;
Rubner stated.&#13;
A tape recorder may be&#13;
used, but "it shouldn't need to&#13;
be," he added.&#13;
Are freshman seminars&#13;
worth the time? Rubner's answer&#13;
is a definate YES.&#13;
The seminar, which is offered&#13;
by the Education division&#13;
will be three credit&#13;
class on Tuesdays and Thursday&#13;
from 8-9:15 a.m&#13;
New work study program alleviates financial strain&#13;
College students can have&#13;
their study abroad fees reduced&#13;
by up to $1500 under a&#13;
new Work Study program offered&#13;
by the American Institute&#13;
For Foreign Study&#13;
(AIFS) of Greenwich, Connecticut.&#13;
Students participating in&#13;
AIFS college level programs&#13;
in London, Paris and Salzburg&#13;
can reduce their fees by&#13;
working as child care assistants&#13;
while they attend&#13;
school. In exchange for living&#13;
with European families and&#13;
assisting with the child care&#13;
for 15-20 hours per week, students&#13;
receive pocket money,&#13;
share in foreign friendships,&#13;
improve their language skills&#13;
and gain a new cultural understanding&#13;
of life overseas.&#13;
"This new Work/Study opportunity&#13;
will make a year of&#13;
study abroad affordable to&#13;
thousands of students," said&#13;
Henry C. Kahn, president of&#13;
the institute. "It is now less&#13;
expensive to study in London&#13;
under this new plan than in&#13;
most private U.S. colleges."&#13;
The Institue also offers full&#13;
time child care positions&#13;
without college study in Britain&#13;
and Germany.&#13;
The American Institute For&#13;
Foreign Study has provided&#13;
overseas education programs&#13;
for over 300,000 participants&#13;
since it was founded in 1964.&#13;
The Institute is a subsidiary&#13;
of AIFS, Inc., a publicly&#13;
owned company.&#13;
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Milwaukee Rep stages&#13;
Henrik Ibsen production&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theater presents Henrik&#13;
Ibsen's "Hedda Gabler," a&#13;
powerful dramatization of&#13;
emptiness and frustration,&#13;
Feb. 27 through April 5, in the&#13;
Todd Wehr Theater. Hedda, a&#13;
woman cut off from advancing&#13;
herself except through&#13;
matrimony, struggles feverishly&#13;
against the loss of control&#13;
in her own life. Faced&#13;
with the dire consequences of&#13;
her rebellious, anger-filled&#13;
actions, Hedda makes a fateful&#13;
decision.&#13;
Revised and directed by the&#13;
Obie Award-winning playwright&#13;
Maria Irene Fornes,&#13;
"Hedda Gabler" features&#13;
resident company member,&#13;
Marie Mathay, in the title&#13;
role. Other cast members include:&#13;
James Pickering (Jorgen&#13;
Tesman), Kenneth Albers&#13;
(Judge Brack), Rose Pickering&#13;
(Mrs. Elvsted), Tamu&#13;
Gray (Julianne Tesman) and&#13;
Richard Riehle (EUert Lovborg).&#13;
Joining the Rep for&#13;
this production is Adele Borouchoff&#13;
(Berte). Ms. Borouchoff&#13;
has performed with&#13;
Skylight, The Florentine&#13;
Opera and the Clavis Theatre.&#13;
The set designer is Donald&#13;
Eastman, with costumes&#13;
by Gabriel Berry and lights&#13;
by Anne Militello. Production&#13;
State Manager is Rob Goodman.&#13;
Talkbacks (post-show discussions&#13;
with the actors and&#13;
director) will take place on&#13;
Fridays, March 6, 13, 20, 27&#13;
and April 3.&#13;
There will be an interpreted&#13;
performance for the hearingimpaired&#13;
on Sunday, March&#13;
22, at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Tickets range from $5 to&#13;
$15. For information or reservations,&#13;
call 273-7206.&#13;
Very Special Arts help sought&#13;
Volunteers are currently&#13;
being sought to work at the&#13;
eighth annual Very Special&#13;
Arts Festival to be held Tuesday,&#13;
March 17, 1987 from 9&#13;
a.m. to 1 p.m.&#13;
The festival, which is held&#13;
annually during spring break,&#13;
provides hands-on arts experiences&#13;
for 1200 disabled students&#13;
from throughout Racine&#13;
and Kenosha counties.&#13;
Volunteers are needed to&#13;
serve as artist assistants,&#13;
group aides, errand runners,&#13;
greeters and more. Forms&#13;
and additional information&#13;
are available in Union 209, or&#13;
by calling Diane Welsh, Festival&#13;
Coordinator at 553-2279.&#13;
This worthwhile civic project&#13;
is an excellent way to&#13;
spend a day of spring break!&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 5, 1987 13&#13;
Mfe after Parkside&#13;
Alumnus takes bite out of life&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Eating at a different restaurant&#13;
almost every night of&#13;
the week may sound glamorous,&#13;
but it's work for Parkside&#13;
alumnus Willard Romantini.&#13;
"People think that being a&#13;
restaurant c ritic is a wonderful&#13;
job, an d it is exciting, but&#13;
I have tho se dreaded monthly&#13;
deadlines. I also destroy my&#13;
body physically in terms of&#13;
my diet. I had 40 p izzas in a&#13;
period of about six weeks,&#13;
and 35 hamburgers in a&#13;
month. It's not utopia, but I&#13;
wouldn't give it up for anything,"&#13;
said Romantini.&#13;
Romantini is the senior restaurant&#13;
critic for Milwaukee&#13;
Magazine, and a fifth-grade&#13;
teacher at Carollton Elementary&#13;
School, Oak Creek. He&#13;
received his Communication&#13;
B.A. and his education certification&#13;
from Parkside in&#13;
1975.&#13;
He has been teaching for 12&#13;
years, and began writing for&#13;
Milwaukee Magazine six&#13;
years ago.&#13;
"I had no writing experience&#13;
whatsoever. Over 300&#13;
people applied for the (restaurant&#13;
critic) job, and I got&#13;
it because I had worked as an&#13;
apprentice chef at Meadowbrook&#13;
Country Club before I&#13;
came to Parkside," said&#13;
Romantini.&#13;
Writing i s a craft one must&#13;
develop, feels Romantini, and&#13;
he has worked to develop his&#13;
style.&#13;
"When I first started writing&#13;
for Milwaukee Magazine&#13;
it had different owners and&#13;
we all had to write under&#13;
pseudonyms. When the new&#13;
editors came in they said to&#13;
me, "Your stuff really sucks,&#13;
but we'll work with you on&#13;
it." In that period of time I&#13;
learned how to write," said&#13;
Romantini.&#13;
As now one of the most prolific&#13;
writers for Milwaukee&#13;
Magazine, Romantini has two&#13;
monthly restaurant columns,&#13;
and writes about five feature&#13;
stories each issue. He is currently&#13;
working on a book,&#13;
"The Milwaukee Diner's&#13;
Guide," which will be&#13;
released later this year by&#13;
the Chicago Review Press.&#13;
Romantini has reviewed&#13;
over 600 restaurants in the&#13;
past six years and he finds it&#13;
a challenge to keep his food&#13;
column fresh.&#13;
"I write about food and&#13;
there are only so many adjectives&#13;
you can use. People&#13;
don't remember what you did&#13;
last year so you're only as&#13;
good as your last article. It&#13;
becomes easier and difficult&#13;
at the same time. You've&#13;
done so many articles that&#13;
you know how to do it, on the&#13;
other hand, you've done so&#13;
much you've said everything&#13;
before already. That's the difficulty&#13;
of the job," he said.&#13;
Romantini must also deal&#13;
with the people he might aggravate&#13;
with bad reviews.&#13;
"I have advertising people&#13;
who hate my guts because&#13;
editorial and advertising&#13;
don't mix. The sales people&#13;
get mad because they've sold&#13;
a big ad to a restaurant and I&#13;
trash their client. The restaurants&#13;
spend a lot of money&#13;
advertising in the magazine&#13;
and they think t hey get me to&#13;
go along with it, but it just&#13;
doesn't work that way," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Milwaukee's many restaurant-&#13;
goers clamor for Romantini's&#13;
advice. Every Thursday&#13;
at 7:10 a.m. he can be heard&#13;
on WKTI with Bob Reitman&#13;
and Gene Mueller, and occasionally&#13;
on WTMJ's Kathleen&#13;
Dunn radio show, to discuss&#13;
local restaurants. He also&#13;
speaks before various groups&#13;
in Milwaukee.&#13;
"My wife and I eat out for&#13;
recreation as well, so I spend&#13;
an incredible amount of time&#13;
in restaurants and talking&#13;
about restaurants. It seems&#13;
that whenever people meet&#13;
me that's all they want to&#13;
talk about. I'm flattered to be&#13;
used as a reference, but no&#13;
one ever asks me about my&#13;
teaching profession," said&#13;
Romantini.&#13;
With all the attention he&#13;
gets for being a critic with&#13;
Milwaukee Magazine, it may&#13;
be surprising that he continues&#13;
to teach school full time.&#13;
"I consider giving up teaching&#13;
ones a month," he said&#13;
half seriously.&#13;
"But the two jobs counteract&#13;
one another and provide a&#13;
very wonderful balance. In&#13;
the classroom I don't have to&#13;
put on a three-piece suit and&#13;
carry a briefcase like I do&#13;
when I work at the magazine&#13;
in the corporate structure. I&#13;
enjoy teaching. The rewards&#13;
aren't monetary at all, but&#13;
it's really great when the little&#13;
lightbulb goes on above&#13;
the student's heads and&#13;
you're responsible," he said.&#13;
But as a teacher, writer,&#13;
author, radio regular, and&#13;
community speaker, has this&#13;
restaurant critic bitten off&#13;
more than he can chew? Not&#13;
at all. Romantini is used to&#13;
digesting many activities.&#13;
Romantini obtained his degree&#13;
and education certification&#13;
in only three years and&#13;
maintained high grades. He&#13;
was able to do this by taking&#13;
18-20 credits each semester&#13;
and 12-15 credits each summer.&#13;
He also worked in the&#13;
now defunct Print Shop.&#13;
"I was 24 when I started at&#13;
Parkside, so my priority was&#13;
getting my degree. I was&#13;
adept at playing college, and&#13;
I feel it taught me discipline,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Romantini thinks writing&#13;
well professionally is much&#13;
different than doing well in&#13;
school.&#13;
"Everything you turn in&#13;
(when you're writing professionally)&#13;
has to be your best&#13;
work. When you put your&#13;
name on something you can't&#13;
hand in a 'B' paper and get&#13;
away with it. It has to be an&#13;
'A' when you're writing professionally.&#13;
Some of them will&#13;
be better than others, but&#13;
they all have to be your best&#13;
shot. That's quite different&#13;
than at the university when&#13;
you find out what little you&#13;
have to do to get an 'A.'&#13;
That's the reality of the job,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
What a dvice would he give&#13;
to students interested in writing&#13;
professionally? "Do as&#13;
much as you can, even if it&#13;
means writing for small tabloids,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
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PSGA competes in&#13;
College Bowl&#13;
by Jeff Dreher&#13;
Parkside's PSGA Championship&#13;
College Bowl Team&#13;
of Brian Hogan, Fred Monarch,&#13;
Jan Kratochvil and Jeff&#13;
Dreher attended the Region B&#13;
, Tournament in Marquette&#13;
Michigan from February 19-&#13;
21st. The Tournament was&#13;
held at Northern Michigan&#13;
University and Great Lakes&#13;
Olympic Training Center. It&#13;
was entitled "Varsity Sport&#13;
Of The Mind."&#13;
The competitors at the tournament&#13;
were from ten universities&#13;
in the states of Michigan,&#13;
Illinois and Wisconsin.&#13;
Four of the ten teams were&#13;
from Division I schools, including&#13;
the reigning National&#13;
Champions, UW Madison.&#13;
The competition allowed for&#13;
two graduate students on&#13;
each team.&#13;
Even against those odds,&#13;
Parkside's College Bowl&#13;
Team rose to the challenge.&#13;
In the first round the team&#13;
defeated UW Milwaukee.&#13;
In the second round UW&#13;
Madison was drawn, which&#13;
caused Parkside's team to&#13;
prepare for a long hard battle.&#13;
UW Madison sent their&#13;
all-star team. They gradually&#13;
overwhelmed the PSGA team&#13;
with the speed of answering&#13;
the questions. Parkside was&#13;
respectable, though, scoring&#13;
90 points against their 240&#13;
points.&#13;
In Parkside's final round,&#13;
Beloit College soundlv defeated&#13;
PSGA Parkside was&#13;
defeated by a Beloit Team&#13;
that was well experienced&#13;
from prior years of competition.&#13;
That loss knocked Parkside&#13;
from the competiton because&#13;
it was based on a double&#13;
loss elimination.&#13;
The winning team ended up&#13;
being UW Madison, who won&#13;
two of three matches over&#13;
Northwestern to take the&#13;
title. Beloit, on the other&#13;
hand, was knocked out in the&#13;
semi-final round.&#13;
University ol Wisconsin&#13;
Platteville&#13;
I. ..#V»&#13;
See Castles in the Air&#13;
And learn your way around the world&#13;
"If you have built castles in the air, now put the&#13;
foundations under them .'' Henry David Thoremu&#13;
Study in London for $3475 per semester. Includes air fare,&#13;
resident tuition, field trips, family stay with meals.&#13;
Study in Seville, Spain, for $2725 per semester. Includes resident&#13;
tuition, field trips, family stay with meals. No foreign language&#13;
profiency required.&#13;
Semester programs also in France and Mexico.&#13;
For further information, write or call:&#13;
institute for Study Abroad Programs&#13;
308 Warner Hall&#13;
University of Wisconsin-PIatteville&#13;
1 University Plaza&#13;
Platteville, Wisconsin 53818-3099&#13;
608-342-1726&#13;
14 Thursday, March 5, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Parkside prepared grads&#13;
by Michelle Eirich&#13;
Parkside's chapter of the&#13;
Psi Chi Psychology Club recently&#13;
held a panel discussion&#13;
with former graduates regarding&#13;
their experiences and&#13;
how their background in psychology&#13;
has helped them.&#13;
Psi Chi is a national honor&#13;
society which was founded in&#13;
1929 for the purpose of stimulating,&#13;
encouraging and maintaining&#13;
scholarship in psychology.&#13;
Psi Chi is an affiliate&#13;
of the American Psychology&#13;
Association and a member of&#13;
the Association of College&#13;
Honor Societies.&#13;
Linda Sanders, James&#13;
Twoeme, and Gale Cole all&#13;
graduated from Parkside&#13;
with a bachelor's degree in&#13;
psychology. The degree has&#13;
led each of them into successful&#13;
directions.&#13;
Sanders has decided to further&#13;
her education by attending&#13;
graduate school. She is&#13;
presently enrolled at the Illinois&#13;
Institute of Technology&#13;
and is applying for a research&#13;
assistant position. She feels&#13;
attending Parkside has&#13;
helped her greatly. "Parkside&#13;
has given me an excellent&#13;
base for graduate school. My&#13;
advice to undergraduates, in&#13;
any field, is to learn as much&#13;
as you can in undergraduate&#13;
school. You are definitely&#13;
going to need it for graduate&#13;
school," explained Sanders.&#13;
Twoeme has chosen to use&#13;
his psychology degree to better&#13;
himself. He owns a bookbinding&#13;
business which does&#13;
not call for any use of psychology,&#13;
but he feels that who&#13;
you are and what you do are&#13;
two different things. "Just because&#13;
you major in something&#13;
doesn't mean you have to be&#13;
it. If it makes you a better&#13;
person, it has fulfilled its&#13;
function," commented&#13;
Twoeme.&#13;
Cole's bachelor's degree in&#13;
psychology has led her to a&#13;
top job and pay level in only&#13;
two and a half years. She is&#13;
currently working as a probation&#13;
agent/social worker for&#13;
the state of Wisconsin. "My&#13;
good base from Parkside led&#13;
to my entry job. Hard work&#13;
and several promotions led to&#13;
my top level promotion and&#13;
salary," explained Cole. She&#13;
also feels that Psi Chi is an&#13;
excellent club to prepare psychology&#13;
students for the future.&#13;
Our Psi Chi Psychology&#13;
Club is open to anyone who is&#13;
interested in joining. In addition,&#13;
members are encouraged&#13;
to strive for academic&#13;
excellence. Another installation&#13;
of Psi Chi members is&#13;
planned for April 29, 1987. If&#13;
anyone is interested in&#13;
becoming a member of Psi&#13;
Chi, pleasse contact Jeanne&#13;
Thomas, assistant professor&#13;
of psychology (MOLN 288),&#13;
for an applicaiton.&#13;
njfm For Tickets&#13;
Contact:&#13;
Michael Rohl&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
FRIDAY MARCH 27, 1987&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
WITH&#13;
SPECIAL GUEST&#13;
RACINE LABOR CENTER&#13;
2100 LAYARD AVE.&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN&#13;
ST. HELENS&#13;
TICKETS ON SALE AT ALL&#13;
MAINSTREAM RECORD STORES&#13;
GRAND CENTRAL RECORDS, KENOSHA&#13;
TICKETS SOLD AT THE DOOR THE NIGHT OF THE SHOW&#13;
SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY&#13;
A ROCKSHOW PRODUCTIONS PRESENTATION&#13;
Blind-ed by the light Photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
.Ight and shadow look a bit different through the eye of this window in the Uhion buildng.&#13;
Shape up! i&#13;
Shape Up from pa ge 19&#13;
pete to lift the most weight.&#13;
Weight lifting actually has&#13;
two divisions; power lifting&#13;
and the Olympic lifts.&#13;
Weight training is using resistance&#13;
exercises to improve&#13;
fitness, muscle tone or a&#13;
sport skill. All sport skills can&#13;
benefit from weight training&#13;
because weight training develops&#13;
strength, endurance&#13;
and co-ordination and all&#13;
sport skills use those three&#13;
things.&#13;
All of this seems very simple&#13;
but when a person walks&#13;
into a gym or buys a barbell&#13;
set for the first time, a mass&#13;
of information and ideas is&#13;
presented all at once. This&#13;
can leave a beginner bewildered,&#13;
confused and not as&#13;
motivated.&#13;
Here are some straight&#13;
facts. Resistance exercises&#13;
require muscle contraction.&#13;
There are three types of muscle&#13;
contraction: isometric,&#13;
H.E.L.P. (Hispanics Easing Laden People)&#13;
Presents&#13;
THE MEXICAN FOLKLORIC&#13;
DANCE COMPANY&#13;
OF CHICAGO&#13;
Varied Dance Live&#13;
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50 Dancers...!&#13;
Hundreds of Colorful Costumes...!&#13;
This Ballet has Something for every Member&#13;
of Your Family, you must see it...!&#13;
Saturday, March 7, 1987 • 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Communication Arts Auditorium&#13;
U.W. Parkside&#13;
Donation $5.00 Advance $6.00 at Door&#13;
For tickets and information call 658-1063&#13;
isotonic and isokinetic.&#13;
Isometric contraction is&#13;
static contraction; the muscles&#13;
contract but nothing is.&#13;
moved. The force the muscle&#13;
applies is equal to gravity.&#13;
This type of resistance work&#13;
develops very specific&#13;
strength. It is most commonly&#13;
associated with putting two&#13;
hands together and pressing&#13;
or putting arms in a door and&#13;
pressing out.&#13;
Isotonic contraction is when&#13;
the muscle is stressed and&#13;
there is movement through a&#13;
range of motion. This type of&#13;
contraction develops usable&#13;
strength and flexibility. Good&#13;
examples are push-ups and&#13;
chin-ups where a full range of&#13;
motion is used.&#13;
Isokinetic contraction is&#13;
similar to isotonic contraction&#13;
with the exception of one&#13;
thing - the muscles exert the&#13;
same force through the movement.&#13;
A muscle that isometrically&#13;
contracts changes the&#13;
amount of force through out&#13;
the movement due to the&#13;
change of angle or a joint.&#13;
Because of the use of cams in&#13;
weight training equipment&#13;
such as Nautilus, isokinetic&#13;
contractions are possible.&#13;
These are the basic concepts&#13;
needed to understand&#13;
weight training.&#13;
ODBG0B0 0000000&#13;
OOOEO00 00000(10&#13;
DGGBEOO 0000000&#13;
•BE BQBE300 O00&#13;
•BE BBBB 000000&#13;
OO0H0 O00 00000&#13;
•000000000&#13;
•OS 0000 R 0 00 000&#13;
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000 000&#13;
000 000&#13;
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L I N&#13;
15 RANGER&#13;
Thursday, March 5, 1987 entertainment&#13;
Films on Campus&#13;
Brando classics slated for Union Cinema&#13;
A STREETCAR NAMED&#13;
DESIRE&#13;
PAB kicks off Brando week&#13;
with one of his finest performances,&#13;
as the brutal&#13;
Stanley Kowalski in this stark&#13;
drama directed by Elia&#13;
Kazan.&#13;
Although the film's real&#13;
focus is Vivian Leigh's Stella,&#13;
whose psychological infirmity&#13;
shatters her relationship with&#13;
her family, Brando is "Streetcar's"&#13;
true draw, radiating&#13;
raw power and malice in a&#13;
confused, dull manner.&#13;
An excellent example of&#13;
why Brando's name ever became&#13;
synonymous with the&#13;
art of good acting.&#13;
ON THE WATERFRONT&#13;
Kazan helmed this Brando&#13;
starrer as well and the&#13;
actor's development in the&#13;
four years between this film&#13;
and "Streetcar" is evident.&#13;
Turning in what most consider&#13;
the best performance of&#13;
his young years, Brando stars&#13;
as a tough dockworker whose&#13;
relationships with his coworkers&#13;
(including Rod Steiger,&#13;
in his first role of any notoriety)&#13;
are analyzed longingly&#13;
by the camera.&#13;
Of all Brando's celebrated&#13;
roles, this is perhaps the one&#13;
in which his uncanny ability&#13;
to articulate emotion in such&#13;
a coarse, inarticulate way is&#13;
most evident. Deservedly, he&#13;
earned an Oscar.&#13;
THE GODFATHER&#13;
In the last great performance&#13;
of his career (some of&#13;
us are still waiting for him to&#13;
lose weight and get off his&#13;
private island for one last&#13;
film), Brando stars as the patriarch&#13;
of a high-ranking&#13;
Mafia family in director&#13;
Francis Ford Coppola's stirring&#13;
character study.&#13;
As Don Vito Corleone,&#13;
Brando rises above the&#13;
stereotypical way mobsters&#13;
have been portrayed and&#13;
paints his character as a&#13;
calm, calculated businessman&#13;
whose business just happens&#13;
to include murder and extortion.&#13;
A1 Pacino is superb as&#13;
Vito's son Michael, who shuns&#13;
the family occupation until&#13;
circumstances require him to&#13;
enter the fray to save his father's&#13;
life and honor. In this&#13;
and other scenarios. Coppola's&#13;
message is clear: the&#13;
Mafia lifestyle is one in which&#13;
honor and loyalty mean more&#13;
than life.&#13;
"Godfather II" is a better&#13;
film, but for Brando fans&#13;
Marlon Brando and Eva Marie Saint "On the Waterfront.'&#13;
there's not anything more re- epic,&#13;
warding than this original -•Nick Toper&#13;
Book Review&#13;
Hitchcock's work examined in new anthology&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Studies on Alfred Hitchcock&#13;
are not exactly rare, as many&#13;
books have covered this master&#13;
filmmaker's work.&#13;
However, not quite as well&#13;
as the diverse and very analytical&#13;
"A Hitchcock Reader"&#13;
(Iowa State University&#13;
Press).&#13;
Edited by Marshall Deutelbaum&#13;
and Leland Pogue, this&#13;
tome is a fascinating collection&#13;
of scholarly essays by&#13;
various important writers on&#13;
THE FAR SIDE&#13;
the cinema, covering virtually&#13;
every aspect of Hitchcock's&#13;
genius.&#13;
The essays are compiled&#13;
into five categories or parts.&#13;
These include "Taking Hitchcock&#13;
Seriously," which focuses&#13;
on the filmmaking art&#13;
of this master director;&#13;
"Hitchcock in Britain," which&#13;
studies the too-often overlooked&#13;
early works; "Hitchcock&#13;
in Hollywood," which&#13;
features essays of the moreor-&#13;
less obvious sort (Robin&#13;
Wood's writings on the classic&#13;
"Strangers on a Train" is the&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
highlight here); "The Later&#13;
Films," which deals with the&#13;
more notable films like&#13;
"Rear Window" and "North&#13;
by Northwest;" and, finally,&#13;
"Hitchcock and Film&#13;
Theory," a "Psycho" dossier,&#13;
which studies Hitchcock's&#13;
definitive work, the highlight&#13;
here being co-editor Pogue's&#13;
brilliant essay on "Psycho"&#13;
and film classicism.&#13;
This is the perfect handbook&#13;
for students of film, professors&#13;
and libraries.&#13;
Thursday is&#13;
TEX-MEX FEST&#13;
• Vz price&#13;
appetizers&#13;
$150&#13;
• Mexican&#13;
Beers&#13;
• Texas Teas&#13;
• Mugs of&#13;
Margaritas&#13;
REGENCY MALL MEXICAN RESTAURANTE&#13;
/&#13;
16 Thursday, March 5, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Record Review&#13;
Deep Purple continue to comeback trail&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
The classic comeback last&#13;
year was Deep Purple and&#13;
their Mercury LP "Perfect&#13;
Strangers."&#13;
Now with their latest,&#13;
"House of Blue Light," the&#13;
band has proven its staying&#13;
power in contemporary&#13;
music.&#13;
The power of the initial&#13;
comeback is slightly, and understandably&#13;
diluted, but that&#13;
doesn't keep this latest Mercury&#13;
release from containing&#13;
some fine Purple tracks including&#13;
"Bad Attitude,"&#13;
"Hard Lovin' Woman," and&#13;
"Call of the Wild," which is&#13;
now getting the most radio&#13;
airplay.&#13;
Production by bassist&#13;
Roger Glover tends to emphasize&#13;
his dabbling in syntehsizers&#13;
a bit much. Where Deep&#13;
Purple is usually noted for&#13;
blending Ritchie Blackmore's&#13;
guitars and Jon Lord's keyboards&#13;
with perfect cohesion.&#13;
Glover's production adds unnecessary&#13;
weight with extra&#13;
electronics. This doesn't&#13;
cause the group to come off&#13;
sounding like Phil Collins, but&#13;
it does keep them from&#13;
achieving the same passion&#13;
as had been exhibited on&#13;
tracks like "Gypsy's Kiss"&#13;
c R A N K ' S&#13;
DINER&#13;
COCO&#13;
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o CDCD&#13;
'Cause Good Food Is Never Out Off Style.&#13;
Diners are trendy. Sixty years of&#13;
pleasing Kenosha's palates and&#13;
pocketbooks, and now, all of a&#13;
sudden...we're trendy, imagine&#13;
that.&#13;
So, whether you're fond of&#13;
fashion or a fan of fine food, here's&#13;
some good news:&#13;
Frank's Diner is open for&#13;
dinner. We've expanded our menu&#13;
and extend our hours to 8 pm,&#13;
Monday through Friday.&#13;
Delicious meals at diner prices.&#13;
Imagine that.&#13;
Open Mon.-Fri. 6 A.M.-8 P.M.&#13;
Open Sat. 7 A1M.-2 P.M.&#13;
Open Sun. 7 A.M.-1 P.M.&#13;
508-58th Street&#13;
657-1017&#13;
Ian Pace, Jon Lord, Ian Gillan, Ritchie Blackmore, Roger Giover.&#13;
from "Perfect Strangers."&#13;
The music is quite fundamental&#13;
from a rock standpoint.&#13;
Deep Purple's most&#13;
noted track is the 1973 rocker&#13;
"Smoke on the Water," which&#13;
epitomizes primary rock&#13;
backbeat and the most primitive&#13;
distorted guitar riffs&#13;
combined to produce rhythms&#13;
that are immediately captivating&#13;
to the listener (Joan&#13;
Jett's 1980 hit "I Love Rock&#13;
and Roll" is also noteworthy&#13;
as doing this). The fundamen-&#13;
Guliver (Soundwings)&#13;
Gulliver's Travels are nc&#13;
longer stories just for children.&#13;
"Gulliver," from&#13;
Soundwings (distributed by&#13;
The Welk Record Group),&#13;
make these timeless stories&#13;
for grown-ups again.&#13;
The recording is narrated&#13;
by Sir John Gielgud and accompanied&#13;
by the Royal Philharmonic&#13;
Orchestra. The&#13;
story is based on Johnathon&#13;
Swift's 1729 novel about the&#13;
adventures of Lemuel Gulliver&#13;
on "A Voyage To Lilliput,"&#13;
and "A Voyage to Brobdingnag,"&#13;
with the narration written&#13;
by Larry Gelbart. Even&#13;
poor Gulliver's indiscretions&#13;
are included in the story,&#13;
such as when he put out a&#13;
great fire in Lilliput when he&#13;
"unbuttoned his breeches and&#13;
produced a stream that&#13;
douced the fire in two&#13;
shakes." Obviously the story&#13;
contains all the irony and satire&#13;
intended in Swift's original&#13;
masterpiece, and that are&#13;
tal musical structure of&#13;
"House of Blue Light" is&#13;
merely a backdrop for a&#13;
much fuller instrumental and&#13;
melodic sound than had been&#13;
displayed on the group's&#13;
seventies efforts.&#13;
Ian Gillan's vocals are&#13;
again at the forefront, the&#13;
group emphasizing vocal harmonies&#13;
far more on this LP&#13;
than ever before. In fact Gillan&#13;
sounds so good, it allows&#13;
the listener to forget the&#13;
singer's abortive attempt to&#13;
Short Cuts&#13;
often omitted from the waterdowned&#13;
versions for children.&#13;
Gielgud's powerful voice&#13;
and English accent command&#13;
the listener's attention, and&#13;
gives credibility to Gulliver's&#13;
adventures which begin in&#13;
England. The musical score,&#13;
composed and conducted by&#13;
Patrick Williams, breaths&#13;
new life into the story, and&#13;
the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra&#13;
do an excellent job of&#13;
musically demonstrating the&#13;
excitment, bewilderment and&#13;
emotion that Gulliver would&#13;
have felt.&#13;
"Gulliver" is exciting musically&#13;
and narritively, but it is&#13;
important not to miss Swift's&#13;
intention, which was social&#13;
commentary. Gulliver's real&#13;
discovery is that whomever&#13;
he met, very small or very&#13;
big, "was only himself in different&#13;
guises", and that life is&#13;
an adventure and an opportunity&#13;
to discover. So "Gulliver"&#13;
is not exclusively for&#13;
adults, but a great adventure&#13;
fill in as Black Sabbath lead&#13;
vocalist on the dreadful&#13;
"Born Again" LP.&#13;
And Ritchie Blackmore&#13;
swings his axe^ greater than&#13;
he ever had with his own&#13;
group (Rainbow).&#13;
"House of Blue Light" is a&#13;
nice example of rock purity&#13;
with layers of melodic sound&#13;
that don't fall victim to production&#13;
to any great degree.&#13;
This is one comeback that is&#13;
most welcome.&#13;
PHONE 414-634-4156&#13;
EASTSIDE&#13;
EMPORIUM&#13;
CUSTOM BLENDED PIPE • PAPERBACK BOOK TRADF&#13;
TOBACCOS CENTER&#13;
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• SHIP WITH EZZZZ SERVICE&#13;
300 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE, WI 53403&#13;
for the family - discover it.&#13;
--Jennie Tunkxexcz&#13;
The Big Dish (Warner)&#13;
Mellow rock with a soothing&#13;
voice, quick beat, slick production,&#13;
big horn backups,&#13;
and lyrics with a commentary&#13;
on the human condition&#13;
seems to be the Top 40 formula&#13;
of the day (ie. David and&#13;
David or Bruce Hornsby).&#13;
Big Dish has captured the essence&#13;
of this formula.&#13;
With their debut single,&#13;
"Slide, slowly climbing the&#13;
charts with its tame rock&#13;
style, this band has secured&#13;
its position as masters of the&#13;
latest musical trend. Unfortunately,&#13;
it seems that they&#13;
are afraid to try anything&#13;
new with this style. The Big&#13;
Dish is locked into emotional&#13;
and musical middle ground,&#13;
with their slow songs, such as&#13;
"Beyond The Pale", being&#13;
cut short of inspiration or depression&#13;
and their rock songs,&#13;
"Prospect Street", for example,&#13;
stopping before they start&#13;
to move and pick up energy.&#13;
They do seem to have the capability&#13;
for innovation, as&#13;
heard in "Second Swimmer",&#13;
a combination of distinctly&#13;
separate sounds into one complete&#13;
rhythm/march, but they&#13;
fail to evidence it on most of&#13;
the other tracks.&#13;
Craftsmanship on the LP is&#13;
excellent. Steve Lindsay's&#13;
vocals come across very&#13;
smoothly, reminiscent of&#13;
Roxy Music's emotional overtones.&#13;
-Tyson Wn,i.lUa„a&#13;
RANGER Thursday&#13;
_ _!___ • :&#13;
Movie Review&#13;
Hoosiers"n ice dose ofa s entimentality 6 6&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Gene Hackman has a knack&#13;
for playing extremely likeable&#13;
characters in spite of the&#13;
roles he's been offered.&#13;
So in a film like "Hoosiers,"&#13;
where he actually has&#13;
a likeable role, it enhances&#13;
Over The Top&#13;
Stallone's latest is somewhat&#13;
an improvement over&#13;
the recent "Rocky 4,"&#13;
"Rambo," and "Cobra," but&#13;
only due to its lack of violence.&#13;
What we have here is audience&#13;
manipulation from another&#13;
perspective, that being&#13;
through the same sort of&#13;
hackneyed filial anguish&#13;
aspect as any sappy Wallace&#13;
Beery picture of the thirties&#13;
and forties.&#13;
The picture is complete in&#13;
its attention to detail. A dying&#13;
mom, a fresh faced rich kid,&#13;
a surrogate father, and Super&#13;
Stallone as the real Dad&#13;
whose desertion of the family&#13;
years before is forgotten&#13;
since he's now a nice, quietspoken&#13;
musclebound trucker&#13;
who's learned his lesson.&#13;
The sub-plot, dealing with&#13;
arm wrestling championships,&#13;
allows for Stallone to&#13;
use the Rocky formula once&#13;
again. Stallone is not the pioneer&#13;
of this narrative style,&#13;
but simply re-introduced it to&#13;
commercial filmmaking after&#13;
it layed dormant after scores&#13;
of forties "B" pictues. Now&#13;
that he is still using this formula,&#13;
it is time to start wondering&#13;
how he manages to&#13;
still rake in decent box office.&#13;
Perhaps the moviegoers&#13;
are even dumber than the&#13;
characters Stallone has been&#13;
playing.&#13;
-Jim Neibaur&#13;
Some Kind of Wonderful&#13;
The teenage angst cinema&#13;
of John Hughes has apparently&#13;
run dry of innovation.&#13;
Where "Pretty in Pink"&#13;
was basically arather simple&#13;
attempt at a dramatic "Sixteen&#13;
Candles," "Some Kind of&#13;
wonderful" is generally a&#13;
slapdash attempt at box office&#13;
pay dirt, emerging as no&#13;
more than a scene-for-scene&#13;
reworking of "Pretty in&#13;
Pink" with a change in gender&#13;
among the principal cast&#13;
members.&#13;
While in many ways this&#13;
film is superior to "Pretty in&#13;
Pink," (if they make one&#13;
more film about Molly Ringwald's&#13;
belief that a date to&#13;
the prom will make or break&#13;
the future of civlization...), it&#13;
can't hide its simplistic shortcomings.&#13;
It lakes the uncalculated,&#13;
natural humor of "Sixteen&#13;
Candles" and is far from&#13;
the facts of adolescent inner&#13;
feelings that made "The&#13;
his likeability even further.&#13;
This time he's a high school&#13;
basketball coach, complete&#13;
with sordid past, moving into&#13;
a small conservative Indiana&#13;
community in 1951. He must&#13;
prove himself to the townsfolk&#13;
and ultimately succeeds,&#13;
a trite formula to be sure.&#13;
Breakfast Club" such an important&#13;
film about young people.&#13;
The young performers do a&#13;
nice job of playing the, by&#13;
now, stereotypical Hughes&#13;
roles, giving the viewer&#13;
plenty of emotional power in&#13;
their display of relationships,&#13;
their importance and ultimate&#13;
accent on individuality.&#13;
Despite its somewhat hackneyed&#13;
foundations, this film is&#13;
about perfect from every&#13;
other aspect. All of the various&#13;
"types" utilized to propell&#13;
Angelo Pizzo's screenplay&#13;
are presented with necessary&#13;
depth and do not come&#13;
off as mere caricatures. The&#13;
narrative very carefully&#13;
But the ending is every bit as&#13;
outrageous as in "Pretty in&#13;
Pink," without being presented&#13;
for blatant humorous effect.&#13;
Perhaps the lack of&#13;
freshness in "Some Kind of&#13;
Wonderful" is the reason why&#13;
Hughes' next cinematic venture&#13;
is a return to non-adolescent&#13;
filmmaking .-Jim Neibaur&#13;
shows, through these characters,&#13;
the blind refusal of&#13;
small town persons to accept&#13;
any changes, even those that&#13;
are positive, in order to preserve&#13;
the security of their&#13;
limited lifestyles. This bigscreen&#13;
Mayberry is shown&#13;
with such careful attention to&#13;
detail that the viewer must&#13;
constantly be reminded that&#13;
this is not an old movie.&#13;
Hackman's passions are exhibited&#13;
with an emphasis on&#13;
his being unafraid to stand&#13;
alone, due mostly to the&#13;
events he had to face up to&#13;
prior to coming into this position.&#13;
His altruism not only&#13;
leads him to success as a&#13;
coach, but in rehabilitating&#13;
town drunk Dennis Hopper&#13;
(in yet another brilliant dere-&#13;
March 5, 1987 17&#13;
lict portrayal) by merely giving&#13;
him a chance.&#13;
The film moves along at a&#13;
perfect pace, allowing events&#13;
to gradually unfold in a neat,&#13;
orderly fashion. And under&#13;
this structure, none of it looks&#13;
the least bit corny or trite,&#13;
but always comes off as&#13;
fresh, interesting and entertaining.&#13;
"Hoosiers" is a nice example&#13;
of how American filmmaking&#13;
manages to utilize its&#13;
older methods successfully by&#13;
presenting these methods&#13;
with artistic care and close&#13;
attention to precise cinematic •&#13;
detail. In lieu of more commercial&#13;
entries presently&#13;
haunting the commercial&#13;
movie houses, "Hoosiers" is&#13;
a film that should not be&#13;
overlooked.&#13;
Selected Shorts&#13;
Stallone and Rick Zumwalt strain through "Over the Top."&#13;
Ron's Place Sandwiches and Cocktails&#13;
Sundays:&#13;
Bloody Marys 2forl,&#13;
12-4 p.m.&#13;
Tuesdays:&#13;
"South of the&#13;
Border Day"&#13;
Margaritas&#13;
Pina coladas&#13;
Dreamsicles&#13;
$1.50&#13;
Opens Mon-Sat 11 am&#13;
Sundays 12 noon&#13;
3301 52nd&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
657-4455&#13;
collegiate crossword&#13;
© Edward Julius Collegiate CW79-7&#13;
Crossword Answers page 14&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Anger (2 wds.)&#13;
8 Began again&#13;
15 Ubiquitous (2 wds.)&#13;
16 Gormandized&#13;
17 Division in music&#13;
18 Seasoned pro&#13;
19 Classifieds&#13;
20 Route to success&#13;
22 "There 1940&#13;
song&#13;
23 ad judicata&#13;
24 Robert of song&#13;
25 Part of a sonnet&#13;
28 Guinness, et al.&#13;
30 Washington job, for&#13;
short&#13;
32 Cognizant&#13;
33 Sweet drink&#13;
34 In a mess&#13;
36 Secular&#13;
38 As old as the hills&#13;
39 Boisterous&#13;
43 Some MIT graduates,&#13;
for short&#13;
46 Cousteau's milieu&#13;
47 Kin of G.R.E..&#13;
48 Awaiting (2 wds.)&#13;
50 Frightens&#13;
52 Horace or Thomas&#13;
54 To's partner&#13;
55 Many b ills&#13;
56 Eye parts&#13;
58 Neighbor of Argentina&#13;
(abbr.)&#13;
59 Nonpaying tenant,&#13;
potentially&#13;
62 Mawkishly sentimental&#13;
64 Family derivation&#13;
65 Supposed&#13;
66 Like some beer&#13;
67 Post office&#13;
inventory&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 "Cleopatra Jones"&#13;
star, Dobson&#13;
2 Cite&#13;
3 Placed in a&#13;
particular group&#13;
4 Boxing punches&#13;
5 Rudimentary seeds&#13;
6 Savage&#13;
7 Nine Danish kings&#13;
8 Satisfy one's&#13;
wanderlust&#13;
9 Between Tinker and&#13;
Chance&#13;
10 Prepared&#13;
11 Actress Mary&#13;
12 Kind of bliss&#13;
13 Kin to a whatnot&#13;
14 Signified&#13;
21 Sandra and Ruby&#13;
26 Overhang&#13;
27 Ann-Margret's&#13;
birthplace&#13;
29 Last place&#13;
31 Illusory&#13;
34 599, to Cato&#13;
35 Type of bagel&#13;
37 " Misbehavin"'&#13;
39 New M exico city&#13;
40 Marc Antony's&#13;
wife&#13;
41 Kind of indicator&#13;
42 " Said," Neil&#13;
Diamond song&#13;
44 Shine brilliantly&#13;
45 More contrite&#13;
48 Injury's complement&#13;
49 Something a doctor&#13;
makes&#13;
51 Series of misfortunes&#13;
53 Fraser of tennis&#13;
57 Surgeon Walter&#13;
60 So-so grade&#13;
61 Prepare to feather&#13;
63 Motown (abbr.)&#13;
18 Thursday, March 5, 1987 RANGER&#13;
NAIA National Indoor track meet&#13;
Great performances, near misses for Parkside women&#13;
by Michael J. Rohl&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Luck is said to be a lady&#13;
and also to be when preparation&#13;
and opportunity meet.&#13;
Well, this past weekend some&#13;
very well-prepared ladies met&#13;
opportunity and luck wasn't&#13;
anywhere near by.&#13;
In track and field, races&#13;
are sometimes decided by a&#13;
one-hundreth of a second.&#13;
That is faster than you can&#13;
read this word. It is also ten&#13;
times faster than a person&#13;
can snap their fingers or&#13;
blink. The fastest anyone can&#13;
start and stop a watch is&#13;
maybe four or five hundredths&#13;
of a second. The onlyway&#13;
this kind of time can be&#13;
accurately measured is with&#13;
a fully automatic timer and a&#13;
winner can only be chosen by&#13;
a photograph.&#13;
This is important to understand&#13;
because this is what&#13;
separated Michelle Marter of&#13;
Parkside and Donna Stickelmier&#13;
of Kearney State as they&#13;
both raced to a new national&#13;
record. Marter's time was 4:&#13;
57.79 and the winner's 4:47.78,&#13;
a difference of .01.&#13;
Marter is the second Parkside&#13;
woman ever to break the&#13;
five minute mark - only Kim&#13;
Merritt has done so before.&#13;
Marter's only comments after&#13;
the race were "I ran as fast&#13;
as I could," and "I'm so&#13;
sore."&#13;
Indeed, she did run as fast&#13;
as she could- so fast, in fact,&#13;
that at the finish she fell&#13;
sprawling onto the wooden&#13;
track surface, bruising and&#13;
scraping herself rather badly.&#13;
Marter's race wasn't the&#13;
only hair-raising event on the&#13;
track last Saturday. Sarah&#13;
Hiett also finished a close&#13;
second in the 1000 yd. run.&#13;
Hiett's desire to win the&#13;
race was so great that when&#13;
the pace slowed she did not&#13;
hesitate to take the lead. She&#13;
stayed there until Kathy Taylor&#13;
of Prairie Vies (Texas)&#13;
passed her in the last lap.&#13;
Taylor's time was 2:37,&#13;
Hiett's 2:38.&#13;
' Hiett shouldn't feel bad&#13;
about the race because Taylor&#13;
went on to win the 880, anchor&#13;
her mile and two mile&#13;
relay teams to victory and be&#13;
named the meets outstanding&#13;
performer.&#13;
But Hiett and Marter&#13;
weren't done racing yet.&#13;
Later in the day they teamed&#13;
up with Jilleen Fobair and&#13;
Yolanda Finley in the distance&#13;
medley relay. The distance&#13;
medley is made of four&#13;
distances - 440, 880, % mile&#13;
and mile. Hiett was the opening&#13;
leg, running the 880, then&#13;
Finley ran the 440 leg, then&#13;
Fobair ran the % and Marter&#13;
-anchored the race.&#13;
The Parkside team easily&#13;
won their heat with a time of&#13;
9:26.42. But Kearney State&#13;
was in the second heat and&#13;
they won their race in 9:26.32.&#13;
All the Parkside women could&#13;
do was sit and watch.&#13;
Freshman Jackie Melotick&#13;
had an outstanding performance&#13;
in the two mile run.&#13;
Melotick, a freshman Ail-&#13;
American in cross country,&#13;
made it to the finals on&#13;
Friday night, running a personal&#13;
best time of 11:19. She&#13;
came back the next day and&#13;
finished eighth in the finals,&#13;
running merely a second&#13;
slower.&#13;
Near misses, as well as outstanding&#13;
performances,&#13;
seemed to be the tale of this&#13;
meet. Jacqueline Cotton had&#13;
the 13th fastest time in the 60&#13;
yd. dash with 7.32 but only&#13;
the top 12 advanced to the&#13;
next round. Rebecca Scott&#13;
placed 18th in overall times&#13;
for 60 yd.&#13;
Nancy Marter finished fifth&#13;
in her heat in the mile 5:24,&#13;
but only the top four qualified&#13;
for finals. Fobair finished&#13;
sixth in her heat of the mile&#13;
in 5:25. Colleen Wismer finished&#13;
sixth in her heat of the&#13;
two mile run in 11:34.&#13;
The two mile relay consisting&#13;
of Nancy Marter, Julie&#13;
Lazercik, Carrie Aronie and&#13;
Veronica Chamleer and a 10:&#13;
02, placing third in their heat&#13;
but did not place overall.&#13;
A mile relay team was also&#13;
entered. The team of Nancy&#13;
Marter, Finley, Scott and Cotton&#13;
ran a 4:06 but they too did&#13;
not advance to the finals.&#13;
As a team the Parkside&#13;
women fared well pacing seventh&#13;
and scoring 24 points.&#13;
* * * * * *&#13;
Part of the men's race walking&#13;
team attended The Athletics&#13;
Congress National Indoor&#13;
Championship. The meet was&#13;
held at Madison Square Garden&#13;
last Friday night. It was&#13;
the tryouts for the World Indoor&#13;
Championship.&#13;
Doug Fournier was Parkside's&#13;
top finisher, placing&#13;
fourth and covering the five&#13;
kilometer distance in 20:27.65.&#13;
Dave McGovern placed fifth&#13;
in 21:01.33. Ra^ Sharp, a former&#13;
Parkside student finished&#13;
second in 20:23.89.&#13;
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Details: send self-addressed, stamped&#13;
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GYM SUPERVISORS: Part-time Saturdays,&#13;
some weekdays, late afternoons.&#13;
Must be good with kids. Apply&#13;
at CYC, 1715 52nd Street, Kenosha.&#13;
AD HOC professor needs person for&#13;
serious filing, problems and some ongoing&#13;
typing. Call Gary Eckstein.&#13;
637-7435, after 10 p.m. This is not a&#13;
work-study position.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
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model. $145. 835-4515.&#13;
1969 CAMARO: Recently restored.&#13;
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414-539-2865.&#13;
Personals&#13;
ADRIAN, HAPPY Anniversary and&#13;
thank you for the best 2 years of my&#13;
life! All my love, Michelle.&#13;
JOHNNY Y, been hit by a flying mostaccioli&#13;
sandwich lately?&#13;
IF I'M homophobic, some people are&#13;
reality-phobic.&#13;
VOTE BORKOWSKI/VOGT March 9-&#13;
10.&#13;
RICH BORKOWSKI-President. Dan&#13;
Vogt-vice president. Watch and see!&#13;
VOTE RICH Borkowski PSGA President.&#13;
GOOD LUCK in the election, Dan and&#13;
Rich.&#13;
WHO IS that 12-year-old dancing in&#13;
the bar? But we really appreciate&#13;
your call. Thank you.&#13;
JENNY: DID you hear the one about&#13;
the guy who has only one arm in&#13;
school? When he goes home, he grows&#13;
the other one back.&#13;
COACH: ROCKING chairs? Oh my&#13;
gosh! Rocking Chairs!&#13;
ARE WE in Acapulco 1988 Olympics?&#13;
Watch out for the Esther Williams&#13;
hot-tub synchronized swimming team!&#13;
WHEN IS Paul going to have that&#13;
baby? Jenny, do you know what to do&#13;
if he goes into labor?&#13;
CHUBBY LOVES her hero! It's huge!&#13;
Did you go shopping?&#13;
EXERCISE CAN'T be good. It makes&#13;
people smell.&#13;
AN IDIOT is someone who proofreads&#13;
the Xerox copy against the original.&#13;
TO ME, a woman's body is like a temple.&#13;
I try to attend services as often as&#13;
I can.&#13;
FEMALE SNAP-ON employee looking&#13;
for make with shiny new tool.&#13;
SEX IS like credit: some get it, some&#13;
don't.&#13;
AND YOU were obviously turned&#13;
down by more than one agency.&#13;
THE LAST thing that goes through a&#13;
fly's mind when it hits your windshield&#13;
is its rear end.&#13;
ANN KESTELL: who do I love more&#13;
than you? NO ONE! Thank you for a&#13;
fabulous weekend! Dave G.&#13;
AS BEAUTY, triviality is in the eye of&#13;
the beholder.&#13;
STEVE N.: We are going to have a&#13;
Ball-Bustin'-Flame-Throwin', Corn-&#13;
Shucken, Rock-n-Rollin', Good-oletime&#13;
in Panama City! Dave G.&#13;
BONE, WHAT is in that basket anyway?&#13;
NECK, NECK, neck.&#13;
WHEN THE hell was the first floor of&#13;
the library declared "Social Hour?"&#13;
LOVE GODDESS: AKA Cat Burglar.&#13;
Had prior engagement for Feb. 28.&#13;
Why didn't you save me some M&amp;R?&#13;
CDT. B.&#13;
IN THE immortal words of Richard&#13;
M. Nixon: "I am not a crook!!!" I&#13;
have been accused, tried and convicted&#13;
and we haven't even seen the&#13;
courtroom.&#13;
MICHELLE FEEK: Are you alive?&#13;
Hush Crush.&#13;
AL BACHMAN: Happy quarter-century&#13;
birthday. It's still your decade!&#13;
Laurie.&#13;
KIM: HOW was your six-month date&#13;
with Ray Charles?&#13;
HOUSE TOO cold? Need a warm&#13;
room? Call Kelly "The Blast Furnace"&#13;
McKissick. She'll crank up your&#13;
thermostat so high all liquid in your&#13;
room will evaporate.&#13;
OKAY, JEN, I do wake up with the&#13;
bone sometimes.&#13;
JC: NEVER intertwine your leg with&#13;
mine again, unless you mean it.&#13;
Coach.&#13;
TO THE Parkside Women's Jello&#13;
Wrestling Squad: Thanks for the&#13;
thrill. O Neal 6.&#13;
HEY, KIDS, let's talk about masturbation&#13;
!&#13;
THE PROPHECY of the brown van&#13;
never came true, even with A.J. Kranich&#13;
at the wheel.&#13;
IF YOU looked up "bump-on-a-log" in&#13;
the dictionary...&#13;
"HEY, ROCKY, watch me pull a rabbit&#13;
out of my hat."&#13;
HOW DO you spell coitus interruptus?&#13;
2-3-4.&#13;
WE REALLY appreciate your call.&#13;
Thank you so much for calling.&#13;
THINGS WERE great in the "snow&#13;
me state".&#13;
A BOOK for Amy: How To Find the&#13;
Keys.&#13;
KIM: WAS the date really six months&#13;
long, or did it just seem that way?&#13;
GARY: ROCK a bye baby...rocking&#13;
chair blues.&#13;
Night of the Living Dead Chipmunks&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
{Remember...Classified deadlines&#13;
•is Monday at 10 a.m. for&#13;
^publication Thursday.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 5,1987 19&#13;
Shape up!&#13;
by Michael J. Rohl&#13;
Parkside's Mark Zukley missed this rebound, but grabbed&#13;
17 others against Oshkosh, and you can see why. Actually,&#13;
the extra hand is firmly attached to the arm of the Titans'&#13;
Ric Kunnert (52).&#13;
ACU-I tournament&#13;
Bowlers, darters participate&#13;
by Nick Thome&#13;
On February 21 and 22&#13;
Parkside bowlers and darters&#13;
competed in the Association&#13;
of College Unions/International&#13;
(ACUI) Regional Tournament.&#13;
The ACUI Regional&#13;
attracted 270 students representing&#13;
23 universities.&#13;
According to Dave Halbach,&#13;
the tournament director,&#13;
"the Midwest region consists&#13;
of Wisconsin, the Upper&#13;
Peninsula of Michigan, and&#13;
the area around Chicago; The&#13;
facilities here at Northern&#13;
Michigan are good and the&#13;
staff quite helpful. Overall&#13;
the tournament ran very&#13;
smoothly."&#13;
Parkside's bowlers were&#13;
represented by Karen Savage,&#13;
Roxanne Jourdan, Kim&#13;
Ortin, Kari Kraus, Debbie&#13;
Schneider, Laura Karges,&#13;
Jeff Floyd, Mike Ball, Rusty&#13;
Dehahn, Darren Furtney and&#13;
Glen Malkmus. Parkside's&#13;
darters were represented by&#13;
Patrick "Loops" Grady and&#13;
Jim "Duke" Crowley.&#13;
The men bowlers finished&#13;
seventh in the team competition.&#13;
Malkmus, a former ACI&#13;
individual champ finished&#13;
fifth in the individual event&#13;
and rolled a 269 game during&#13;
the touranment. Floyd was in&#13;
second place in the individual&#13;
competition through the second&#13;
round but faded in the&#13;
finals.&#13;
The women bowlers finished&#13;
fifth in the team event.&#13;
Schneider hit a 221 game and&#13;
finished ninth in the individual&#13;
competition. When aksed&#13;
about the tournament,&#13;
Schneider said "there were&#13;
tough competitors here. The&#13;
winner averaged over 200&#13;
pins a game, and the lanes&#13;
were in good shape."&#13;
The Parkside darters finished&#13;
in seventh and eighth&#13;
overall. Grady said "some of&#13;
these guys were unreal. It's&#13;
hard to concentrate when&#13;
your opponent throws over&#13;
100 points per turn." The&#13;
eventual winner was a student&#13;
from Northern Michigan.&#13;
In the final match he&#13;
threw two perfect 180 point&#13;
rounds.&#13;
just enough tissue as is&#13;
needed to meet the work load.&#13;
From this adaptation process&#13;
come the idea if the body will&#13;
adapt to changes in work&#13;
loads then it will adapt to progressively&#13;
higher work loads.&#13;
This is exactly what occurs.&#13;
When higher levels of resistance&#13;
than normal are used&#13;
the body adapts by growing&#13;
stronger. The key here is&#13;
higher than normal resistance.&#13;
This means the body&#13;
must be stressed; it cannot&#13;
simply be moved to achieve&#13;
these effects.&#13;
Resistance training is any&#13;
exercise that works a muscle&#13;
or muscle group against&#13;
gravity. Examples of resistance&#13;
exercises are chin ups&#13;
and push ups which move the&#13;
body against gravity. Other&#13;
examples of resistance exercises&#13;
can be found in the&#13;
sport of weight lifting and&#13;
weight training. There is a&#13;
difference between the two&#13;
terms.&#13;
Weight lifting is a sport&#13;
where men and women corn-&#13;
Shape Up see page 14&#13;
Aerobic exercise is a great&#13;
way to lose weight and increase&#13;
cardio-vascular&#13;
fitness. It does not, however,&#13;
do much for strength and&#13;
muscle tone. Resistance exercise&#13;
is the best way to increase&#13;
strength and muscle&#13;
tone.&#13;
The theory and reason behind&#13;
resistance work is rather&#13;
simple. The body is a living&#13;
organism that adapts to the&#13;
stresses placed on it. The&#13;
body will adapt to an increased&#13;
work load by growing&#13;
Thanks,&#13;
Rangers,&#13;
for&#13;
a&#13;
great&#13;
season&#13;
ISN'T IT COOL IN PINK?&#13;
New in the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Union&#13;
Mini Mart&#13;
10 oz. bottle for only 19c&#13;
while quantities last.&#13;
(Limit one per customer)&#13;
J"" PARKSIDE UNION MINI MART&#13;
J Coupon good for 20c off 2 liter or&#13;
| 12 pack of Cherry 7-up or Diet&#13;
Cherry 7-up.&#13;
| Offer Expires March 19,1987&#13;
NIKE—wear what winners wear.&#13;
Open 7 days a week • 857-7333&#13;
1-94 at 60th St, Kenosha&#13;
(1 mile north of the Factory Outlet Centre)&#13;
Rangers lose to Eau Claire 61-56 in District 14 semi-final&#13;
A&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Supposedly, free throws are&#13;
the easiest shots to make in&#13;
basketball, but don't remind&#13;
the Oshkosh Titans.&#13;
Ask Parkside's Greg Nash&#13;
instead.&#13;
Nash, a substitute guard for&#13;
the Rangers, hit on six of&#13;
eight free throws in the last&#13;
minute and a half of the&#13;
game to help preserve a 73-70&#13;
win over Oshkosh in an NAIA&#13;
District 14 quarterfinal game.&#13;
After the game, Nash was&#13;
short, but to the point: "I was&#13;
ready to play tonight - I just&#13;
wanted to win."&#13;
While Nash was calm in the&#13;
clutch, the Titans couldn't&#13;
even buy a free throw when&#13;
they needed one. They missed&#13;
four front ends of bonus situations&#13;
in the last four minutes&#13;
of t he game and hit only 10 of&#13;
23 in the game.&#13;
Once again, as has been&#13;
Ranger custom all season,&#13;
the Rangers gained a doubledigit&#13;
lead, but promptly lost&#13;
it." This has happened to us I&#13;
don't know how many times,"&#13;
said head coach Rees Johnson.&#13;
"It happened at Lewis&#13;
and it cost us the game. It's&#13;
just lack of discipline and patience&#13;
on offense - that's been&#13;
our whole problem this&#13;
year."&#13;
Senior center Mark Zukley&#13;
rnoto Dy Bria n rassino&#13;
Parkside's Al Steel goes high over Oshkosh's Joe Butler&#13;
(32) and Gordy Skagestad for two of his six points in the&#13;
Ranger's 73-70 win over the Titans. He had to leave the&#13;
game in the second half with a hand injury.&#13;
offered a bit more optimistic&#13;
view. "There was apprehension&#13;
in the beginning," Zukley&#13;
said. "We started off kicking&#13;
everybody's ass, then we&#13;
played their game a little bit.&#13;
We got caught up in it, but&#13;
our point guard Mike Henderson&#13;
really came thru and got&#13;
us back together and under&#13;
control - that was the turning&#13;
point."&#13;
Indeed, Henderson did get&#13;
the Rangers on track. After&#13;
holding only a three point&#13;
lead at the half, the Rangers&#13;
and Henderson got the offense&#13;
on cruise control, outscoring&#13;
the Titans 15-5 in the&#13;
first eight minutes of t he half.&#13;
Zukley had seven points and&#13;
Henderson four to pace the&#13;
attack.&#13;
However, the old Parkside&#13;
bugaboo returned. Oshkosh&#13;
suddenly caught fire, hitting&#13;
two three-point shots in the&#13;
next minute and outscoring&#13;
the Rangers 20-8 in the next&#13;
eight minutes to pull to within&#13;
61-60 with 3:55 left.&#13;
Two baskets by Zukley and&#13;
a three pointer by the Titans&#13;
made the score 65-63 with 2:&#13;
40 to go, then perhaps the key&#13;
score of the game occured.&#13;
The Rangers worked the&#13;
ball around on offense winding&#13;
down the 45-second clock&#13;
to under 10 seconds. With one&#13;
second left on the shot clock,&#13;
Dave Peterson tossed up an&#13;
off-balance 12-foot jumper&#13;
while covered by two defenders&#13;
and the ball went in. After&#13;
that, it was Nash time.&#13;
Another key to the game&#13;
was the controlling of the&#13;
Titans' top scorer, Gordy&#13;
Skagestad. He was held to 14&#13;
points, 10 under his average.&#13;
. "Peterson did a nice job on&#13;
him, but there were times&#13;
when I though they could&#13;
have put the ball into him&#13;
more.&#13;
"They do lack an inside&#13;
game and that hurts them.&#13;
They're so great outside that&#13;
if they had a good inside&#13;
game, they would be...."&#13;
At the start, Parkside&#13;
stormed out to a 12-0 le ad as&#13;
Oshkosh missed their first&#13;
five shots. A Henderson&#13;
three-pointer later gave the&#13;
Rangers a 17-7 lead, but three&#13;
three-pointers and a free&#13;
throw by the Titans tied the&#13;
score at 17 and they actually&#13;
took the lead 20-17. The&#13;
Rangers finally broke a five&#13;
minute dry spell with 10&#13;
minutes to go in the half on&#13;
two Nash foul shots.&#13;
•Through the rest of the&#13;
half, neither team led by&#13;
more than three points, with&#13;
Parkside in the lead 38-35 at&#13;
half-time.&#13;
Photo by Brian Passino&#13;
James Jones fires in two of his 19 first-half points against&#13;
Oshkosh Saturday night. He and Mark Zukley shared game&#13;
honors with 21 points.&#13;
Zukley and James Jones&#13;
were the offensive pacesetters,&#13;
scoring 21 points each.&#13;
Jones had all but two points&#13;
in the first half and Zukley&#13;
had 13 in the second half.&#13;
Zukley also tied his season&#13;
high with 17 rebounds. Nash&#13;
hit a total of eight free throws&#13;
to finish with 10 points.&#13;
home) with a team effort,"&#13;
Zukley said. "It feels so good&#13;
inside - it's a feeing you just&#13;
can't talk about. When you&#13;
play together well as a team,&#13;
it's just a really good feeling."&#13;
Oshkosh was led by Ric&#13;
Kunnert with 15 points, including&#13;
three three-pointers.&#13;
This game was Zukley's&#13;
last home game. The senior&#13;
center was happy to go out&#13;
the way he did.&#13;
"It was nice to got out (at&#13;
The Rangers received a&#13;
blow when Al Steel left the&#13;
game midway through the&#13;
second half and returned with&#13;
an inflatable cast on his right&#13;
wrist and hand. The injury&#13;
was not exactly determined,&#13;
but it is either a broken or&#13;
dislocated bone on the back of&#13;
his hand. In any case, he was&#13;
unavailable for the game&#13;
against Eau Claire Monday,&#13;
March 2.&#13;
Free throws the key as Ranger</text>
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