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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Thursday, March 12, 1981&#13;
Revise method&#13;
of grade change&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
A February memo sent to&#13;
Parkside's division chairpersons&#13;
from John Campbell, Associate&#13;
Dean of Faculty, changed the&#13;
student grade change policy at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"As part of the continuing effort&#13;
to provide a controlled and accurate&#13;
flow of information between&#13;
the various parties involved&#13;
in the maintenance of student&#13;
records, grade change forms will,&#13;
henceforward, require approval&#13;
by the Office of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty prior to being routed to&#13;
the Office of the Registrar," the&#13;
Campbell memo stated.&#13;
"A recorded grade will not&#13;
normally be changed except for a&#13;
demonstrated error on the part of&#13;
the instructor or the Registrar's&#13;
Office. Grade changes require the&#13;
approval of the instructor,&#13;
division chairperson, and dean,"&#13;
the memo said. This was actually&#13;
adopted by the Faculty Senate on&#13;
March 9, 1973.&#13;
Campbell explained that when&#13;
this legislation was initially&#13;
passed during the 1972-73&#13;
academic year, it was a matter of&#13;
routine for the office of the dean to&#13;
sign all grade change forms.&#13;
About four or five years ago, it&#13;
was decided that routing grade&#13;
changes through the dean's office&#13;
was not needed administratively,&#13;
according to Campbell. He said&#13;
that at that time, grade change&#13;
approval was delegated to&#13;
divisional chairpersons.&#13;
Campbell said that the latest&#13;
change in procedure resulted&#13;
from "the questions that have&#13;
been raised about the appropriateness&#13;
of what had been&#13;
done in this recent situation&#13;
(requests for grade changes by&#13;
some physical education students&#13;
last semester). It would mean one&#13;
more level at which grades could&#13;
be reviewed." Parkside's&#13;
procedure for handling grade&#13;
changes has returned to the&#13;
earlier pattern, reinstating administrative&#13;
control.&#13;
Campbell said that grade&#13;
changes, in most cases, involve&#13;
removing an incomplete by&#13;
assigning a final grade. However,&#13;
Campbell said that sometimes&#13;
tins means changing a grade&#13;
assigned in error to the correct&#13;
anger&#13;
Vol. 9 - No. 22&#13;
grade; this includes cases in&#13;
which the students attending class&#13;
whose names do not show up on&#13;
the class list.&#13;
On February 3 Campbell sent a&#13;
memo to Beecham Robinson&#13;
suggesting, "At the present time,&#13;
with the permission of the instructor,&#13;
a student may add a&#13;
course at any time during the&#13;
semester (or change from audit to&#13;
credit), even at the end of the&#13;
semester. Upon reflection, this&#13;
amount of flexibility seems rather&#13;
excessive and may, indeed, lead&#13;
to some awkward situations for&#13;
individual instructors. If my&#13;
concerns are shared, I would like&#13;
to ask the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee to consider the&#13;
adoption of a policy along the&#13;
following lines: Students may not&#13;
add a course, or change from&#13;
audit to credit, after the end of the&#13;
eighth week of classes, in the case&#13;
of full - semester courses, or after&#13;
the mid - p oint of the class in the&#13;
case of modules."&#13;
Currently, the "Faculty Guide"&#13;
states, "Students may, during the&#13;
first week of classes, add any&#13;
course for which they are&#13;
qualified. After the first week, a&#13;
course may be added with the&#13;
instructor's consent. Course&#13;
additions should be made in the&#13;
Office of Student Records." There&#13;
is no specified deadline for course&#13;
additions.&#13;
Campbell said that he felt his&#13;
proposal was reasonable. The&#13;
Academic Policies Committee&#13;
now has three alternatives: to&#13;
accept, to not accept, or to alter&#13;
the Campbell proposal.&#13;
Campbell said that he has&#13;
thought about limiting the "add&#13;
time" policy in the past. He said&#13;
that it seems to be a reasonable&#13;
policy that students should pay&#13;
tuition and fees and be involved&#13;
officially as a student rather than&#13;
waiting until far into the&#13;
semester. Although students could&#13;
be getting service and receiving&#13;
the benefits of going to class&#13;
unofficially, Campbell expressed&#13;
concern that they could drop out&#13;
at whim. He said that he felt that&#13;
the recent situation in physical&#13;
education has brought more attention&#13;
to policies and that good&#13;
changes will be produced by that&#13;
attention.&#13;
28 grade change cards draw attention&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
On Dec. 29 last year Theresa&#13;
Peck, Chairperson of the&#13;
Education Division, received&#13;
28 grade change and 3 Independent&#13;
study cards for six&#13;
basketball players and one&#13;
wrestler.&#13;
The students, in order to&#13;
remain eligible for athletic&#13;
competition, dropped 10&#13;
classes worth 26 c redits from&#13;
the social science, education,&#13;
science and business divisions&#13;
and picked up one - credit&#13;
modulars like jogging,&#13;
b o w l i n g , r a c q u e t b a l l ,&#13;
wrestling and golf.&#13;
Peck initally refused to sign&#13;
the cards because of the large&#13;
number of the m (usually only&#13;
one or two cross her desk at a&#13;
time) and because the&#13;
students' names did not appear&#13;
on class lists.&#13;
Peck talked to Vice Chancellor&#13;
/ Dean of Faculty&#13;
Lorman Ratner and Athletic&#13;
Director Wayne Dannehl and&#13;
then contacted the instructors&#13;
who requested the changes —r&#13;
wrestling coach James Koch,&#13;
cross country coach Lucien&#13;
Rosa, basketball head coach&#13;
Steve Stephens and assistant&#13;
coach Rudy Collum.&#13;
The coaches admitted to&#13;
Peck that the students joined&#13;
the classes late and somehow&#13;
the adding and dropping&#13;
procedure hadn't taken place.&#13;
The coaches told Peck that the&#13;
students did attend the classes&#13;
and did the work, so Peck&#13;
approved the changes.&#13;
Peck said that she didn't&#13;
understand what was happening&#13;
right away because&#13;
usually grade change cards&#13;
are submitted to her for the&#13;
removal of an incomplete, but&#13;
this time they were submitted&#13;
so that the students could&#13;
receive the initial grades for&#13;
the courses.&#13;
Athletic Board&#13;
Eligibility policy changed&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
The Parkside Athletic Board&#13;
met twice in the past month to&#13;
deal with two pressing issues.&#13;
The major issue for the Athletic&#13;
Board this semester involved&#13;
drafting and passing a new 30 -&#13;
credit eligibility policy. Prior to&#13;
the setting of the policy, complaints&#13;
from several quarters had&#13;
surfaced about students taking&#13;
more than 30 credits of Physical&#13;
Education. The present policy for&#13;
graduation states that any credits&#13;
taken in Physical Education over&#13;
the 30 - credit limit do not count&#13;
towards graduation.&#13;
It was believed by some that&#13;
athletes were taking PE credits&#13;
beyond the limit to avoid failing&#13;
coursework and remain eligible&#13;
for competition. NAIA r ules state&#13;
that an athlete must be enrolled in&#13;
12 credits during the current&#13;
semester and must have completed&#13;
24 credits in their prior two&#13;
semesters to be eligible to compete.&#13;
There are no requirements&#13;
as to what type of courses count&#13;
toward the 12 and/or 24 c redits.&#13;
A survey by Dr. Wayne Dannehl,&#13;
Parkside's Athletic&#13;
Director, was carried out last fall&#13;
to see if, in fact, there was a&#13;
problem with athletes abusing the&#13;
30 - credit limit.&#13;
Dannehl said, "I was aware that&#13;
some students were taking too&#13;
many Phy - Ed credits; that's why&#13;
I was pushing for this 30 - credit&#13;
ruling last fall. If we wouldn't&#13;
have had to do the survey last fall&#13;
we may have gotten the policy&#13;
passed in time to have caught this&#13;
problem (the adding of c lasses by&#13;
some athletes late in the semester&#13;
last fall)."&#13;
With the passing of the new&#13;
eligibility policy, the Athletic&#13;
Board hopes thai these types of&#13;
problems will be curbed in the&#13;
future.&#13;
The eligibility policy passed by&#13;
the board reads as follows:&#13;
In addition to meeting applicable&#13;
NAIA/NCAA eligibility&#13;
requirements, all UW - Parkside&#13;
students on intercollegiate&#13;
athletic teams are subject to the&#13;
following additional policy&#13;
EFFECTIVE JUNE 1. 1981:&#13;
Only the first 30 credits of&#13;
Physical Education courses&#13;
successfully completed at any&#13;
post • secondary institution may&#13;
be used to satisfy NAIA/NCAA&#13;
eligibility requirements.&#13;
All post - secondary Physical&#13;
Education course credits earned&#13;
prior to June 1, 1981 may be&#13;
counted in determining&#13;
NAIA/NCAA e l i g i b i l i t y ;&#13;
HOWEVER, Physical Education&#13;
credits earned after June 1, 1981&#13;
are subject to the 30 - credit&#13;
limitation above.&#13;
Interpretation of this policy in&#13;
individual cases rests with the&#13;
Athletic Board.&#13;
In addition to passing the new&#13;
eligibility policy, the Board has&#13;
also created a committee which&#13;
will review athletes' transcripts&#13;
for reasons of elig ibility. Standard&#13;
procedure in the past has been&#13;
that the Chairperson of the&#13;
Athletic Board reviews and signs&#13;
them. Starting this semester, a&#13;
sub - committee consisting of the&#13;
Chairperson of the Board, the&#13;
Athletic Director and a rotating&#13;
member of the Board will review&#13;
transcripts for the purpose of&#13;
establishing eligibility when&#13;
eligibility sheets are completed&#13;
and forwarded.&#13;
At the present, the Athletic&#13;
Board is also looking into the pros&#13;
and cons of preventing students&#13;
from participating in athletics&#13;
while on academic probation.&#13;
Dannehl has been corresponding&#13;
with a variety of universities to&#13;
find out what their policies are on&#13;
this issue. The accumulative&#13;
results are: St. Norbert College,&#13;
UW - Madison, Wisconsin State&#13;
Universities Conference (WSUC)&#13;
and North Central College allow&#13;
students to participate in athletics&#13;
while on academic probation as&#13;
long as they are admitted to&#13;
school, as long as they meet&#13;
NAIA/NCAA regulations.&#13;
Evening bus service starts KENOSHA RACINE&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Beginning the week after&#13;
spring break, Parkside will&#13;
have limited evening bus&#13;
transportation to Kenosha and&#13;
Racine, according to Mary&#13;
McDonald, chairperson of&#13;
Parkside's Evening Transportation&#13;
Committee.&#13;
"There will be two Jelco&#13;
buses, one for each city area,"&#13;
McDonald said. "Both will&#13;
leave Parkside Union at 9:30&#13;
p. m. Also, the buses will pick&#13;
up passengers at Com. Arts,&#13;
and Phy. Ed. The entire route&#13;
for each city will take no&#13;
longer than an hour and 15&#13;
minutes."&#13;
"The Racine bus will go as&#13;
far north as Shorecrest (3 Mile&#13;
Road and Main Street). The&#13;
Kenosha bus will go as far&#13;
south as Pershing Boulevard&#13;
(at 85th Street)," McDonald&#13;
said.&#13;
Tickets will be priced at 75*&#13;
each or $4.00 for a book of&#13;
eight. Tickets can be used any&#13;
time after purchase, Mc&#13;
Donald said. Bus drivers will&#13;
not accept cash, only tickets.&#13;
After this week's tabling,&#13;
tickets will be available at the&#13;
Union Information Desk,&#13;
along with schedules and&#13;
routing flyers, according to&#13;
McDonald. She added that&#13;
after 7:30 p. m., tickets will be&#13;
available at the Rec Center&#13;
desk.&#13;
The decision to begin offering&#13;
evening bus transportation&#13;
was made after a&#13;
survey of over 500 Parkside&#13;
students indicated a high&#13;
interest in some sort of&#13;
evening transportation,&#13;
McDonald said. The Evening&#13;
Transportation Committee&#13;
and the survey were initiated&#13;
by the Educational Services&#13;
Consul, under Carla Stoffle,&#13;
Assistant Chancelor of&#13;
Educational Services. Those&#13;
on the committee are: Ron&#13;
Brinkmann, Olivia Lui -&#13;
Hayne, Don Jahns, Dave&#13;
Pedersen and Kathy Slama.&#13;
SUFAC is funding this&#13;
semester's evening bus&#13;
transportation as a trial&#13;
period, McDonald said, and&#13;
ridership will determine&#13;
whether or not it will be&#13;
continued in the future.&#13;
1. Wood Rd.&#13;
2. Taylor Ave.&#13;
3. Southwood Dr.&#13;
4. Durand Ave.&#13;
5. Lathrbp Ave.&#13;
6. Wright Ave.&#13;
7. Ohio St.&#13;
8. Kinzie Ave.&#13;
9. Lathrop Ave.&#13;
10. Graceland Blvd.&#13;
11. Osborne Blvd.&#13;
12. Spring St.&#13;
13. Northwestern Ave&#13;
14. Yout St.&#13;
15. Douglas Ave.&#13;
16. Harmony Dr .&#13;
18. LaSalle&#13;
19. 3 Mile Rd.&#13;
20. Erie St.&#13;
21. Gould St.&#13;
22. Main St.&#13;
23. 7th St.&#13;
24. Villa St.&#13;
25. 16th St.&#13;
26. Taylor Ave.&#13;
27. Meacham Rd.&#13;
2&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Have a happy break To the Editor&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Help us help you&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
There have been some misconceptions lately&#13;
about what Ranger should and is able to do, so I'll&#13;
try to explain why we're here and what we're&#13;
doing.&#13;
We're here mainly to inform Parkside students&#13;
about what is happening everywhere, not just at&#13;
Parkside, that affects them. As editor, I try to&#13;
keep up with campus events but I can't find out&#13;
about everything in time to give it advance&#13;
coverage if no one from the sponsoring&#13;
organization informs the people they plan to get&#13;
coverage from about their activities.&#13;
Contrary to popular opinion, you can't get&#13;
something for nothing; somebody has to make an&#13;
effort. In this case the effort only involves having&#13;
somebody jot down the basic information about&#13;
the upcoming event (who, what, when, where,&#13;
why, how, etc.) and then dropping it off at the&#13;
Ranger office. And that's only if Ranger doesn't&#13;
make the contact first, which we'll always try to&#13;
do. If the "news" deserves more extensive&#13;
coverage, someone from Ranger will get in&#13;
contact with those in charge for additional information.&#13;
I know that's not the way it works on "real"&#13;
newspapers, but you have to realize the&#13;
limitations of t he student press, especially those&#13;
of a young newspaper like Ranger serving the&#13;
equally young university of P arkside. The same&#13;
goes for every organization at this campus: its&#13;
existence doesn't go back further than 10 years,&#13;
so there isn't a whole hell of a lot of tradition to&#13;
fall back on for guidance.&#13;
The first and only tradition that appears to be&#13;
working at Parkside is that of student non - involvement,&#13;
which has many crippling effects. In&#13;
Ranger's case, it means that we have to produce&#13;
a newspaper for 5000 Parkside students with only&#13;
a handful of reporters. A handful of reporters&#13;
can't do too much, especially when most of them&#13;
are the editors, too.&#13;
Another problem for Ranger is the lack of&#13;
journalistic knowledge students can obtain at&#13;
Parkside. The last journalism class I had was in&#13;
high school. There are two reporting classes&#13;
listed in Parkside's bi-yearly catalog, but they&#13;
haven't been offered for a few years. Oh sure,&#13;
there are internships available (and good ones,&#13;
too), but those are geared toward enhancing&#13;
knowledge, not teaching the basics (how to write&#13;
a simple news story, layout a page or write a&#13;
headline).&#13;
So don't fool yourself thinking that the whole&#13;
Ranger staff is working on the newspaper so that&#13;
they can use their journalism degree (there isn't&#13;
one) and experience to enable them to get a good&#13;
job with a good newspaper after graduation. To&#13;
my knowledge, there are only two Ranger staff&#13;
members who intend to continue in journalism&#13;
after their undergraduate years. One is myself&#13;
and the other is a person who is thinking of applying&#13;
for next year's editorship.&#13;
I noticed one problem when I came to Parkside&#13;
in the fall of 1979 and the problem still exists. That&#13;
problem is the poor communications between&#13;
student organizations. That's probably due to the&#13;
fact that Parkside is so young; we have yet to&#13;
come into a time when everybody knows what&#13;
everybody else is doing (or supposed to be&#13;
doing); it looks like it might take another decade&#13;
to straighten that out.&#13;
The only way to solve the communications&#13;
problem between groups is to have people within&#13;
each organization make an effort to do so. But&#13;
that is impossible if each student group lacks the&#13;
sufficient number of members to do the&#13;
organization's job as well as it should be done, let&#13;
alone work along with a number of other&#13;
organizations. People have to do their own work&#13;
before they can help others. If they have to do a&#13;
huge amount of work in their group, they'll never&#13;
be able to set aside more time to try to improve&#13;
communications with others.&#13;
Therefore, all the Parkside student&#13;
organizations need more members so that all&#13;
groups can be organized together in a cohesive&#13;
group known as Parkside Students.&#13;
We need each other's cooperation. Ranger can&#13;
provide assistance for others by covering activities&#13;
and issues that should be covered. In&#13;
return Ranger needs your help. No, you don't&#13;
have to join our staff and write stories every week&#13;
(although it would be nice if you did). If you have&#13;
information that should be publicized to students,&#13;
don't take it for granted that we already know&#13;
about it. If everyone at Parkside thought that&#13;
way, we wouldn't have anything.&#13;
PSGA Elections&#13;
President&#13;
Jan Oechler&#13;
Jim Kreuser&#13;
Kay Mullikin&#13;
Gary Strath man&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Kathy Seliga&#13;
Chuck Neu&#13;
Kathy Bambrough&#13;
Acknowledge vets&#13;
Polls, located In Level 1 in Molinaro Hall, are&#13;
open Thursday, March 12 until 8 p. m.&#13;
Senators&#13;
Steve Kaufman&#13;
Bradley Faust&#13;
Louis Valldejuli&#13;
Mike Loos&#13;
Bill Morrone&#13;
Kathy Slama&#13;
Phil Pogreba&#13;
Joe Ripp&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Veterans in the future no doubt&#13;
will serve their country in conflicts&#13;
and crisises that our country&#13;
will become involved in. However,&#13;
apprehension and doubt will&#13;
accompany and interfere with&#13;
their performance knowing that in&#13;
the past our government, by the&#13;
people, for the people, have not&#13;
provided adequate readjustment&#13;
programs, health care and&#13;
counseling for their return to&#13;
society.&#13;
Now at the time of national&#13;
muscle - flexing and period of&#13;
military importance this&#13;
government should take an&#13;
initiative to stimulate veterans&#13;
programs and not pursue their&#13;
aggressive attitude of reduction.&#13;
To eliminate those programs that&#13;
are most needed now is not only&#13;
economically short - sighted, but&#13;
plain foolishness.&#13;
Agent Orange, the herbicide&#13;
containing Dioxin, a known&#13;
carcinogen, appears to have come&#13;
into contact with over 80% of all&#13;
Vietnam veterans whether they&#13;
were actual combat veterans or&#13;
members of support units. Carcinogenicity&#13;
has a lag time of 20-30&#13;
years. Lag time is the maximum&#13;
amount of t ime before symptoms&#13;
might occur.&#13;
This time bomb ticking away&#13;
will not be swept under the rug.&#13;
We are not asking for support. For&#13;
these problems that affect individuals&#13;
involved in the Vietnam&#13;
experience, we demand&#13;
acknowledgement and support for&#13;
these problems.&#13;
Thomas B. Olsen&#13;
UW-P veteran&#13;
Location of magazines&#13;
shows poor judgement&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I wish to complain about the&#13;
placement of the sexploitive&#13;
magazines at the bookstore. They&#13;
are placed in the window, and I&#13;
believe that this is in bad taste and&#13;
also exhibits poor judgement.&#13;
I believe, first of all, that it is the&#13;
bookstore's right to sell this&#13;
literature. I have no quarrel with&#13;
the selling of the material. I only&#13;
take issue with the fact that these&#13;
magazines, where they are now&#13;
placed, subject everybody to their&#13;
view. Even children of students&#13;
are subjected to the material.&#13;
When I questioned a worker at the&#13;
bookstore about the placement of&#13;
these magazines for the public to&#13;
see, she replied that the&#13;
magazines were good movers!&#13;
I would not and do not call for&#13;
the removal of this type of&#13;
literature from the bookstore,&#13;
since it is their free right to sell it.&#13;
I only ask for some discretion and&#13;
a little more prudent judgement&#13;
as to the placement of the&#13;
material.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
Chris Dorf&#13;
Curly's Hat Band brings&#13;
country rock to Union&#13;
To start Spring Break off, PAB&#13;
is featuring Curly's Hat Band in&#13;
the Union Square tomorrow at 9&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Urban country/rock best&#13;
describes their wide variety of&#13;
music selections. Curly's Hat&#13;
Band makes use of country rhythms&#13;
and instruments but maintains&#13;
an electric rock thrust.&#13;
The selections to be performed&#13;
are taken from the music of Pure&#13;
Prairie League, Lynyrd Skynyrd,&#13;
Marshall Tucker Band, Billy Joel,&#13;
Steely Dan, Charlie Daniels, and&#13;
Waylon &amp; Willi e, to name a few.&#13;
They will also perform six original&#13;
numbers: "Still On My Mind,"&#13;
"Sure Havin' Fun," "Lay Down&#13;
Your Love," "Wishin' You Were&#13;
Here," "Lookin' For Someone To&#13;
Love" and "South Bound Train."&#13;
The latter was released as a&#13;
single, with "Wishin' You Were&#13;
Here" on the flip side, and was&#13;
written by Roger "Curly" and&#13;
Audrey Hendrickson; "Wishin'&#13;
You Were Here" was written by&#13;
Roger alone.&#13;
The cost of admission will be $2&#13;
for UW-P students and $2.50 for&#13;
guests. There can only be one&#13;
guest per Parkside ID. Two valid&#13;
forms of identification are&#13;
required for admittance. There&#13;
will be a 50$ discount for anyone&#13;
wearing a cowboy hat.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer ....Editor&#13;
Brian Felland # .Business Manager&#13;
*Ve y,c*ett Wendy Wes!t-p1h"al, News Editor Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Editor&#13;
BrianPass.no Photo Editor&#13;
Ginger Helgeson Copy Edjfor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Dave Cramer, Mike Farrell, Dan Galbraith, Mike Holmdohl,&#13;
Carol Klees, Dan McCormack, Lori Meyer, Bruce Preston, Kim&#13;
Schlater, Janet Wells, Jeff Wicks&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW-Parkslde and thev are solelv&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content. V V&#13;
™ eve7 during the academic year except during breaks and holidays.&#13;
Printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWParkslde,&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53141.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
paper with one - I nch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone number included&#13;
for verification.&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
reserves all editorial privileges in refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
defamatory content.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 12,1981&#13;
Reagan proposes&#13;
tax changes&#13;
BY Susan JV . A&gt; •l u.is e&#13;
PPnfT proposal is for a 10 per&#13;
yyeeaarr for three years inC Utht eev etrayx&#13;
rates for all individual income&#13;
taxpayers making a total tax cut&#13;
of 30 p er cent."&#13;
fPr?6nt Reagans summary&#13;
of the tax cut area of his new&#13;
economic proposal rings out with&#13;
enticing optimism but what does it&#13;
really involve? And how do&#13;
members of Congress, and the&#13;
business and banking communities&#13;
feel about it?&#13;
First of a ll, let's take a look at&#13;
the program itself. The Reagan&#13;
tax proposal is twofold. First, the&#13;
program is aimed at reducing&#13;
individual tax rates by 10 per cent&#13;
per year for three years, and&#13;
secondly, at increasing the incentive&#13;
for productive investments&#13;
by business and industry&#13;
in new plants and equipment&#13;
by allowing more rapid&#13;
write off of the costs of investments.&#13;
The foundation of the Reagan&#13;
plan for individual tax rate&#13;
reductions rests upon the fact that&#13;
over the last few years, tax&#13;
burdens have been increasing&#13;
steadily due to social security tax&#13;
rate increases and inflation&#13;
pushing people into higher tax&#13;
brackets. Consequently, this has&#13;
reduced the incentive to work and&#13;
the ability to save.&#13;
The Reagan plan is aimed at&#13;
reducing tax rates across - the -&#13;
board. At present, under each of&#13;
the four taxpayer rates schedules&#13;
(joint, single, married filing&#13;
separately and head of&#13;
household), people pay tax at&#13;
rates ranging between 14 per cent&#13;
and 70 per cent. According to the&#13;
White House, when this plan is&#13;
fully implemented, rates will&#13;
range between 10 pe r cent and 50&#13;
per cent.&#13;
Under Reagan's proposal, the&#13;
idea is to implement these cuts on&#13;
July 1, 1981. At that time, if the&#13;
proposal has been approved by&#13;
Congress, withholding will be&#13;
reduced by approximately 10 per&#13;
cent for individual taxpayers.&#13;
The effects expected by the&#13;
a d m i n i s t r a t i o n a r e&#13;
unquestionably positive. The cut&#13;
in tax rates is expected to provide&#13;
greater incentives for employment&#13;
and savings. Also,&#13;
reduced tax rates should make tax&#13;
shelters less attractive and encourage&#13;
investment which, the&#13;
White House assumes, would&#13;
expand the productive base of the&#13;
economy and produce more jobs.&#13;
The second part of the tax cut&#13;
proposal, termed by the administration&#13;
as the 'Accelerated&#13;
Cost Recovery System,' would&#13;
create a new system for treating&#13;
investments by business and&#13;
industry. Specifically, it would&#13;
determine the periods of time over&#13;
which the costs of a company's&#13;
investments can be "recovered"&#13;
or "written off" when calculating&#13;
taxes.&#13;
In the new system, most&#13;
business property would fall into&#13;
one of th ree depreciation periods:&#13;
Three year depreciation (autos&#13;
and research and development&#13;
equipment), five year&#13;
depreciation (most other&#13;
machinery) and ten year&#13;
depreciation (factory buildings,&#13;
retail stores, and warehouses).&#13;
If the plan is approved by&#13;
Congress, the new system would&#13;
be effective for all property&#13;
acquired or placed in service after&#13;
December 30, 1980. There are&#13;
multiple advantages to a system&#13;
of accelerated depreciation. The&#13;
White House feels that enactment&#13;
of th is system would increase the&#13;
incentive for business investments,&#13;
increase productivity,&#13;
raise real wages, provide a basis&#13;
for creatinjg new jobs, improve the&#13;
U.S. position as a competitor in&#13;
world markets, reduce the accounting&#13;
burden for taxpayers&#13;
and reduce the auditing burden on&#13;
the Internal Revenue Service.&#13;
This second part of the Reagan&#13;
tax proposal, which was originally&#13;
introduced in the Senate by former&#13;
Wisconsin Senator Gaylord&#13;
Nelson, should skate through&#13;
Congress with very little&#13;
resistance. The major area of&#13;
conflict so far in the tax proposal&#13;
concerns the individual tax cuts.&#13;
Members of the business and&#13;
banking communities and the&#13;
Congressional leadership remain&#13;
apprehensive about that aspect of&#13;
the tax plan.&#13;
Federal Reserve Board&#13;
Chairman Voelker has encouraged&#13;
President Reagan to&#13;
forego the individual tax cuts until&#13;
the budget cuts are firmly in&#13;
place. John H. Perkins, president&#13;
of the Illinois National Bank and&#13;
Trust Co., said, "I have great&#13;
uncertainty over certain details of&#13;
the Reagan plan." "I'm&#13;
cautious," said Robert W. Galvin&#13;
of Motorola Corporation. These&#13;
comments combined with great&#13;
VstuNH&#13;
A GOOD PLACE TO BE!&#13;
art classes begin March 23,1981&#13;
AASU s upports Atlanta parents&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Parkside's Minority Student&#13;
Union (MSU) has organized a subcommittee&#13;
to support and assist&#13;
the parents of black children&#13;
murdered in Atlanta, Georgia.&#13;
Over the past few months, the&#13;
bodies of ove r 20 school-age black&#13;
children have been found in the&#13;
area. Police have as yet no&#13;
positive identity of t he murderer,&#13;
who preys primarily on young&#13;
boys.&#13;
According to Debra Starks,&#13;
chairperson of MSU's Committee&#13;
to Stop Children's Murders&#13;
(named for the central committee,&#13;
CSCM, a citizen's action&#13;
group based in Atlanta), the&#13;
committee seeks to "generate&#13;
support for the people of Atlanta,&#13;
who must live in constant fear&#13;
until the trauma is over."&#13;
Starks said, "Most of the&#13;
parents also need financial&#13;
assistance to defray funeral expenses,&#13;
as most of the murdered&#13;
children were from low-income&#13;
families."&#13;
CSCM has been distributing&#13;
green ribbons to those who have&#13;
made a contribution to the&#13;
parents' fund. The ribbons should&#13;
be worn as an inverted "V",&#13;
signifying hope, until the murderer&#13;
is apprehended; they can&#13;
then be reversed to signify victory,&#13;
according to Vicki Rogers, a&#13;
member of CSCM. Today is the&#13;
last day that CSCM will be&#13;
distributing the ribbons from their&#13;
table on the main level near the&#13;
library, but contributions can still&#13;
be made through MSU.&#13;
Other members of the CSCM&#13;
include Cynthis Johnson, Michael&#13;
Johnson and Donna Rhodes.&#13;
Further activities are being&#13;
planned by CSCM to generate&#13;
Parkside support for the people of&#13;
Atlanta and to raise funds for&#13;
those who have lost children to the&#13;
unidentified murderer, according&#13;
to Starks.&#13;
Nonverbal evening workshop offered&#13;
A workshop entitled "Nonverbal&#13;
Communication: Body Politics&#13;
and Spatial Relationships" will be&#13;
presented by The Bottom Line, an&#13;
organization of Parkside Communication&#13;
Students, on Tuesday,&#13;
March 24, be tween 8-9:30 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro 107.&#13;
The workshop will make participants&#13;
aware of nonverbal&#13;
behavior, messages, and consequences.&#13;
Participants will&#13;
become alerted to how silent&#13;
congressional wariness concerning&#13;
the individual cuts may&#13;
mean a rocky road ahead for the&#13;
program's adoption.&#13;
According to economist Alan&#13;
Greenspan, "The individual tax&#13;
cuts could be the greatest&#13;
stimulus to the economy in the last&#13;
twenty years. Kennedy did virtually&#13;
the same thing and it&#13;
succeeded in greatly stimulating&#13;
the economy, increasing&#13;
productivity, and creating new&#13;
jobs. This is a positive move."&#13;
But not everyone is positive that&#13;
the cuts are the best course to&#13;
take. "To cut taxes alone will only&#13;
build upon an already fearsome&#13;
deficit and kick inflation higher,"&#13;
said House Ways and Means&#13;
Chairman Dan Rostenkowski (DILL).&#13;
"You cannot make any&#13;
parallel with the Kennedy 30 p er&#13;
cent tax cut because when that cut&#13;
was enacted, inflation was at two&#13;
per cent and we were not facing&#13;
eight per cent unemployment. We&#13;
need to give top priority not to how&#13;
generously we can cut taxes, but&#13;
to how wisely we can cut spending."&#13;
In the third part of our series we&#13;
will outline the part of President&#13;
Reagan's proposal that&#13;
Rostenkowski feels should take&#13;
priority — the spending cuts&#13;
themselves and the people they&#13;
will hit the hardest.&#13;
messages can promote or interfere&#13;
with the accomplishment&#13;
of busi ness and professional goals&#13;
as well as with friendship. The&#13;
knowledge acquired about nonverbal&#13;
behavior can help in all&#13;
areas of life.&#13;
The workshop is a must for&#13;
those who want to develop an&#13;
awareness about the silent&#13;
messages which pass between&#13;
themselves and others on levels&#13;
which are not perceived.&#13;
Cultivation of awareness of&#13;
nonverbal messages can assist&#13;
those who want to be more successful&#13;
"across the board."&#13;
Specifically, nonverbal awareness&#13;
can help when applying for jobs,&#13;
presenting and evaluating initial&#13;
contacts, evaluating relationships&#13;
and throughout career development.&#13;
Examples of spatial considerations,&#13;
facial expressions&#13;
Madison&#13;
program&#13;
ranks fifth&#13;
The 1980 Gourman Report, a&#13;
publication of National&#13;
Educational Standards, ranked&#13;
the undergraduate forest science&#13;
program at UW-Madison among&#13;
the top five in the nation.&#13;
The Madison forest science&#13;
curriculum was first offered in&#13;
1968. Professor Ronald Giese, the&#13;
department chairman, says that&#13;
the program is unique in the&#13;
nation because of its strong emphasis&#13;
on analytical skills,&#13;
forestry policy issues, and individualized&#13;
instruction. This&#13;
excellence is possible through the&#13;
help of superior computer&#13;
facilities.&#13;
and bodily posture will be&#13;
presented. After the movie&#13;
"Communication: The Nonverbal&#13;
Agenda" is shown, training activities&#13;
will permit audience&#13;
participation.&#13;
The workshop is free and open&#13;
to all interested persons.&#13;
Scholarships&#13;
available&#13;
The Financial Aid Office now&#13;
has several local scholarship1&#13;
applications available for funds to&#13;
be awarded in 1981-82. Included&#13;
are the Data Processing&#13;
Management $500 Grant, Business&#13;
and Professional Women's&#13;
Foundation awards, American&#13;
Association of University Women&#13;
(Racine) Scholarship, and&#13;
Library Association Scholarships.&#13;
Please inquire through the&#13;
Financial Aid Office, 284 Tallent&#13;
Hall, prior to April 1, 1981.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
^National Bank&#13;
/ of Kenosha&#13;
QPWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN O FFICE&#13;
AUTO B ANK&#13;
24 HOUR T ELLER ?&#13;
BRISTOL 1&#13;
PLEASANT PRAR1E&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
-a. ; -— •—- --&#13;
Charles A. Wustum&#13;
Museum of Fine Arts&#13;
636-9178&#13;
(sSP&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
the Country Rock of&#13;
CURLY'S&#13;
HAT BAND&#13;
Friday, Mar. 13&#13;
9:00 pm&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Admission:&#13;
$2o° UW.P Students&#13;
9250 Guests&#13;
5W off for anyone&#13;
wearing a cowboy hat&#13;
Thursday, March 12,1981&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Parkside hosts women's conference by G. Helgeson&#13;
women's conference,&#13;
featuring a one - woman&#13;
dramatization of the life of 19th&#13;
century feminist Margaret Fuller&#13;
i^i^"V&lt;W.omen in the Work&#13;
Force, by feminist commentator&#13;
Caroline Bird, an organizational&#13;
fair featuring community&#13;
agencies from Kenosha and&#13;
Racine, and a full-day series of&#13;
workshops will be held at&#13;
Parkside on Friday night through&#13;
Saturday, April 24-25.&#13;
The conference, entitled "Accent&#13;
on Women," is being&#13;
organized by the Educational&#13;
Outreach Office in conjunction&#13;
with the Women's Bureau at&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute,&#13;
Planned Parenthood, and other&#13;
various campus groups and&#13;
organizations.&#13;
Funding for the conference is&#13;
being supplied by a Parkside&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts grant.&#13;
Additional funding is being contributed&#13;
from two Parkside&#13;
student groups, Parkside&#13;
Women's Concourse and the&#13;
Political Science Club.&#13;
"The purpose of the conference&#13;
is to bring together a wide scope of&#13;
women from the community in&#13;
order to celebrate the&#13;
achievements of women and to&#13;
explore new directions for ourselves,"&#13;
according to the conference&#13;
planning committee.&#13;
On Friday at 7:30 p.m., the&#13;
conference will begin with the&#13;
Communication Art Theatre&#13;
performance of "St ill Beat Noble&#13;
Hearts" by New York actress&#13;
Laurie James. After the performance,&#13;
there will be a wine&#13;
reception near the theatre and&#13;
conference participants will be&#13;
entertained by Parkside music&#13;
students.&#13;
Saturday at 9 a.m., Caroline&#13;
Bird will speak to conference&#13;
members on the unique problems&#13;
of women in the work force and&#13;
how to solve them.&#13;
From 10 a .m. to 4 p.m., local&#13;
agencies and organizations will be&#13;
tabling in the conference area to&#13;
provide information to conference&#13;
participants about services&#13;
available to women. Two of the&#13;
organizations that will be tabling&#13;
are Mother Courage Book Store of&#13;
Racine and the local chapters of&#13;
the National Organization for&#13;
Women.&#13;
A series of workshops will be&#13;
offered to participants on a&#13;
variety of topics, including:&#13;
Relationships — Close Encounters&#13;
of the Needed Kind, Making It As&#13;
An Artist, Women in Non -&#13;
Traditional Jobs and Apprenticeships&#13;
and Men's Roles in&#13;
the Women's Movement.&#13;
Brochures and registration&#13;
forms for the conference will be&#13;
available beginning this week at&#13;
Parkside's information kiosks, the&#13;
Library Learning Cento- and at&#13;
the Extoision Office. The fee,&#13;
which includes a luncheon in the&#13;
Union Dining room, is $6.50 for&#13;
students and $10.50 for the public.&#13;
James opens conference&#13;
New York actress Laurie&#13;
James' production of "Still Beat&#13;
Noble Hearts" will kick off&#13;
Parkside's first women's conference&#13;
on Friday night in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre at&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
The play is a one - woman&#13;
dramatization of the life of&#13;
Margaret Fuller, 19th century&#13;
woman of letters, social critic and&#13;
Transcendentalist. Fuller has&#13;
been called "America's forgotten&#13;
genius." She was a 19th century&#13;
misfit: a woman raised by a&#13;
ACTRESS LAURIE JAMES&#13;
as Margaret Fuller (Insert).&#13;
father who wanted a boy, but&#13;
wouldn't let his child's sex spoil&#13;
his plans for its education. Thus,&#13;
Fuller read Latin before English&#13;
and Cervantes, Moliere and&#13;
Shakespeare by the age of eight.&#13;
As an adult, Fuller was a friend&#13;
to and part of the intellectual&#13;
circle of Emerson, Thoreau,&#13;
Bronson Alcott and Horace&#13;
Greeley. However, she was&#13;
severely criticized for her&#13;
revolutionary writings, which&#13;
were considered immoral in the&#13;
1840's.&#13;
Fuller was one of the first to&#13;
speak out for women's right. Her&#13;
understanding of women's place&#13;
in society, as revealed by her book&#13;
Woman in the 19th C entury, laid&#13;
the groundwork for feminism in&#13;
the United States.&#13;
Most famous in 19th century&#13;
America were her "Con-&#13;
Caroline Bird l ectures&#13;
The second day of Parkside's&#13;
first women's conference will&#13;
begin with a lecture by Caroline&#13;
Bird, author of Born Female: The&#13;
High Cost of Keeping Women&#13;
Down, on "Women in the Work&#13;
Force."&#13;
The one - hour lecture will be&#13;
given in the Union Cinema at 9 a.&#13;
m.&#13;
Bird, best known as an analyst&#13;
and interpreter of today's&#13;
American society, is equally&#13;
knowledgeable about trends in&#13;
education and business. She has&#13;
guested on several major&#13;
television programs, including&#13;
NBC's "Today," WNET's&#13;
"Woman Alive", ABC's "Good&#13;
Morning America" and CBS's&#13;
"Sixty Minutes".&#13;
Bird's study of the Depression&#13;
and its effects, The Invisible Scar,&#13;
and her controversial The Case&#13;
Against College are widely&#13;
discussed books. But it was Born&#13;
Female that put Bird into the&#13;
center of the women's movement,&#13;
whose causes she advanced in the&#13;
book.&#13;
Everything A Woman Needs To&#13;
Know To Get Paid What She's&#13;
Worth is Bird's most recent book,&#13;
and it is concerned with the plight&#13;
of women in business again. It is a&#13;
book of tactics for dealing with the&#13;
subtle and unique obstacles&#13;
women face in demonstrating&#13;
their competence and in dealing&#13;
with the male - oriented job world.&#13;
In order to help business better&#13;
understand how women can be&#13;
more useful to them, Bird also&#13;
offers seminars and workshops to&#13;
aid corporations and professionals&#13;
in exploring today's social&#13;
changes and how they will be&#13;
affected by them.&#13;
Marilyn Bender in the New&#13;
York Times Book Review, called&#13;
Bird "constructive and practical."&#13;
She has also been&#13;
characterized as forward - looking&#13;
and affirmative.&#13;
According to Bender, "During&#13;
the last half - dozen years,&#13;
Caroline Bird has been translating&#13;
the creative outbursts and&#13;
theoretical mandates of Betty&#13;
Friedan and Gloria Steinem and&#13;
other more publicized and&#13;
scrappier sisters into fool-proof&#13;
recipes for coping in a hither - to&#13;
male - directed world."&#13;
versations," meetings she conducted&#13;
for the educated women of&#13;
Boston in the hope that she could&#13;
foster in them the consciousness&#13;
that would lead them to&#13;
"naturally develop self - respect&#13;
and learn self - help."&#13;
Fuller, her husband and their&#13;
infant were drowned in 1850, while&#13;
bound homeward from Europe,&#13;
where Fuller had witnessed the&#13;
Italian Revolution of 184 8.&#13;
James' performance will cover&#13;
Fuller's life in America between&#13;
1810 and 1846. James claims, "It&#13;
has become my mission in life' to&#13;
tell her story, to bring Margaret&#13;
Fuller back into the history books&#13;
and into the memory of&#13;
Americans."&#13;
To prepare for the drama,&#13;
James spent fifteen years&#13;
researching Fuller's life and&#13;
works, traveling to places in&#13;
America and Europe that Fuller&#13;
had been familiar with and&#13;
studying her diaries and letters at&#13;
the Harvard library. She also has&#13;
had the cooperation of Fuller's&#13;
great - nephew, Buckminster&#13;
Fuller, who labels her portrayal of&#13;
his great - aunt "full of the impeccable&#13;
heart, intellect and&#13;
ideals that were Margaret."&#13;
A YEAR OUT OF COLLEGE,&#13;
ANDA STRAUSS IS MAKING AVIATION&#13;
HISTORY IN THE ARMY.&#13;
111 be seeing Germany&#13;
a way no tourist can. From the&#13;
cockpit of an Army Chinook&#13;
helicopter.&#13;
"I m being assigned to&#13;
a Chinook helicopter unit in&#13;
Germany as a test pilot and&#13;
maintenance officer, and I'm&#13;
proud that I'll be the first&#13;
woman to have that assignment&#13;
over there. It's a real thrill&#13;
for me.&#13;
"So was learning how&#13;
to fly a helicopter. It takes a lot&#13;
more skill than an airplane.&#13;
If you think college is demanding,&#13;
flight school is even&#13;
tougher. It's not only academically&#13;
demanding, it's really&#13;
mentally demanding as well&#13;
as physically.&#13;
"In Germany, I'll have a&#13;
chance to use some of the leadership&#13;
and management techniques&#13;
I learned in ROTC. It's&#13;
going to be a real challenge having&#13;
command responsibilities.&#13;
"I'm also excited about&#13;
living in Germany. I'm looking&#13;
forward to travelling and doing&#13;
some skiing. And I really want&#13;
to learn the language and get&#13;
to know the people.&#13;
I got into ROTC really&#13;
j ust to see what it was all about.&#13;
For me, it all couldn't have&#13;
worked out better."&#13;
Army ROTC got Anda&#13;
Strauss off to a good start. Maybe&#13;
it can do the same for you.&#13;
To find out, stop by your Army&#13;
ROTC office on campus. While&#13;
you re there, ask about our&#13;
scholarships and $1,000 a year&#13;
spending money you can earn&#13;
in your last two years.&#13;
And begin your future as&#13;
an officer.&#13;
AT UW-P CALL:&#13;
Capt. Fred Herron&#13;
Marquette U. ROTC&#13;
Call Collect:&#13;
1-224-7229/7195&#13;
borest and a member of Army ROTC. ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
attend conference V Barbara I&#13;
Thursday, March 12,1981&#13;
by J. Kingery&#13;
On the afternoon of February 27&#13;
five members of the Women in&#13;
Business Club set out for the UWGreen&#13;
Bay campus to attend a&#13;
conference offering workshops on&#13;
administrative, managerial and&#13;
coping skills directed toward&#13;
women in business fields.&#13;
Representing Parkside during&#13;
the conferences were Cathy&#13;
Colwell, Bonnie Ertl, Barb&#13;
Kingery, Cathy Lawless and&#13;
Debbie Milosch. The conference&#13;
started off with a keynote address&#13;
by Dr. Alma Baron, UW-Madison&#13;
coordinator and teacher of&#13;
programs for women in the&#13;
managerial field. Baron is also the&#13;
coordinator for the Executive and&#13;
Administrative Programs for&#13;
Secretaries. Her talk was on the&#13;
history and future of women in&#13;
business.&#13;
Afterwards, there were 12&#13;
workshops available during the&#13;
day on a variety of subjects.&#13;
During the first session, Colwell,&#13;
Ertl and Lawless attended Conflict&#13;
Management. Ernest&#13;
Thompson, an organizational&#13;
development consultant in the&#13;
Green Bay area, presented&#13;
techniques helpful in differentiating&#13;
between and&#13;
resolving several types of conflict.&#13;
Kingery and Milosch chose for&#13;
their first workshop a discussion&#13;
on networking given by Sylvia&#13;
Patzloff, the Executive Director&#13;
Special Festival here&#13;
of the Green Bay - DePere YWCA&#13;
Awareness was heightened by the&#13;
workshop: participants sensed&#13;
tnat communication is needed if&#13;
women are to achieve goals.&#13;
C°lw5 Kingery and Milosch&#13;
also attended a workshop on&#13;
stress management given by E.&#13;
Marlene Crowley, a consultant /&#13;
instructor for Northern Wisconsin&#13;
Technical Institute. She presented&#13;
a short - range stress plan and&#13;
provided a number of valuable&#13;
tips for controlling stress.&#13;
Ertl and Lawless attended a&#13;
workshop on effective communication&#13;
given by Doris Byrne,&#13;
who holds workshops for industry&#13;
and professional groups.&#13;
At the end of the day, all five of&#13;
the Parkside group attended a&#13;
workshop on the subject: "Where&#13;
the Jobs Are and How to Get&#13;
Them." A panel of three held a&#13;
question and answer session on&#13;
the availability of jobs and how to&#13;
write an effective resume' to get&#13;
those available jobs. The panel&#13;
members were: Kathy Ley,&#13;
Service Bureau of Green Bay;&#13;
Jim Lemke, Job Services; and&#13;
Cathy Huntowski, Small Business&#13;
Advisory, UW Extension.&#13;
The closing address, given by&#13;
Sharon Metz, Wisconsin's 90th&#13;
District Assembly Representative,&#13;
was on how the legal&#13;
system has given women the&#13;
power to make changes.&#13;
More than lioo handicapped&#13;
children and young adults from&#13;
the Kenosha - Racine area will&#13;
participate in the second "Very&#13;
Special Arts Festival" at UWParkside&#13;
on Tuesday, March 17.&#13;
It will be a festival emphasizing&#13;
"hands on" participation by the&#13;
youngsters with 180 workshops&#13;
designed to allow the youngsters&#13;
to experience various art forms,&#13;
according to festival co - chairman&#13;
Thomas Reinert of UWParkside.&#13;
Taking part will be about 400&#13;
students from Kenosha Unified&#13;
Schools special education classes&#13;
and about 550 from Racine Unified,&#13;
special education classes, plus&#13;
handicapped students from&#13;
Western Racine County schools&#13;
and young adults from the Racine&#13;
Opportunity Center, Careers for&#13;
Retarded Adults of Racine and the&#13;
Kenosha Achievement Center.&#13;
Fifty-five individual artists and&#13;
performing arts groups totaling&#13;
about 175 pe rsons, 160 volunteer&#13;
aids and 300 teachers and teacher&#13;
aids also will participate in the&#13;
sessions, which run from 10 a.m.&#13;
to 1:30 p.m. Many of the teachers&#13;
and aids involved are from UWParkside&#13;
and/or the surrounding&#13;
communities.&#13;
Workshop topics will include&#13;
mobile - making, foil and&#13;
styrofoam~ constructions, apple&#13;
Arts Review to&#13;
recognize talent&#13;
by Christine Wood&#13;
This spring Parkside students&#13;
will publish their first annual arts&#13;
review. This anthology originated&#13;
with a small group of students who&#13;
felt that there was a high degree of&#13;
creative talent at Parkside that&#13;
had gone uhrecognized.&#13;
Editor Ginger Helgeson,&#13;
associate editor Janet Wells,&#13;
Heidi Makris, John Nichols, Jeff&#13;
Frank and Brian Passino make up&#13;
the staff of the Parkside Arts&#13;
Review. Carol - Lee Saffioti and&#13;
Peter Hoff serve as advisors.&#13;
Graphics, photography, poetry&#13;
and short stories will be featured&#13;
in the review. A screening committee&#13;
will choose outstanding&#13;
entries to be published in the&#13;
review, which will be available to&#13;
the Parkside community early in&#13;
May.&#13;
Those students who are interested&#13;
in submitting an original&#13;
piece of work can still do so. The&#13;
deadline for entries is March 26.&#13;
All written work can be submitted&#13;
to Ginger Helgeson at the Ranger&#13;
office or to Janet Wells. All art&#13;
work should be submitted to the&#13;
SOC office on March 25 from 10 to&#13;
11:30 a. m. and on March 26 from&#13;
11 to 12:30 p. m.&#13;
Written work should be typed.&#13;
Art work and photography should&#13;
be black and white and 18" x 24"&#13;
or smaller.&#13;
"Janet Wells and I have been&#13;
working on this review for almost&#13;
a year," Helgeson commented.&#13;
"We feel that Parkside students&#13;
have a great deal to offer and we&#13;
hope that they will see the arts&#13;
review as&#13;
talents."&#13;
a forum for their&#13;
The Parkside Arts Review will&#13;
be an annual publication. Students&#13;
interested in serving on next&#13;
year's staff can obtain information&#13;
from Ginger Helgeson&#13;
in the Ranger office (553-2295).&#13;
I Like to Jog!&#13;
Special Of&#13;
The Week&#13;
ADULT MUGS&#13;
Adult Gift f f&#13;
2410 52nd St. Kenosha&#13;
KENOSHA SAVINGS&#13;
&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
To make your&#13;
future look&#13;
much brighter.&#13;
WOMEN MEN&#13;
MEMBERSHIPS:&#13;
ONE MONTH (Introduction) - $20. 00&#13;
FOUR MONTH MEMBERSHIP - $95.00&#13;
ONE YEAR MEMBERSHIP - $19 5.00&#13;
COLLEGE ATHLETES - $150.00&#13;
2105 - 91 st StrMt&#13;
Ml, Wise. 53140&#13;
(414) 684-2221&#13;
NAUTILUS machines are&#13;
designed to increase&#13;
strength, flexibility and&#13;
cardiovascular condition.&#13;
sculpture, clowning, cartooning,&#13;
stained glass, clay modeling, cloth&#13;
collage, dramatics, paper flower -&#13;
making, paper dying, balloon&#13;
twisting, color drawing, potato&#13;
sculpture, magic, music - making,&#13;
folk dancing, word imagery,&#13;
puppets, salt dough, yarn collage,&#13;
living sculpture, string design,&#13;
mural collage, musical games,&#13;
silk screen, rhythmic movement,&#13;
thumbprint design, weaving,&#13;
designing with natural materials,&#13;
creative dramatics, puppetry and&#13;
story telling.&#13;
Performing arts groups involved&#13;
include the Somers&#13;
Clowns, Opera Racine, Racine&#13;
Dance Theater, River Acres 4-H&#13;
Clowns, The Potter's Clay gospel&#13;
singers, K-9 Klowns, St. Joseph's&#13;
High School Art Club and Careers&#13;
for Retarded Adults folk/square&#13;
dancers. Ranger Bear, mascot of&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic teams, will&#13;
also be on hand.&#13;
Reinert said that "Very Special&#13;
Arts Festivals," held throughout&#13;
the country, are a program of the&#13;
National Committee for Arts for&#13;
the Handicapped, an educational&#13;
affiliate of the John F. Kennedy&#13;
Center for Performing Arts. Local&#13;
sponsors are the Racine /&#13;
Kenosha Very Special Arts&#13;
Festival Committee which has&#13;
been planning the event since last&#13;
spring, UW-Parkside, Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Unified School Districts&#13;
and Western Racine County&#13;
Schools.&#13;
Support for the festival also has&#13;
come from the Kenosha Art&#13;
Association, the Racine Arts&#13;
Guild, Racine Art Association,&#13;
Kemper Center, local business&#13;
and industry and service clubs.&#13;
Reinert said the event has&#13;
special significance this year&#13;
since 1981 has been designated by&#13;
the United Nations as International&#13;
Year of the Disabled.&#13;
Locally, this year's festival has&#13;
been enhanced by development of&#13;
a resource workbook designed to&#13;
help special education teachers&#13;
both prepare students for the&#13;
festival experience and to follow&#13;
up with later' arts experiences in&#13;
the regular classroom, he said.&#13;
In conjunction with the festival,&#13;
Parkside's Media Services will&#13;
show festival scenes on closed -&#13;
circuit TV and a display of art&#13;
work by special education&#13;
students from Racine and&#13;
Kenosha schools will be on display&#13;
through April 2 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery.&#13;
MANAGEMENT GOT THE&#13;
GUTS?&#13;
But I Also STOP IN AND&#13;
Enjoy Other PICK UP SOME&#13;
Things In Life NEW TOYS.&#13;
We've&#13;
got&#13;
the&#13;
goal.&#13;
You've got to be tough to play our&#13;
game. But the goal is well worth it — a&#13;
rewarding career in retail management&#13;
that pays off in competitive salaries,&#13;
sizeable bonuses and excellent benefits.&#13;
Our game is the retali shoe business. We're pretty good at&#13;
it and play it to win. That's why Fayva is one of the nation's&#13;
largest and most successful shoe retailers and why we can&#13;
offer ambitious men and women a real opportunity for a&#13;
professional management career.&#13;
If you're willing to work hard for fast success you can go&#13;
from trainee to assistant manager In approximately 8 weeks&#13;
(2 weeks of orientation; 1 week In a training classroom; 5&#13;
weeks of on-the-job training in a Fayva Store) and then to&#13;
Store Manager in 9-12 months more. With our growth rate, it&#13;
won't take long for you to go even higher If you prove to be&#13;
the kind of pro that has help ed make Fayva a top team In the&#13;
industry.&#13;
Fayva Representative&#13;
will be on campus&#13;
Thursday, March 26th&#13;
Contact your College Placement&#13;
Office for appointment.&#13;
FAYVA&#13;
555 Turnpike Street&#13;
Canton, Massachusetts 02021&#13;
Attention: Field Employment Manager&#13;
KIND OF SHOE STORE&#13;
Equal Opportunity Employer M/F&#13;
6 Thursday, March 12,1981 RANGER&#13;
Agent Orange described I Scholarship deadline approaches&#13;
During the Vietnam War,&#13;
measures were taken to strip&#13;
away jungle cover in the upland&#13;
forests and mangroves and to&#13;
destroy crops that would have&#13;
been used to help subsidize enemy&#13;
soldiers. These measures were the&#13;
use of toxic chemicals as&#13;
defoliants. The defoliants,&#13;
designated by their chemical&#13;
compositions, were 2,4,5, T and 2,&#13;
4, D; better known as Agent&#13;
Orange. A defoliant is, in effect,&#13;
an intense fertilizer which makes&#13;
crops "burn out" and die, thereby&#13;
destroying whatever vegetation&#13;
with which it comes into contact.&#13;
A herbicide, 2, 4, 5, T was introduced&#13;
as a registered pesticide&#13;
in 1948. "Some 122 companies&#13;
currently purvey 424 r egistered&#13;
products containing this compound,&#13;
and about 5.4 million&#13;
kilograms of 2, 4, 5, T-containing&#13;
products was made in the United&#13;
States in 1970 (USDA 1976)."&#13;
Agent Orange: 2,4,5, T and 2,4,&#13;
D; contains what is classified as&#13;
an impurity, the dioxin TCDD.&#13;
The dioxin TCDD found in Agent&#13;
Orange was measured at 0.1 to 0.5&#13;
parts per million (ppm). Through&#13;
research, it was found that the use&#13;
of dioxin in the parts per trillion&#13;
(ppt) level pose potential health&#13;
dangers.&#13;
Dioxin is a known carcinogen —&#13;
a substance that produces cancer.&#13;
Carcinogenicity has a lag time of&#13;
20-30 years. Lag time is the&#13;
maximum amount of time in&#13;
which symptoms might occur.&#13;
TCDD has an extreme biological&#13;
stability, therefore it does not&#13;
decompose or break down in the&#13;
human body, in water, meat or&#13;
plants. After contact, TCDD is&#13;
stored in the fat and milk of&#13;
animals (including humans). It&#13;
has been proven to accumulate&#13;
over a period erf time where there&#13;
has been continuous contact.&#13;
The chemical 2, 4, 5, T breaks&#13;
down in substances such as meat,&#13;
water, plants and soil. It has a&#13;
half/life of 1-1/2 to 3 years when&#13;
contained in soil. In humans; 2, 4,&#13;
5, T is released from the system&#13;
through the urine, but TCDD&#13;
(dioxin) is not released.&#13;
"Daily exposure to only about&#13;
0.01 micrograms (10 nanograms)&#13;
TCDD is needed for 'incipient&#13;
carcinogenicity', 4 mg per day for&#13;
premature death, and 240 mg per&#13;
day for acute toxicity. Since the&#13;
Agent Orange used in Vietnam&#13;
contained almost half a kilogram&#13;
of 2, 4, 5, T per liter (Westling&#13;
1976), each milliliter of this&#13;
reagent would contain 25&#13;
nanograms of TCDD, more than&#13;
twice the 'incipient carcinogenic&#13;
dose'. ... Thus, American servicemen&#13;
who worked with Agent&#13;
Orange or who saw duty in the&#13;
heavily defoliated zones of&#13;
Vietnam have a legitimate basis&#13;
for asking the government to look&#13;
into the state of their health."&#13;
(BIOSCIENCE Vol. 29, February&#13;
1979, A Mixed Blessing by Arthur&#13;
W. Galston.)&#13;
SYMPTOMS &amp; EFFECTS OF&#13;
DIOXIN:&#13;
1. CHLORACNE: Skin erruptions&#13;
on the face, neck and back;&#13;
loss of sensations in the extremities;&#13;
nerve damage;&#13;
fatigue; nervousness; irritability ;&#13;
intolerance to cold; palpable and&#13;
tender liver; insomnia; loss of&#13;
libido and vertigo and shortness of&#13;
breath.&#13;
2. Headaches.&#13;
3. Upper respiratory distress.&#13;
4. Stomach &amp; kidney pain.&#13;
5. Edema.&#13;
6. Gastric hyperplasia &amp;&#13;
ulceration.&#13;
7. Hemoroglus of gastrointestinal&#13;
tract &amp; other organs.&#13;
8. Decreased immuno -&#13;
responses.&#13;
9. Vascular lesions.&#13;
10. Gastric Ulcers.&#13;
11. Acute psychosis (reported&#13;
suicides).&#13;
12. Severe d epression.&#13;
13. Memory &amp; concentration&#13;
disturbances.&#13;
ALSO: Liver cell and Kidney&#13;
cancer; cell carcinoma of the&#13;
lung ; carcinoma of the ear duct;&#13;
and birth deformities in the&#13;
second generation (children of&#13;
Vietnam veterans).&#13;
Should you have any of these&#13;
symptoms and spent time in an&#13;
area where agent orange was&#13;
used, contact the Parkside Vets&#13;
Club.&#13;
a&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elm wood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
N /&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
The application deadline for&#13;
several scholarships distributed&#13;
through Parkside is March 27. All&#13;
eligible continuing Parkside&#13;
students may secure application&#13;
forms from divisional offices,&#13;
Main Place information kiosk, or&#13;
Student Union information desk.&#13;
All scholarship applications&#13;
require the endorsement of a&#13;
faculty member prior to being&#13;
turned it.&#13;
One Joanne M. Esser&#13;
Scholarship in the amount of $400&#13;
is available. Qualifications consist&#13;
of an interest in ecology, need,&#13;
scholarship and completion of 30&#13;
to 90 credits by the end of the&#13;
current semester.&#13;
Two Kenneth L. Greenquist&#13;
Scholarships are available in the&#13;
amount of $250 each.&#13;
Qualifications consist of need,&#13;
scholarship and completion of 75&#13;
to 105 c redits by the end of the&#13;
current semester.&#13;
Four Bernard C. Tallent&#13;
Scholarships in the amounts of&#13;
$250 each are available.&#13;
Qualifications consist of&#13;
scholarship, service, need and&#13;
completion of 60 to 90 cre dits by&#13;
the end of the semester.&#13;
Two Irvin G. Wyllie Scholarships&#13;
are available in the amounts&#13;
of $250 each. Qualifications consist&#13;
of scholarship, need and completion&#13;
of 75 to 105 cre dits by the&#13;
end of the semester.&#13;
Bedford Duo begins concert tour&#13;
The Bedford Duo — harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford and&#13;
oboist Monte Bedford — will begin&#13;
a six-city concert tour with a&#13;
performance in Indianapolis on&#13;
March 13. The week-long tour will&#13;
include concerts in Nashville,&#13;
Tuscaloosa (Ala.), Atlanta,&#13;
Macon (Ga.) and Selma (Ala.).&#13;
Frances Bedford, a member of&#13;
the Parkside music faculty,&#13;
frequently performs in solo&#13;
recitals as well as with faculty&#13;
member ensembles. Monte&#13;
Bedford, who did his graduate&#13;
work at UW-Madison, is on the&#13;
faculty of the University of&#13;
Alabama where he is oboist of the&#13;
Capstone Woodwind Quintet, the&#13;
resident faculty ensemble there.&#13;
Patronize&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Advertisers!&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
LISA, do you only eat Snickers? Hereshy's&#13;
PRE-MED student wants patient to play&#13;
doctor with. (Rod)&#13;
I CHALLENGE lOP'S to a Walk on Water&#13;
contest. Tinfoil&#13;
FOR SALE: Nice and tender "Loins" KKKloins&#13;
ask for loins.&#13;
PAMCAKES, a tall, dark, handsome stranger&#13;
in your future. Jane&#13;
TO THE KEY-TOSSER, see you in court.&#13;
Cafeteria Bum&#13;
TOOTHBRUSH — Down In the Union again&#13;
getting stoned? I.C.I — Cavity&#13;
BUBBA—the bathroom is around the corner.&#13;
NEED GIRL (34-22-36) or better! I'm RICHI&#13;
Call Brendan.&#13;
PHIL — Thanks for being thoughtful, considerate,&#13;
gentle, funny, exciting, cute, . . .&#13;
JUDY — YOU should be on Sesame Street&#13;
with me. Big Bird&#13;
JOANNE, Brian from the Army has plenty of&#13;
quarters.&#13;
WANTED: meaningless relationship to add to&#13;
collection. Contact Black Silk.&#13;
VOLTAR works his mercenary magic on&#13;
pathetic, undeveloped, ignominious&#13;
disciples.&#13;
JOANNE, the next Issue of Playgirl comes&#13;
out soon and this one's 37".&#13;
WANITA, weez gots too boogie agin in K.C.I&#13;
The Military&#13;
Last August, the Bedfords&#13;
added an international dimension&#13;
to their growing reputation for&#13;
their performance on both&#13;
Baroque and contemporary music&#13;
with a concert at the International&#13;
Double Reed Society in Edinburgh,&#13;
Scotland, during the&#13;
Edinburgh Festival. That&#13;
program included the first performances&#13;
outside the U.S. of&#13;
three works written especially for&#13;
the duo by contemporary&#13;
American composers.&#13;
In support of its encouragement&#13;
of new music, the duo was&#13;
recently awarded a Wisconsin&#13;
Arts Board grant to commission&#13;
and premiere a new oboeharpsichord&#13;
composition from&#13;
Veterans Club meets Sunday&#13;
Veterans and concerned citizens&#13;
are invited to a meeting of the&#13;
Parkside Veterans Club on&#13;
Sunday, March 15 at 2 p.m. The&#13;
meeting will be held at Finney's&#13;
West, located at the corner of&#13;
Highways 31 and E.&#13;
The purpose of the meeting is to&#13;
recruit new members, supply&#13;
information and elect club officers&#13;
for the current year. Video tapes&#13;
pertaining to Agent Orange and&#13;
the Vietnam experience will be&#13;
shown. Information and forms&#13;
will be available for those&#13;
veterans who need assistance in&#13;
filing claims with the Veterans&#13;
Administration. Free beer will be&#13;
served.&#13;
John Downey of the UWMilwaukee&#13;
faculty. The Arts&#13;
Board also funded the duo's&#13;
Wisconsin tour three years ago.&#13;
In January, the duo premiered&#13;
Will Gay Bottje's "Sonata for&#13;
Oboe and Harpsichord" in a&#13;
concert at Southern Illinois&#13;
University. The work has been&#13;
published by the American&#13;
Composers Alliance.&#13;
Their Southern Illinois concert&#13;
brought high praise in a review by&#13;
music professor W. Kent Werner:&#13;
"Throughout the evening, the&#13;
artists brought to the music a high&#13;
level of technical finish, sen-&#13;
' sitivity to the style appropriate to&#13;
the period and flawless ensemble.&#13;
How they ever manage the latter&#13;
in view of their geographical&#13;
separation is a mystery .... The&#13;
highlight of the evening was Mrs.&#13;
Bedford's performance of two&#13;
Scarlatti Sonatas for solo harpsichord.&#13;
Here, the limitations of&#13;
the instrument were swept away&#13;
by an imaginative use of rubato,&#13;
articulation and musical gesture&#13;
. that brought to mind performances&#13;
by the celebrated&#13;
Fernando Valenti."&#13;
C&amp;R AUTO SERVICE&#13;
Quality Auto Work&#13;
Done At&#13;
Reasonable Rates&#13;
10% OFF FOR&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS&#13;
Call 553-9092or 694-3712&#13;
or see Chuck In&#13;
Union at 12:00&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
-Records—Sheet Music—&#13;
—Instruction Music—&#13;
Lowest Price Always&#13;
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626 56th St. 654-2932&#13;
WANTED: An attractive female escort to the&#13;
Marquette University Naval Ball. Held at&#13;
Hyatt Regency, Milwaukee. (April 19) Call&#13;
Brendan&#13;
TOOTHBRUSH — Good luck G.L. last chance&#13;
to hit big I — Cavity&#13;
HEIDI — ask anyone who REALLY saw . ..&#13;
nothing happened!&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1980 SUZUKI 550L, black. Call 553-92*62 after 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE, Kenosha&#13;
country setting. 634-8562 weekdays, 862-2883&#13;
weekends.&#13;
GIRLS: Rooms. Racine, near bus route. 634-&#13;
8562 weekdays, 862-2883 we ekends.&#13;
APARTMENT FOR RENT: 2 bedrooms,&#13;
fireplace, carpet, stove and refrigerator,&#13;
$250 month, incl. utilities. 654-5491.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
RACINE ECOLOGICAL SOCIETY Is looking&#13;
for artists and craftspersons to sell their&#13;
work at their Colonial Park Wildlife Arts&#13;
and Crafts Fair, Sun. May 31. Contact Jeff&#13;
Siutea at 634-1065. Sign up by March 15th.&#13;
FOUND - man's ID bracelet in Union parking&#13;
lot. 1-425-3027.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30c will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered UW-P gtudent or student organization is qualified&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
Name.&#13;
SS No.. Ranger&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
Martin named to Hall of Fame Former UW-Parkside national&#13;
wrestling champion and four -&#13;
time all - American Ken Martin&#13;
has been named to the National&#13;
Assn. of Intercollegiate Athletics&#13;
(NAIA) wrestling Hall of Fame.&#13;
Martin, a native of Coleman,&#13;
Wis., who now lives in Cody, Wyo.,&#13;
will be honored at the annual&#13;
NAIA Wrestling Hall of Fame&#13;
banquet Wednesday night at&#13;
Central State University in Edmond,&#13;
Okla., site of this year's&#13;
national tournament.&#13;
Martin, who was inducted as a&#13;
charter member of the UWParkside&#13;
Athletic Hall of Fame in&#13;
January, 1980, along with onetime&#13;
teamate Bill West, a NAIA&#13;
"Hall" inductee last year, joins&#13;
three other athletes and one coach&#13;
as the newest hall of f amers.&#13;
Martin had a splendid four year&#13;
record at UW-Parkside, posting&#13;
an 87-8-2 career mark and&#13;
becoming the first Wisconsin&#13;
wrestler to earn all - American&#13;
honors four times. He placed&#13;
second at 134 lbs. as a freshman,&#13;
third as a sophomore and won in&#13;
that same weight class as a junior.&#13;
He moved up to 142 lbs. as a senior&#13;
and lost a 6-6, 2-2 s plit referee's&#13;
decision in that championship.&#13;
Martin was twice named UWParkside&#13;
Athlete of the Year,&#13;
served as captain three times and&#13;
was selected most valuable and&#13;
most inspirational by his teammates&#13;
four times. He was also&#13;
NAIA all - d istrict four times as&#13;
well as twice the NAIA District 14&#13;
wrestler of t he year.&#13;
"Ken Martin is the person&#13;
responsible for turning a&#13;
wrestling program which was one&#13;
year old when he entered UWParkside&#13;
in the fall of 1970 into one&#13;
of the NAIA's strongest in the&#13;
1970's," Parkside Coach Jim Koch&#13;
said. "He started and carried an&#13;
outstanding wrestling tradition at&#13;
Parkside for four years as a&#13;
competitor and three years as a&#13;
student assistant coach."&#13;
"Every coach hopes that a&#13;
special athlete will come along&#13;
some time in his career," Koch&#13;
added. "Ken spoiled me by&#13;
showing up in my first year of&#13;
coaching. He has without a doubt&#13;
set the standard by which all&#13;
others will be compared."&#13;
Martin late- served as head&#13;
wrestling coach at Cody, Wyo.,&#13;
High School.&#13;
Martin is the son of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Wilfred Marquardt of&#13;
Coleman. He placed fourth in the&#13;
state high school meet in 1965 and&#13;
1966 while wrestling for Coach Jim&#13;
Douglas.&#13;
Martin now lives in Cody, where&#13;
he is an owner and operator of&#13;
Wyoming Ri ver Trips.&#13;
ACV-I tournament results by Gary Ledger&#13;
Twenty Parkside students,&#13;
including bowler Drama Desmaris&#13;
and 8-Ball p layer Ron Schneider,&#13;
gained experience competing&#13;
during their stay at the ACU-I&#13;
Regional Tournament in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Donna Desmaris, one of the 5-&#13;
member Parkside women's team,&#13;
led the competition with the&#13;
tournament high game of 238 and&#13;
high series of 608. Bowler Jan&#13;
Oechler explained, "Donna went&#13;
into the 608 series 18 pins down.&#13;
She finished 85 pins ahead." Most&#13;
important, the high game series&#13;
honors won Desmaris the&#13;
Woman's (Individual) All Events.&#13;
As a result, she will go to the&#13;
Nationals in Baltimore,&#13;
Maryland, in April.&#13;
Lisa Peckus, Ellie Becwar, Beth&#13;
Wise, Oechler and Desmaris, all&#13;
members of Parkside's Bowling&#13;
Club, made up the woman's team.&#13;
They finished 6th, claiming both&#13;
the team high game of 898, a nd&#13;
team high series of 240 6.&#13;
Ron Schneider, 3-time ACU-I&#13;
qualifier, defeated Don Lutz of&#13;
UW-Madison to claim the&#13;
Regional 8-Ball Title. This will be&#13;
Schneider's second trip to the&#13;
Nationals.&#13;
The Men's Bowling Team&#13;
placed fifth. John Peterson, Willie&#13;
Yee, and Jay Podella led the way&#13;
with a 196, 195, and 191 average,&#13;
respectively. Jerry Zigner and&#13;
Brian Ebener, all members of th e&#13;
Bowling Club, completed the&#13;
team.&#13;
Parkside also fielded competitors&#13;
in chess, backgammon,&#13;
foosball and table tennis. Nick&#13;
Hartl and Ted Patterson, both of&#13;
the Chess Gub, played both individually&#13;
and as a team. They&#13;
brought home a 2nd place team&#13;
plaque. Backgammon player&#13;
Gregg Williams, although&#13;
defeated early, "gained valuable&#13;
tournament experience," he said.&#13;
Foosball team Dave Sanner and&#13;
Tom Shulak placed 9th. John&#13;
Matranga and Gary Neu made up&#13;
Parkside's second foosball team.&#13;
Parkside Table Tennis Club&#13;
members Khai Luc and Brian&#13;
Walley competed in both the&#13;
singles and doubles matches. Luc&#13;
had a 3-1 rec ord earning him a&#13;
three-way tie for first in Round 1.&#13;
Because of pa irings, however, he&#13;
did not advance to the double&#13;
elimination matches. But, "every&#13;
tournament you gain experience,"&#13;
explained Luc. According to&#13;
Walley, he found out "there are a&#13;
lot of better table tennis players&#13;
around."&#13;
Thursday, March 12,1981&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, March 12&#13;
RECITAL by students at 1 p. m. In th e Union Cinema. The program is tree and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
MEETING Inter - Varsity Christian Fellowship small group meeting on "Rough&#13;
Edges" series from 12:30 -1:30 p. m. in Moln. D131. All are welcome.&#13;
Friday, March 13&#13;
VIDEO TAPES at 1 p. m. in Union Square with the "Second Annual Young&#13;
Comedians Show". Admission is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
DANCE at0 p. m. in Union Square featuring "Curley's Hat Band". Admission is $2&#13;
for Parkside students and $2.50 for a guest. Admission will be reduced 50( if you&#13;
are wearing a cowboy hat. Two ID cards are required at the door. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Saturday, March 14&#13;
PLAY "The Woodhull" with Elizabeth Garry at 8 p. m. in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
is $1 for students and $1.50 for others. Tickets are available at the Union&#13;
Information Center and will be available at the door. Sponsored by Parkside&#13;
Women's Concourse.&#13;
March 17,18 &amp; 19&#13;
CAPSULE COLLEGE takes place. Call ext. 2312 for additional details.&#13;
Thursday, March 19&#13;
LECTURE at 1 p. m. in Molinaro Hall. Prof. Walasek will talk on "Is the&#13;
Population Explosion Still Exploding?" Register please, atext. 2312.&#13;
PUBLIC HEARING at 6:30 p. m. in GR 103 with the Department of Natural&#13;
Resources. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Monday, March 23&#13;
VIDEO TAPES at l p. m. in Union Square featuring "Son of Football Follies".&#13;
Admission is free for Parkside students, staff and faculty. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
SEMINAR "Study Skills" at Ip. m. in CA142. All are welcome.&#13;
MEETING Inter - Varsity Christian Fellowship small group meeting from 1-2 p. m.&#13;
in Moln D128. All are welcome.&#13;
Wednesday, March 25&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 12 no on in Union Square featuring "Free Hot Lunch". Admissionis&#13;
free for Parkside students, staff and faculty. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
BROWN BAG LUNCH/LECTURE from 1-2 p. m. in Union 207. Sponsored by Inter -&#13;
Varsity Christian Fellowship and open to all.&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE ABOUT&#13;
STUDENT FINANCIAL AID&#13;
APRIL 15!&#13;
Remember that date if you need financial assistance&#13;
for next school year.&#13;
Here's why:&#13;
There won't be as much financial aid for college students next year. That's&#13;
certain! All schools will feel the pinch because of cut backs in Washington and&#13;
tight money at the state level. With not enough aid to go around, it will probably&#13;
become a case of "Fir st-Come, First-Served." That's where April 15 comes in!&#13;
Those who apply for financial aid before April 15 will be the "First-Served."&#13;
They'll be considered for the full range of aid available, and will receive their&#13;
first check in time for the Fall semester.&#13;
Those who apply after April 15 probably will not receive full funding, and may&#13;
be excluded entirely from some programs because of shortage of funds. And the&#13;
aid they do get may be late in arriving.&#13;
The April 15 a pplication date has been set by the Financial Aid Office to&#13;
guarantee that UW-Parkside students get FIRST PRIORITY on THE BEST&#13;
FINANCIAL AID PACKAGE AVAILABLE. That applies to all students: continuing&#13;
students already on financial aid, continuing students whose changing&#13;
economic circumstances might make them eligible, and new s tudents whose&#13;
applications for Fall have been accepted.&#13;
Remember! Everyone who wants financial aid for 1981-82 must complete an&#13;
application. Application forms (separate from the admission form) and the&#13;
latest information in financial aid prospects for 1981-82 are available in the&#13;
Financial Aid Office, Room 284, or call 553-2291.&#13;
W&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Thursday, March 12,1981&#13;
Rangers end season with loss to Eau Claire ^ Doug Edenhauser&#13;
t Jnf "J8?6 men's basketball&#13;
wtT jnded its season last&#13;
Wednesday night with a disappointing&#13;
88-64 loss at the hands of&#13;
in NAIA&#13;
District 14 championship game.&#13;
This is the third straight year that&#13;
the Rangers have lost to Eau&#13;
Claire for the tide, which earned&#13;
Eau Claire a trip to the NAIA&#13;
national tournament in Kansas&#13;
City.&#13;
The Rangers went into the game&#13;
knowing that they were going to&#13;
have a tough time against not only&#13;
the Eau Claire team, which had a&#13;
24-4 record going into the game,&#13;
but the extremely loud Eau Claire&#13;
crowd, which has been said to&#13;
mean an extra six to eight points&#13;
for the home team. The young&#13;
Ranger team took the pressure of&#13;
the crowd well because of their&#13;
Women lose&#13;
in playoffs&#13;
by Pete Cramer&#13;
After a disappointing 6-19&#13;
season, Coach Noreen Goggin and&#13;
the women's basketball team&#13;
found their way to Iowa for the&#13;
regional tournament game held at&#13;
Grandview College. The Rangers&#13;
made it there by upsetting Milton&#13;
75-70 for the NAIA District 14&#13;
championship title.&#13;
Parkside found their stay short ;&#13;
they were knocked out of the&#13;
tournament in the first round by&#13;
Missouri Western 71-59.&#13;
Mistakes seemed to be&#13;
Parkside's downfall. They turned&#13;
the ball over 20 times to their&#13;
opponents seven, yielding 11&#13;
steals on top of that. The Rangers&#13;
shot a game average of .479 from&#13;
the floor to Missouri Western's&#13;
.375. However, Missouri had 38&#13;
more field goal attempts than&#13;
Parkside throughout the course of&#13;
the game.&#13;
The lead scorer for Parkside&#13;
was Laurie Pope with 18 points,&#13;
while Cindy Ruffert and Robin&#13;
Henschel each added 10. In the&#13;
rebounding column, Laurie Pope&#13;
led the team with nine while&#13;
Jeanne Jacobs pulled down seven.&#13;
The RANGER congratulates the&#13;
Women's Basketball team for a&#13;
fine effort in a somewhat disappointing&#13;
season.&#13;
Two wrestlers Ail-American&#13;
Two Parkside wrestlers, junior&#13;
Dan Winter and freshman Mike&#13;
Muckerheide, earned NAIA All -&#13;
American honors last weekend by&#13;
placing among the top six&#13;
finishers in their weight classes.&#13;
Winter placed third at 134&#13;
pounds by winning five of six&#13;
matches for the third consecutive&#13;
year. His season record now&#13;
stands at 30-3. He will compete in&#13;
the NCAA Division I tournament&#13;
this weekend in Princeton, New&#13;
Jersey.&#13;
Muckerheide placed sixth at 158&#13;
pounds by winning four of seven&#13;
matches, finishing the season with&#13;
an 18 - 12 record.&#13;
Vet convention held&#13;
Last weekend there was a&#13;
Wisconsin Association of Concerned&#13;
Veterans Organization&#13;
(WACVO) convention held in&#13;
Stevens Point. Ten voting points&#13;
were available to the Parkside&#13;
Veterans Club, but the Parkside&#13;
club wasn't there.&#13;
There are many budget cuts&#13;
that are about to take place that&#13;
will affect a large veteran&#13;
population. For example, the state&#13;
of Wisconsin recently initiated an&#13;
Agent Orange Identification and&#13;
Assistance program. The money&#13;
needed to continue this project is&#13;
about to be severed from the&#13;
budget. This program, although&#13;
successful to this point, has been&#13;
labelled "unnecessary" by the&#13;
state.&#13;
WACVO states, "Now is the&#13;
time to stand up for the rights that&#13;
the veteran should have and&#13;
deserves. The urgency of this&#13;
matter cannot be overstressed.&#13;
Within the next year, if the&#13;
veteran does not take the bull by&#13;
the horns, he or she will have&#13;
nothing left of the benefits that are&#13;
rightfully theirs."&#13;
WACVO asks voters to write to&#13;
their representatives in government&#13;
to let them know voters do&#13;
not want decreases in veterans'&#13;
benefits.&#13;
"Ethnic&#13;
Dance&#13;
Night »&#13;
Performed by:&#13;
The Racine&#13;
Dance Theatre&#13;
March 28&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATRE&#13;
General Admission $1.50&#13;
Sponsored by:&#13;
The INTERNATIONAL&#13;
STUDENTS ORGANIZATION&#13;
•&amp;REDKEN"&#13;
» hair&#13;
styles&#13;
for men&#13;
and women&#13;
experience with big crowds&#13;
earlier in the season. V—&#13;
However, neither team played&#13;
the caliber of ball expected of&#13;
them. The two teams played&#13;
evenly for most of the first half,&#13;
but Eau Claire gained a ten point&#13;
lead for a 40-30 halftime score.&#13;
Parkside's freshman guard&#13;
Charles Perry kept the Rangers in&#13;
the game in the first half with 13&#13;
points and four assists.&#13;
Parkside fought back to close&#13;
the margin to two points early in&#13;
the second half before Eau Claire&#13;
called a timeout to regroup. The&#13;
Blugolds then scored seven&#13;
unanswered points and eventually&#13;
built the lead back up to 11 points.&#13;
Parkside retaliated, with just&#13;
under three minutes left in the&#13;
game, in a scoring spurt in which&#13;
they outscored Eau Claire 11-2&#13;
(with Perry scoring eight of those&#13;
points) to close the gap again to&#13;
two points. With the score at 64-62,&#13;
Eau Claire called a timeout to cool&#13;
off the hot Rangers, and wait on to&#13;
take a four point victory.&#13;
Chuckie Perry led both teams in&#13;
scoring with 22 points, making the&#13;
Eau Claire game his best game of&#13;
the season. He also dished out nine&#13;
assists and pulled down five&#13;
rebounds before fouling out in the&#13;
last minute of the game.&#13;
The Rangers ended their season&#13;
with a deceptive 16-14 record, not&#13;
bad considering the caliber of&#13;
competition they were up against.&#13;
mum&#13;
FRESHMAN GUARD&#13;
opponents for layup.&#13;
RANGER photo by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
CHARLES PERRY weaves through&#13;
THE STROH BREWERY COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN © 1978&#13;
'And for my second wish ..&#13;
For the real beer lover.</text>
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