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              <text>Student life faces reorganization</text>
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              <text>^University of Wisconsin - P arkside Student Life faces&#13;
reorganization&#13;
Injunction prevents full&#13;
enforcement of "Act"&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
Students applying for Federal&#13;
financial aid for college will not be&#13;
required to provide information&#13;
anymore as to their compliance&#13;
with Selective Service&#13;
registration requirements, according&#13;
to Jan Ocker, Director of&#13;
the Financial Aids office. Ocker&#13;
received word last week in a letter&#13;
from the U.S. Department of&#13;
Education, stating that students&#13;
would not be required to provide&#13;
information concerning Selective&#13;
Service registration status.&#13;
The letter came after the U.S.&#13;
District Court for the District of&#13;
Minnesota has issued a&#13;
pre lim inar y injunctio n&#13;
prohibiting the Department of&#13;
Education and the Selective&#13;
Service System from enforcing&#13;
section 1113 of the Department of&#13;
Defense Authorization Act for&#13;
1983.&#13;
The Act states that with the&#13;
1983-84 award year, any student&#13;
who is required to register for the&#13;
draft and who fails to do so is&#13;
ineligible for student financial aid&#13;
under Title IV of the Higher&#13;
Education Act of 1965.&#13;
If you are applying for Federal&#13;
financial aid (Pell Grant, Supplemental&#13;
Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant, College Work -&#13;
Study, National Direct Student&#13;
Loan, Guaranteed Student / PLUS&#13;
Loan, and State Student Incentive&#13;
Grant Programs), until further&#13;
notice you are not required, as a&#13;
condition for receipt of such aid, to&#13;
provide information as to your&#13;
compliance with Selective Service&#13;
registration requirements.&#13;
This means that you need not&#13;
complete the portion of the&#13;
"Statement of Educational&#13;
Purpose / Registration Compliance"&#13;
in the "1983-84 Student&#13;
Aid Report" which inquires as to&#13;
your Selective Service&#13;
••••••&#13;
registration status. In addition,&#13;
you need not provide such information&#13;
(Mi any other form&#13;
which asks about your Selective&#13;
Service registration status as a&#13;
condition for receipt of Federal&#13;
aid.&#13;
Depending on the outcome of a&#13;
court case, however, you may be&#13;
required to provide information&#13;
concerning your Selective Service&#13;
registration status at a later date.&#13;
Should such a requirement take&#13;
effect, your receipt of Federal&#13;
financial aid could be delayed if&#13;
you have not, by that time,&#13;
provided information as to your&#13;
registration status. For this&#13;
reason, you are encouraged to&#13;
provide this information voluntarily&#13;
now.&#13;
Depending on the outcome of the&#13;
court case, however, students&#13;
may be required to provide information&#13;
concerning their&#13;
Selective Service status in what is&#13;
called a "Statement of&#13;
Educational Purpose /&#13;
Registration Compliance" at a&#13;
later date.&#13;
Should the injunction be&#13;
revoked, however, possible delay&#13;
later of a student's receipt of Title&#13;
IV financial aid could occur, so.the&#13;
student can voluntarily supply the&#13;
Statement of Registration&#13;
Compliance this year.&#13;
The injunction prevents the Act&#13;
from being enforced, so students&#13;
are not required to provide any&#13;
information which asks for&#13;
Selective Service status as a&#13;
condition for receipt of financial&#13;
aid.&#13;
Financial aid under Title IV&#13;
includes the Pell Grant, Supplemental&#13;
Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant, College Work -&#13;
Study, National Direct Student&#13;
Loan, Guaranteed Student / PLUS&#13;
Loan, and State Student Incentive&#13;
Grant Programs. Counting that&#13;
pniiRTH ANNUAL Students Awards Banquet had about&#13;
* M!«+c in attendance. Student Organizations selected two&#13;
tefs frl wmn their organizations for Distinguished&#13;
ic A „«h Q and Luis Vallde uli was given the campus - ®. Awar^, and LUIS AWARD OTHER AWARD WJN.&#13;
RANGER - Andy Buchanan and Pat Hensiak; PSGA -&#13;
are: RANGER Anay ^ Va||dejulj/ PAB . Chrjs&#13;
ne&#13;
,&#13;
BuenM u Npkon and Jim Reeves, PEER SUPPORT -&#13;
imelev, Neil ana and SOC - Carla Thomas,&#13;
Mulligan and chroeder. The Presidents Award was&#13;
rie Olson and Dave S Advlsor 0f the Year was given to&#13;
i to Terry Tunks, andthe^Adv.s ^ rjght/ rQW one# Terry&#13;
ilyn Bugenhagen. Pitfurea ^ paf Hensjak/ Rat&#13;
:ker, Dave "Schroeder.&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Office of Student Life is&#13;
being reorganized to bring it in&#13;
line with other UW-System&#13;
campuses and to make the accountability&#13;
of some organizations&#13;
normally a part of Student Life&#13;
clearer, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Carla Stoffle said.&#13;
The reorganization will make&#13;
the Union administration directly&#13;
responsible to Stoffle, and move&#13;
services like the Child Care&#13;
Center and the Student Health&#13;
Office to Community Student&#13;
Services.&#13;
The position of dean of student&#13;
life will be frozen after the contract&#13;
of the current dean, Dave&#13;
Pedersen, expires. The freeze and&#13;
the Union reorganization will be in&#13;
effect for a one - year "interim&#13;
period," Stoffle said.&#13;
The move of the Child Care&#13;
Center and the Student Health&#13;
Office are expected to be permanent&#13;
changes. They will continue&#13;
to be funded by SUFAC,&#13;
however.&#13;
Stoffle said the Student Activities&#13;
Coordinator, Buddy&#13;
Couvion, and the Director of the&#13;
Union, Bill Heibuhr, will be taking&#13;
on additional duties.&#13;
"They're going to have to play&#13;
more of a campus role," she said.&#13;
"There are committees that the&#13;
dean of student life has served on&#13;
representing both and one or the&#13;
other will have to take over that&#13;
role."&#13;
The Bookstore and Food Service&#13;
will report to the Union during the&#13;
interim period.&#13;
and other state grants, loans and&#13;
scholarships, about one in three&#13;
Parkside students receive aid,&#13;
which totals more than 1.7 million&#13;
dollars.&#13;
DAVE PEDERSEN&#13;
Planning for next year is&#13;
proceeding along the new lines of&#13;
organization. "I've talked to some&#13;
people (in the Union) and I've&#13;
talked to some students and I'm&#13;
waiting for student government to&#13;
get a chance to think about it and&#13;
give me some input," she said.&#13;
"If they have some real&#13;
problems with it, I'll have to stop&#13;
and think about it and work it&#13;
through."&#13;
One of Pedersen's duties,&#13;
student discipline, will be taken&#13;
over by Jenny Price, Stoffle's&#13;
administrative assistant. Price&#13;
has a degree in law and held the&#13;
position of judicial officer on a&#13;
larger campus before coming to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"The responsibility is one which&#13;
is appropriate with Jenny's&#13;
background," Stoffle said.&#13;
Pedersen will be taking a&#13;
position as Dean of Student Affairs&#13;
at Southern Connecticut&#13;
University, a school with a&#13;
population of 11,000 to 12,000&#13;
students, located in New Haven,&#13;
CT.&#13;
UTIC teaching fellowship granted&#13;
Two Parkside assistant&#13;
professors, Laura Gellott, history,&#13;
and Michael Gurtman,&#13;
psychology, have been named&#13;
Lilly Post Doctoral Teaching&#13;
Fellows through a grant received&#13;
by the UW System Undergraduate&#13;
Teaching Improvement Council&#13;
(UTIC) from the Lilly Endowment,&#13;
Inc., of Indianapolis.&#13;
The fellowships, which were&#13;
granted to 10 UW System faculty,&#13;
are designed to provide professors&#13;
early in their teaching careers&#13;
released time from teaching&#13;
assignments to explore and&#13;
develop more effective teaching&#13;
methods.&#13;
Parkside Prof. Peter S. Hoff,&#13;
English and humanities, will&#13;
serve as project director for&#13;
Lilly's UW System fellowship&#13;
program. Hoff also is executive&#13;
director of UTIC.&#13;
The UW System is the second&#13;
state university system nationwide&#13;
to be awarded fellowships&#13;
from the Lilly endowment&#13;
program (Pennsylvania was the&#13;
first).&#13;
Gellott, who received her&#13;
master's degree from Marquette&#13;
University and her PhD from UWMadison,&#13;
and Gurtman, who&#13;
earned his master's and PhD&#13;
degrees at the University of&#13;
Connecticut at Storrs, joined&#13;
Parkside last fall.&#13;
Their fellowships total $7,440; a&#13;
total of nearly $50,000 has been&#13;
awarded to the UW System&#13;
through the program.&#13;
Both Gellott and Gurtman will&#13;
work on projects this summer that&#13;
will be the basis of new courses&#13;
here next fall.&#13;
Gellott, whose area of&#13;
specialization is the study of&#13;
authoritarian society in central&#13;
Europe in the 1930's, will develop&#13;
a multi - disciplinary approach to&#13;
that topic through application of,&#13;
among others, theories of&#13;
psychology and economics.&#13;
Gurtman will develop a&#13;
"building blocks" approach to&#13;
teaching theories of statistics to&#13;
psychology majors by implementing&#13;
innovative teaching&#13;
methods such as computer -&#13;
assisted instruction using bar&#13;
graphs and by focusing on small&#13;
group problem - solving.&#13;
Gellott and Gurtman will attend&#13;
UTIC's Faculty College in&#13;
Marinette, Wis. this June and a&#13;
two - week institute for teaching&#13;
improvement in Madison this&#13;
August as well as a number of&#13;
seminars.&#13;
Parkside Prof. Beecham&#13;
Robinson, education, will be an&#13;
instructor at the Madison institute.&#13;
History professor Thomas&#13;
C. Reeves and psychology&#13;
professor Donald A. Walter will&#13;
serve as summer project advisers&#13;
to Gellott and Gurtman. When&#13;
Gellott and Gurtman complete&#13;
their projects, an additional $600&#13;
will be awarded to Parkside for&#13;
teach ing impr ovem ent&#13;
workshops.&#13;
Scholarship day honors many&#13;
Nearly 70 students received&#13;
awards and honors during this&#13;
year's Scholarship Day, held last&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Sponsored by the Campus&#13;
Awards and Ceremonies Committee,&#13;
the program included an&#13;
address by professor of e ducation&#13;
Teresa Peck, and music by the&#13;
university's Chamber Singers,&#13;
directed by music professor&#13;
William Weinert.&#13;
The event also included&#13;
remarks by Parkside alumnus&#13;
Rodger DeRose, marketing&#13;
manager of over - the - counter&#13;
products for Rondelle&#13;
Laboratories, Inc., a subsidiary of&#13;
S.C. Johnson &amp; Son, Inc.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
presented the awards.&#13;
SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
« C. Tallent Scholarships&#13;
of $400 each, which memorialize&#13;
the former dean of the university's&#13;
Kenosha campus, went to&#13;
Todd Laszewski (Mathematics /&#13;
Applied Science), Caledonia;&#13;
Joanne M. Myers (Business&#13;
Management / Communication),&#13;
Racine; and Kenneth Wilhelm&#13;
(Psychology / Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations), Racine.&#13;
The Joanne M. Esser&#13;
Scholarship of $400, fo r a student&#13;
interested in ecology, went to&#13;
Thomas Siewert (Music / Earth&#13;
Science), Racine.&#13;
Kenneth L. Greenquist&#13;
Scholarships of $300 e ach, which&#13;
are named for the former&#13;
University regent and Racine&#13;
attorney and civic leader, were&#13;
awarded to Marijean Merrick&#13;
(Engineering Technology),&#13;
Kenosha; and Diane Vaccareilo&#13;
(Medical Technology / English),&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie scholarships of&#13;
$250 each, named for UWParkside's&#13;
founding chancellor,&#13;
went to Mary Barranco (Communication&#13;
/ Labor and Industrial&#13;
Relations), Racine; and Joseph&#13;
Shea (Life Science), Racine.&#13;
William W. Petrie Labor and&#13;
Industrial Relations Scholarships&#13;
of $250 went to Bonnie McDonnell,&#13;
South Milwaukee; and Maria&#13;
Veronico, Burlington.&#13;
The Robert Bauer Scholarship&#13;
of $200, to memorialize the UWParkside&#13;
life science graduate&#13;
who drowned last year in&#13;
Hayward, Wis., went to Edward&#13;
Randle, Kenosha.&#13;
The Johnson Wax Award of $100&#13;
Continued On Page Eight &#13;
2 Thursday, May 5,1983 RANGER&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Custodians receive support&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
I am writing this letter for my&#13;
friends in the janitorial department&#13;
who work for us, the&#13;
students. I am concerned for our&#13;
school and their jobs here. We are&#13;
about to lose our janitors to the&#13;
night shift. I know that most of the&#13;
students here could care less&#13;
about that, but I am concerned&#13;
because this will affect us, the&#13;
students who attend Parkside.&#13;
There have been many comments,&#13;
some of them published in the&#13;
Ranger in the past, about how&#13;
dirty our school is. This is doomed&#13;
to be worse if the janitors go to&#13;
night shift. It isn't just that the&#13;
janitors won't do their jobs on&#13;
nights, but is instead, that there&#13;
won't be anyone here to do the job&#13;
during the day.&#13;
Many people don't realize how&#13;
much the janitors do during the&#13;
day. They are the ones that clean&#13;
up the messes in the halls, empty&#13;
the full trash cans during the day&#13;
and try to keep our school as clean&#13;
as possible. They are the ones that&#13;
you go to when there is no soap in&#13;
the restrooms or the paper towels&#13;
run out. They are also the ones&#13;
that you contact when you don't&#13;
know who else to see about no&#13;
lights in a classroom or when&#13;
someone has spilt something and&#13;
you want to have the mess cleaned&#13;
up before it makes a bigger mess.&#13;
I know that I have gone to the&#13;
janitors several times each&#13;
semester for minor things that&#13;
needed to be done. I don't feel that&#13;
it is fair for us, the students, to&#13;
have to put up with full trash cans&#13;
in the middle of the day, or&#13;
ashtrays that are running over, no&#13;
toilet paper in the bathrooms, or&#13;
no resource person who can help&#13;
us in a myriad of small problems.&#13;
I believe that this proposed&#13;
change should have been looked&#13;
into more thoroughly before being&#13;
done for the sake of the&#13;
cleanliness of Parkside.&#13;
The point of this letter is that we&#13;
students deserve a clean school.&#13;
This won't be possible if the&#13;
janitors are on night shift. There&#13;
won't be anyone here to keep it&#13;
clean. The only people who will be&#13;
able to seethe buildings clean will&#13;
be those who have classes early in&#13;
the mornings. The rest of the&#13;
students will have to deal with&#13;
mounting trash and accumulated&#13;
dirt. We need to become concerned&#13;
with the janitor's plight as&#13;
it does effect us as students.&#13;
Barbara Johnson&#13;
Threat to overthrow&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Through your newspaper I wish&#13;
to inform the students of this&#13;
University of a very active group&#13;
that is planning to overthrow part&#13;
of our bureaucracy. Following is&#13;
an explanation of the&#13;
revolutionary ideas of our group.&#13;
This group is adopting the name&#13;
"N.P.S.G.A." (the Not Parkside&#13;
Stu den t G o ver n m ent&#13;
Association). Anyone may join&#13;
our organization which is headed&#13;
by both members and ex -&#13;
members of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
which are discontent with the&#13;
current leadership of the Senate.&#13;
The President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. has forbid us from airing our&#13;
differences in public so we, the&#13;
N.P.S.G.A. members are&#13;
revolting against bureaucratic&#13;
censorship.&#13;
Here's to you Mr. President —&#13;
"Arriba, arriba the Revolution!"&#13;
In the past P.S.G.A., Inc. has&#13;
been known for "bending" the&#13;
rules in the Constitution. For&#13;
example, on the meeting of April&#13;
27, 1983, the Senate illegally appointed&#13;
a new Assistant President&#13;
Pro - Tempore. This decision was&#13;
mostly due to the ignorance of the&#13;
Senate about their own rules&#13;
which their Vice - President&#13;
neglected to clarify. While we're&#13;
discussing fishy issues within the&#13;
Senate, let's review Tammy&#13;
Millager's termination from&#13;
employment, or as the Senate&#13;
called it "temporary suspension."&#13;
Lack of communication at its best.&#13;
But the Vice - President says it's&#13;
all been legal. A likely story, Mr.&#13;
Spoon, have you read your Constitution&#13;
lately!&#13;
Some reporters in Ranger and&#13;
other sources of information&#13;
claim that the students don't know&#13;
who the President and Vice -&#13;
President of their P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
are. Well, those of us who belong&#13;
to the N.P.S.G.A. are reminded&#13;
every day who the people "in&#13;
power" are. We are the oppressed&#13;
!!&#13;
Soon will come the time for a&#13;
new era to begin. Fellow&#13;
revolutionaries of Parkside, the&#13;
coup d'etat will happen very soon.&#13;
Be ready to march down to the&#13;
Union Square (aka Red Square)&#13;
and justice at once will soon&#13;
return to this University.&#13;
Remember that the coup d'etat is&#13;
near and that you have been&#13;
warned. So, when you least expect&#13;
it . . . expect it. If you wish more&#13;
information, our source of contact&#13;
will be the Ranger. If you can't&#13;
find us, one of our soldiers of&#13;
revolution will find you.&#13;
Just one more point, to the&#13;
Executive Board of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc.: We can do this two ways —&#13;
either you surrender peacefully or&#13;
we will be forced to do it for you.&#13;
The Angry Oppressed!&#13;
More letters&#13;
Reader argues&#13;
To the Editors,&#13;
The Ranger seems to have a&#13;
double standard when it comes to&#13;
an individual's freedom. The&#13;
editor is appalled by government&#13;
restriction of sexual freedom, but&#13;
on the same page advocates&#13;
restrictions of e conomic freedom.&#13;
Apparently, in the Ranger's eyes,&#13;
it is alright for the government to&#13;
peer into one's bankbook, but not&#13;
into one's bedroom. My letter's&#13;
main issue of freedom in general&#13;
is clearly related to Senator&#13;
Hasten's important victory.&#13;
Freedoms must come together&#13;
as an inseparable group to have&#13;
any real long lasting value. As a&#13;
natural right they can't be doled&#13;
out here and there by government.&#13;
If freedoms can be denied singly&#13;
by government we risk losing&#13;
them all one by one. In the words&#13;
of David Hume, "It is seldom that&#13;
liberty of any kind is lost all at&#13;
once." The Ranger is wrong in&#13;
believing that we have the luxury&#13;
of selecting which freedoms are&#13;
important. The truth is that they&#13;
all are important. It is an all or&#13;
nothing situation in the long run.&#13;
On the specific issue of the&#13;
editorial I really can't understand&#13;
the Ranger's reasons or logic in&#13;
attacking Senator Hasten for&#13;
opposing the withholding tax. The&#13;
editorial's argument is full of&#13;
holes and hard to believe in&#13;
places. The tax is not new, but the&#13;
method of collecting is. There is&#13;
no evidence to suggest widespread&#13;
"cheating" on paying what the&#13;
government decides is owed.&#13;
There is no reason to believe,&#13;
either, that any more money will&#13;
be taken in with this new law.&#13;
Besides the government already&#13;
gets the same information from&#13;
the financial institutions. All they&#13;
have to do is match this information&#13;
with the tax return to&#13;
determine compliance. Finally,&#13;
the cost of this new law would be&#13;
borne, as always, by the consumer&#13;
in the form of higher loan interest&#13;
rates, less service, and tighter&#13;
restrictions on issuing loans. The&#13;
costs far outweigh any benefits.&#13;
The withholding issue concerns&#13;
everyone's freedom. Attacking a&#13;
minority makes it so much easier&#13;
to eventually rob us all of our&#13;
freedom. Whenever someone&#13;
wants to make an issue popular all&#13;
he has to do is say that it is against&#13;
the "rich". I wish somebody&#13;
would define "rich" for me and&#13;
please tell me why it is so terrible.&#13;
A premise of the Ranger's&#13;
argument is that one's income is&#13;
the government's first and the&#13;
individual's second. Shouldn't it&#13;
be the other way around?&#13;
Shouldn't people be "rewarded"&#13;
by keeping what they've earned?&#13;
It is a radical idea, but it just may&#13;
prove to be popular.&#13;
The term "unearned income" is&#13;
misleading and even derogatory&#13;
to those who have interest and&#13;
dividend income. (Incidently, only&#13;
an insignificant amount of my&#13;
almost nonexistent income is from&#13;
this source.) The government has&#13;
a lot of gall to say that an individual&#13;
did nothing to earn interest&#13;
and dividends. One has to&#13;
pay taxes over and over on the&#13;
same money. Government&#13;
taxation does nothing to encourage&#13;
working, saving, and&#13;
investing. Many of our problems&#13;
are linked to our economy. These&#13;
problems are too great to be&#13;
solved by government. It's best to&#13;
leave them to a more powerful&#13;
and effective force, the free&#13;
market. We will find that when&#13;
our economic ills are cured in this&#13;
manner we shall have relatively&#13;
few problems. More important,&#13;
we will still be free.&#13;
I really don't believe the Ranger&#13;
when they chide Senator Hasten&#13;
for his "unheard of behavior" in&#13;
the Senate. I'm sure that if a&#13;
freshman senator spoke strongly&#13;
against, say, U. S. intervention in&#13;
Latin America, you would have&#13;
praised him for his valiant stand&#13;
against the established tradition. I&#13;
also really doubt the statement&#13;
about the Senate never being quite&#13;
the same. I'm sure that it will&#13;
recover. As for your allusion to&#13;
Senator Joseph McCarthy, the two&#13;
are quite the opposite. McCarthy's&#13;
actions harmed the innocent and&#13;
attempted to control people.&#13;
Hasten's action helped people by&#13;
letting them hold on to some&#13;
economic freedom and stemming&#13;
the tide of government control&#13;
over more aspects of our lives. His&#13;
stand does fit in with the larger&#13;
scheme of things. When we have&#13;
kept this one freedom we have&#13;
helped to insure the rest. We&#13;
should thank Senator Hasten for&#13;
his uphill struggle.&#13;
My specific feelings on the&#13;
editorial bring me back to my&#13;
issue of freedom in general and&#13;
what we can do to preserve it. This&#13;
nation was founded on the ideal of&#13;
freedom for the individual. Our&#13;
Founding Fathers recognized that&#13;
any style of government oppresses&#13;
the individual. Thomas&#13;
Paine remarked, "Government,&#13;
even its best state, is but a&#13;
necessary evil; in its worst state&#13;
an intolerable one." Any government&#13;
act infringes on the freedom&#13;
of the individual. (Perhaps the&#13;
advantage of democracy is that&#13;
we get to choose our own oppressors.)&#13;
A minimalist view of&#13;
government was advocated and&#13;
accepted to best protect the individual.&#13;
&#13;
We seem to be slipping away&#13;
from our original ideals. It is not&#13;
due to some outside force. By&#13;
demanding more and more from&#13;
government we are slowly losing&#13;
control over our lives. By&#13;
believing that government makes&#13;
the best decisions for us and can&#13;
solve all of our problems robs us of&#13;
our individuality. In the process&#13;
we shall surrender all our personal&#13;
freedom and have it&#13;
replaced by the dictates of some&#13;
Big Brother. (Plato felt that of all&#13;
forms of government democracy&#13;
was the most prone to dictatorship.)&#13;
We just can't continue&#13;
to expect to receive government&#13;
benefits and say that they are&#13;
"free". In the long run the price is&#13;
just too high to pay. The only&#13;
limits to the oppression of&#13;
government is the power with&#13;
which the people show themselves&#13;
capable of opposing it. Think&#13;
about it.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Arnold S. Parise&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
Herbert Kubly&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Buenktr0" ^hrm Ter&#13;
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' Maureen Burke, Jeanne&#13;
Patriril r, mhP£;&#13;
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KortenHirL ^h&#13;
6&#13;
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' Michael Kailas, Carol&#13;
Reuhnrn M ,&#13;
Kov&#13;
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' Rlck Luehr&#13;
-&#13;
Robb Luehr&#13;
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Tunkiec"' P ean Scarbr&lt;&gt;ugh, Dave Schroeder, Jennie&#13;
uw&#13;
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rksidc« «—»•&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER WlSCOnSi&#13;
°'&#13;
SEI KMIW Ranger!University of Wisconsin&#13;
s i ' r a r&#13;
s , a n d a r d s i z e&#13;
eluded for verification. signed and a telephone number inNames&#13;
will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
reserves a°l SiXr'a? pT^S^'n refusing fo^nt^lett" Thursday&#13;
" The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. print letters which contain false or &#13;
Thursday, May 5,1983&#13;
Kreuser talks about&#13;
his term as president&#13;
by Jeff Wicks&#13;
One of the most frequently used&#13;
comments people make about&#13;
student government is that they&#13;
don't know what goes on in PSGA.&#13;
Indeed, some people don't even&#13;
know who the current PSGA&#13;
president is. But the past&#13;
president knows what it's like, and&#13;
he was in office for two years, the&#13;
most anyone can be president. His&#13;
name is Jim Kreuser.&#13;
Kreuser, a junior majoring in&#13;
Political Science, was in PSGA his&#13;
freshman year, and ran for&#13;
president in 1981. He won over&#13;
three other candidates by a 281&#13;
vote margin. Last year he was re -&#13;
elected in a tight election, winning&#13;
by only 25 votes.&#13;
Kreuser had many priorities&#13;
when he took office. One was more&#13;
student involvement in government.&#13;
&#13;
"One of my biggest emphases&#13;
when I came in was to have&#13;
students sit on faculty committees,&#13;
because under the shared&#13;
governance concept, under law we&#13;
have rights as voting members on&#13;
faculty committees, and it wasn't&#13;
being done before I came into&#13;
office," Kreuser said. During his&#13;
administration, Jim states that all&#13;
committee seats available to&#13;
students were full, some of which&#13;
he sat on himself.&#13;
"There is an enormous amount&#13;
of committees that exist that&#13;
students can participate on, and&#13;
probably more students should be&#13;
made aware of it. But as long as&#13;
they were full, I really didn't&#13;
worry about it too much, just to&#13;
make sure that people were&#13;
reporting and the right things&#13;
were being done," he said.&#13;
While Kreuser was in office, two&#13;
seats were made available to&#13;
students on the Environmental&#13;
Concerns committee, two on the&#13;
Graduate Programming committee,&#13;
one on Campus planning&#13;
and in August, the president of&#13;
PSGA will sit on the Faculty&#13;
Senate as a non - voting member,&#13;
but a member nontheless. "This is&#13;
a big advance for the students&#13;
because they can now have more&#13;
input in matters that concern&#13;
them," says Jim. "That's the crux&#13;
of student government, to play an&#13;
active role in all the institutional&#13;
decision - making process that&#13;
goes on in an institution."&#13;
Kreuser also felt that he had to&#13;
play a role outside of Parkside. He&#13;
says that decisions in state and&#13;
local government affect students&#13;
more than many realize.&#13;
"I think state issues are important&#13;
because state legislators&#13;
are more accessible and we have&#13;
more influence," he said. "On the&#13;
national level, we have one vote.&#13;
In the state legislature, we have&#13;
two senate votes and six&#13;
representative votes that we can&#13;
affect, just in this area."&#13;
Kreuser sums up how he feels&#13;
student government should work&#13;
in three words: educate, agitate,&#13;
and legislate. "This is how student&#13;
government should work," he&#13;
says. Educate by letting senators&#13;
know who he has been talking to,&#13;
and what's going on with administration&#13;
and faculty. Agitate&#13;
on campus and outside the&#13;
campus when student issues arise.&#13;
Legislate by passing resolutions&#13;
against things that infringe on&#13;
student rights.&#13;
Some "tangible things" Kreuser&#13;
points to as accomplishments&#13;
while he was president is his work&#13;
with the Union Pad, infant care,&#13;
putting shelves in the bathrooms,&#13;
and a great deal of time and effort&#13;
in establishing the shared&#13;
governance concept with Walter&#13;
Feldt, Secretary of the Faculty. A&#13;
special task force was set up of&#13;
administrators, students and&#13;
faculty to work out a way to get&#13;
students involved with some of the&#13;
decision - making under shared&#13;
governance, signed into law under&#13;
Governor Lucey.&#13;
Also, Parkside played host to&#13;
two United Council meetings for&#13;
the first time.&#13;
Kreuser credits much of what&#13;
he has done this last year to his&#13;
vice - president, Chuck Betz. Betz&#13;
was the first V. P. to finish his&#13;
term in five years, Kreuser said,&#13;
"He's 10 times better than either&#13;
V. P.'s I had last year. He did a lot&#13;
of follow - up for me in the&#13;
senate."&#13;
When asked about criticism he&#13;
received that he was inaccessible,&#13;
he replied, "Why should I be&#13;
sitting in the PSGA office waiting&#13;
for students to come in - killing&#13;
time - when I could be at a faculty&#13;
meeting or studying?"&#13;
"I don't think there was a note&#13;
on my door or desk that I didn't&#13;
answer. I seemed like I always&#13;
had somewhere to go."&#13;
Kreuser pointed out that if&#13;
anything goes wrong with PSGA,&#13;
the president seems to always get&#13;
the blame. "Does the president&#13;
have to answer to all the problems&#13;
with PSGA? I think the Senators&#13;
can answer many questions that&#13;
come the president's way."&#13;
What does he think about the&#13;
future of PSGA? Get out of the&#13;
book business (book exchange),&#13;
and possibly hand it over to a&#13;
student organization for a money -&#13;
maker. Also, always keep student&#13;
seats in committees full, keep&#13;
fully aware of SUFAC reserves at&#13;
u *&#13;
A!"&#13;
ES&#13;
Rf&#13;
P&#13;
*&#13;
ES&#13;
,&#13;
ENJ&#13;
AT'YE demonstrates an Epson personal computer at the Computer Fair,&#13;
held last Saturday in Main Place. On the corner of the table is an Epson 8K desktop computer,&#13;
sitting on its carrying case.&#13;
all times, and get to know faculty&#13;
on committees better.&#13;
And what about the current&#13;
PSGA president and what advice&#13;
does he give to him? "Phil is&#13;
concerned, and I am glad&#13;
someone from PSGA won. He has&#13;
to develop his own style. If he can&#13;
mobilize the Senators to work on&#13;
issues and follow through, he'll&#13;
have a great deal less to do and&#13;
more time for the students."&#13;
If you could run again and did in&#13;
this last election, would you have&#13;
won?&#13;
"By 100 votes," Kreuser said.&#13;
Political science internships&#13;
The Public Service Internship&#13;
Program (PSIP) at Parkside has&#13;
summer and fall openings for&#13;
students who wish to earn political&#13;
science credits as interns in local,&#13;
state or national government&#13;
agencies.&#13;
PSIP students get practical&#13;
experience in working in political&#13;
campaigns, helping with legal&#13;
services for the poor, solving&#13;
constituent problems for&#13;
legislators, assisting local administrators&#13;
in providing comMadison&#13;
students reach dorm settlement&#13;
The owners of a private dormitory&#13;
have settled out - of - court&#13;
with a group of Madison students,&#13;
agreeing to reimburse, the&#13;
students $50,000 in security&#13;
deposits and to repay or replace&#13;
meal tickets.&#13;
The settlement ends one portion&#13;
of the students' suit against former&#13;
and current owners of&#13;
Wisconsin Hall, a private facility.&#13;
Students had been caught between&#13;
a former manager who declared&#13;
bankruptcy, former owners who&#13;
refused to honor dorm contracts,&#13;
but not their pre - paid meal&#13;
tickets. Under terms of the settlement,&#13;
Germantown Trust will&#13;
compensate students with new&#13;
meal tickets or pay for money&#13;
spent on food, says attorney Tom&#13;
Glowacki.&#13;
The bank, and Wisconsin Hall's&#13;
current manager, A1 Beauchaine,&#13;
aren't admitting legal responsibility,&#13;
says Glowacki, but don't&#13;
want to victimize innocent&#13;
students. The bank's action should&#13;
help restore Wisconsin Hall's&#13;
reputation, he says. (NOCR)&#13;
munity services, working with&#13;
planning agencies and assisting&#13;
local court agencies.&#13;
Students can earn from three to&#13;
six academic credits as interns.&#13;
In the past, PSIP interns have&#13;
worked for Congressman Les&#13;
Aspin, the city of Kenosha, the&#13;
Racine Jail Alternatives&#13;
Program, the Kenosha Police&#13;
Department, the Racine Police&#13;
Department, the Racine County&#13;
Public Defender's Office, the&#13;
Kenosha District Attorney's&#13;
Office, the Wisconsin Department&#13;
of Local Affairs and Development,&#13;
the Racine County Juvenile Court,&#13;
the Racine Clerk of Courts, the&#13;
Kenosha County Juvenile Court&#13;
and numerous other public and&#13;
private agencies.&#13;
Persons interested in enrolling&#13;
in the PSIP program can pick up&#13;
application forms in WLLC 344 or&#13;
phone the university's office of&#13;
Community Outreach at 553-2032.&#13;
Extension workshops:&#13;
cameras § edible plants&#13;
The University Extension at&#13;
Parkside is offering two&#13;
workshops this month, one on&#13;
gathering edible wild plants, and&#13;
the other on vacation&#13;
photography.&#13;
The photography class, taught&#13;
by Paul Flagg, will cover what&#13;
equipment to consider taking,&#13;
what films to take and how to care&#13;
for them, camera technique,&#13;
composition, and some measures&#13;
to take if and when photographic&#13;
disaster strikes.&#13;
The class will be taught on&#13;
Monday, May 16 and Monday,&#13;
May 23 in Tallent Hall. Fee for the&#13;
class is $7.&#13;
The course on edible plants will&#13;
show you how to use plants grown&#13;
in the wild in hundreds of dishes.&#13;
Easily recognized plants will be&#13;
identified by Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, a Parkside&#13;
professor of earth science.&#13;
The course will meet on&#13;
Thursday, May 12 and Thursday,&#13;
May 19, and includes two Saturday&#13;
field trips, on May 14 and 21.&#13;
Correction&#13;
Materials needed for the class&#13;
include a field notebook, pocket&#13;
knife, rucksack or plastic bags&#13;
and a sauce pan for cooking. Fee&#13;
for the class is $22.&#13;
Registrations for both classes&#13;
are being taken by the UW - Extension,&#13;
phone 553-2312.&#13;
^•attention^H&#13;
INTERESTED STUDENTS&#13;
PSGA IS LOOKING FOR STUDENTS&#13;
FOR SUFAC AND FACULTY COMMITTEES&#13;
ALSO FOR THE POSITION OF&#13;
PSGACHIEF JUSTICE&#13;
Contact - Phil Pogreba in PSGA Office&#13;
***•*•••****•••********************&#13;
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PROFESSIONAL&#13;
WORD PROCESSING&#13;
• Ideal for Cover Letters&#13;
and Resumes.&#13;
# Call — BETTER LETTERS&#13;
(312) 6620148&#13;
*&#13;
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•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A HAY 21&amp;22 &#13;
4 Thursday, May 5,1983 RANGER&#13;
THE ARMY ROTC 2-YEAR&#13;
PROGRAM. UP TO $1,000 A YEAR&#13;
PUIS A COMMISSION.&#13;
If you passed up Army&#13;
ROTC during your first two&#13;
years of college, you can&#13;
enroll in our 2-year proS&#13;
am before you start your&#13;
st two.&#13;
Your training will start&#13;
the summer after your&#13;
sophomore year at a six-week&#13;
Army ROTC Basic Camp.&#13;
It'll pay off, too. You'll&#13;
earn over $400 for attending&#13;
Basic Camp and up to&#13;
$1,000 a year for your last&#13;
two years of college.&#13;
But, more important,&#13;
you'll be on your way to earning&#13;
a commission in today's&#13;
Army—which includes the&#13;
Army Reserve and Army&#13;
National Guard—while you're&#13;
earning a college degree.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALLYOUCANBE.&#13;
Contact address&#13;
ENROLLMENT OFFICER&#13;
MARQUETTE UNIV.&#13;
ARMY ROTC&#13;
CALL COLLECT&#13;
(414) 224-7195/7229&#13;
Astronomer to speak&#13;
on planetary geology&#13;
Dr. Peter H. Schultz of the&#13;
Lunar and Planetary Institute in&#13;
Houston, Texas will be speaking&#13;
at Parkside on Thursday at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in GRNQ. 103 and Friday at 1&#13;
p.m. in Grq. 103. Dr. Schultz&#13;
focuses his research on planetary&#13;
surface processes, especially&#13;
impact cratering. Schultz who&#13;
took his doctorate from the&#13;
University of Texas in astronomy&#13;
with a strong background in&#13;
geology is also a member of the&#13;
Planetary Geology Speakers&#13;
Bureau. The Planetary Geology&#13;
Speakers Bureau is a national&#13;
lecturer program sponsored by&#13;
the National Aeronautics and&#13;
Space Administration and&#13;
coordinated by Arizona State&#13;
University.&#13;
Planetary geology is an interdisciplinary&#13;
science which has&#13;
been grown from infancy in less&#13;
than two decades. Unlike&#13;
traditional geologists who are&#13;
concerned with the development&#13;
of planet Earth, planetary&#13;
geologists address questions&#13;
about the origin and evolution of&#13;
the solid surfaces of planets and&#13;
their natural satellites and seek to&#13;
place terrestrial and extraterrestrial&#13;
geologic processes&#13;
into a unified framework of&#13;
knowledge. Planetary geologists&#13;
view extraterrestrial environments&#13;
as great geologic&#13;
experiments running under&#13;
conditions differing from those on&#13;
Earth which must inevitably&#13;
result in improvements to our&#13;
understanding of natural&#13;
terrestrial processes.&#13;
The talks Thursday, entitled&#13;
"Target Earth — Effects of Large&#13;
Body Impacts", and Friday,&#13;
entitl ed ''P lan eta ry&#13;
Catastrophes", are co - sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Geology and&#13;
Physics Programs and the Racine&#13;
Geological Society. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to attend either or both&#13;
of the talks.&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
The Parkside Challenge has&#13;
been postponed one week, because&#13;
none of the other schools in the&#13;
UW system have had enough&#13;
nerve to register yet. As a result,&#13;
we have begun a systematic&#13;
assault on the other schools good&#13;
names. We expect some sort of a&#13;
response very shortly. The&#13;
Parkside Challenge will take&#13;
place, in the Union Recreation&#13;
Center, on May 14. «&#13;
The Dart Team is also having a&#13;
fund raising drive. The let's buy a&#13;
real Dart Board fund has $8 so far.&#13;
Come on, folks. We have over 60&#13;
members. If you can't afford the&#13;
price of a large beverage from the&#13;
Union, you can't afford your&#13;
tuition. Go up to the Student Life&#13;
Office, Union 209, and give Marcy&#13;
75 cents. Help us save a sport that&#13;
has been around over 400 years. In&#13;
other words, cough up some&#13;
change you bunch of cheap college&#13;
- educated slime.&#13;
The UWPDT is planning a trip&#13;
to the Brewers game on May 27.&#13;
CLUB EVENTS^*********&#13;
Any interested members, or non&#13;
members, are encouraged to&#13;
attend the next Dart Team&#13;
meeting Monday at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro 126. We will be cooking&#13;
Johns on ville Brats before the&#13;
game. Good luck on your finals.&#13;
DST&#13;
Delta Sigma Theta, Inc. will be&#13;
holding a rush party on Thursday,&#13;
May 5 in Union 104, to open its&#13;
membership to women at&#13;
Parkside. Delta Sigma Theta is a&#13;
national public service sorority,&#13;
dedicated to the principles of&#13;
community service and academic&#13;
excellence.&#13;
Chess&#13;
The Chess Club would like to&#13;
thank everyone who entered our&#13;
Spring Tournament, and everyone&#13;
who helped make it happen. If you&#13;
didn't participate, you can show&#13;
up at our meetings next week and&#13;
we'll forgive you. The Chess Club&#13;
is also looking for groupies, so just&#13;
report to Union 207 fro m 6 to 10&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday or Moln D-133&#13;
between 1 and 4 p.m. on Wednesday.&#13;
You won't have to stay&#13;
four hours (it doesn't take long).&#13;
Our next meeting's agenda: The&#13;
Psychotherapy for Chess&#13;
Disorders Committees will report&#13;
on a new phobia — fear of entering&#13;
chess tournaments; 4-D chess&#13;
notation; and Applied Intimidation&#13;
Theory.&#13;
ET&#13;
All persons in Applied science&#13;
and engineering technology are&#13;
encouraged to join "the" club.&#13;
This will be an organizational&#13;
meeting to review and revise the&#13;
constitution, discuss a club name&#13;
and finalize plans for a picnic that&#13;
will be held May 21. The final&#13;
meeting of this semester will be&#13;
held on Wednesday, May 11 at l&#13;
p.m. in Moln D-139.&#13;
ISO&#13;
The International Students&#13;
Organization held their annual&#13;
election last Friday, April 29. The&#13;
following officers were elected:&#13;
Ziad Musaitif was elected&#13;
president, Depak as senior vice&#13;
president, Riz Yray as junior vice&#13;
president, Ed Francisco as&#13;
secretary, Beejan Beheshti as&#13;
treasurer and Patty as ISO's&#13;
advertising officer.&#13;
PSE&#13;
PSE, the Marketing Club, would&#13;
like to thank everyone that participated&#13;
and helped with the&#13;
Third Annual Loop 500. We wo uld&#13;
also like to congratulate the&#13;
winning teams: First place, Mike&#13;
Vania, Sue Meyer, Don&#13;
Matownski, Donna Driscoll;&#13;
Second place, Riz Yray, Jose&#13;
Yamat, Brenda, "Minge"; Third&#13;
place, Ron Jake, Ted Miller, Chris&#13;
Kunz.&#13;
Geology&#13;
Dr. Peter H. Schultz of the&#13;
Lunar and Planetary Institute in&#13;
Houston, Texas will be giving two&#13;
talks next week which will be co -&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Geology and Physics Clubs and&#13;
the Racine Geological Society.&#13;
The first talk will be held Thursday,&#13;
May 5 at 7:30 p. m. in Grq&#13;
103. The talk is titled "Target&#13;
Earth Effects of Large - Body&#13;
Impacts". The second talk,&#13;
"Planetery Catastrophes," will be&#13;
held Friday, May 6 at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Grq 103.&#13;
Write Ranger&#13;
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on the ******&#13;
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automatic timing, scorin,&#13;
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and documentation.&#13;
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RANGER Thursday, May 5,1983 5&#13;
Sound Diggings&#13;
'Hollywood Henry' brings back the blues&#13;
'Something Wicked' brings Bradbury novel to life&#13;
by Napoleon Scarbrough&#13;
If the names T-Bone Walker,&#13;
Lead Belly, Lightning Hopkins&#13;
and the recently - late Muddy&#13;
Waters mean anything to you,&#13;
then you are undoubtedly aware of&#13;
an original American art form&#13;
called the blues. I happened to&#13;
catch a great veteran blues act&#13;
last evening at the Racine&#13;
Sheraton. Chester Henry Scarborough&#13;
and company (The Good&#13;
Bags) showed their American&#13;
blues heritage by performing&#13;
songs made famous by the immortals&#13;
mentioned above. Chester&#13;
Henry's blues guitar gave me a&#13;
feeling of joy, sadness, despair&#13;
and happiness, while his cousin&#13;
Lonnie Williams' blues bass lines&#13;
literally walked me across the&#13;
dance floor. L.G. Gill's drum work&#13;
was smooth and laid back, while&#13;
keyboardist Jo Jo Hayes ran the&#13;
gamut of riffs from Booker T. to&#13;
Jimmy Smith. Roy Williams, the&#13;
brother of Lonnie, crooned one&#13;
blues standard after another. At&#13;
times the silkiness of Sam Cooke&#13;
floated across the room on tunes&#13;
like "Love Me" and "What It Is,"&#13;
by Z.Z. Hill and Little Milton&#13;
respectively, while at other times&#13;
he displayed a raspyness in his&#13;
voice on "Things I Used To Do"&#13;
and "Blind, Cripple and Crazy,"&#13;
as well as other blues standards.&#13;
All in all, the band showed their&#13;
twenty year versatility of being&#13;
together in the blue.&#13;
Henry, as well as the other&#13;
members of the band, migrated to&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
to perform&#13;
The Parkside Wind Ensemble,&#13;
conducted by assistant professor&#13;
of music Mark Eichner, will&#13;
present its spring concert&#13;
featuring a guest performance by&#13;
adjunct dance professor&#13;
Katherine Zavada at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, May 10 in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission to the concert,&#13;
sponsored by the Fine Arts&#13;
Division, is $1 for all students,&#13;
Parkside staff and senior citizens&#13;
and $2 for others.&#13;
Proceeds will go to the&#13;
university's Music Scholarship&#13;
Fund.&#13;
Zavada, who will perform in&#13;
contemporary dance style to&#13;
Warren Benson's "Solitary&#13;
Dancer," has danced&#13;
professionally as a member of&#13;
several Milwaukee - based touring&#13;
companies, including "Dancecircus,"&#13;
with which she performed&#13;
for five years.&#13;
In addition to teaching several&#13;
dance forms at Parkside since&#13;
1977, Zavada teaches dance at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
The concert also will feature&#13;
Ingolf Dahl's "Sinfonietta," a&#13;
musical fabric of ban d sounds — a&#13;
parade, a concert in the park and&#13;
a serenade — woven into a&#13;
symphonic context; "Symphony&#13;
No. 3" by Vittorio Giannini,&#13;
America's popular neo - romantic&#13;
composer; and "Armenian&#13;
Dances," by Alfred Reed, who&#13;
draws heavily from the work of&#13;
Gomidas Vartabed, the founder of&#13;
Armenian classical music who&#13;
collected over 4,000 Armenian folk&#13;
songs.&#13;
Eichner, who joined the&#13;
Parkside music faculty last fall,&#13;
conducts wind and brass ensembles&#13;
in addition to teaching&#13;
applied trumpet. He received his&#13;
masters degree in music from the&#13;
University of T exas - Austin and&#13;
was director of instrumental&#13;
music at the University of Science&#13;
and Arts of Oklahoma before&#13;
coming to UW-P. He has studied&#13;
trumpet with Dr. J. Frank Elsass,&#13;
Terry Cravens and Wayne&#13;
Barrington at UW-Austin.&#13;
Racine from their native&#13;
Mississippi, bringing their&#13;
musical heritage with them.&#13;
Although they have never&#13;
released a record, they have been&#13;
successfully filling clubs in and&#13;
around the Racine area as well as&#13;
Chicago and Indiana.&#13;
When asked about his views on&#13;
the future of the blues, Henry&#13;
replied, "If the young musicians&#13;
don't reclaim their natural&#13;
heritage and stop chasing after&#13;
fads, the blues will slowly die out.&#13;
We are at present a dying breed."&#13;
Hollywood Henry and the Blues&#13;
Bags will continue to play clubs,&#13;
private engagements and hotels&#13;
such as the Racine Sheraton&#13;
mentioned above. They would also&#13;
like to play a few college campuses&#13;
to "enlighten the young&#13;
people to a basic, original&#13;
American art form."&#13;
I, as well as the other guests at&#13;
the hotel, certainly enjoyed this&#13;
rare act of au thenticity and, even&#13;
after the show was over, the&#13;
chandeliers dimmed, and the&#13;
amplifiers went hush, I could still&#13;
see and hear blues as it dawned on&#13;
me that I had uncovered yet&#13;
another clue to the real music that&#13;
I am looking for in my quest for&#13;
sound digging.&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Ever since the Disney Studios&#13;
started making PG films I have&#13;
been waiting for a film of theirs&#13;
that I would enjoy. I was disappointed&#13;
by "The Black Hole," and&#13;
bored by "Tron." So I was pleased&#13;
to find that Disney's latest&#13;
release, "Something Wicked This&#13;
Way Comes," was, in fact, a&#13;
pleasant surprise.&#13;
Based on the 1962 novel by Ray&#13;
Bradbury, the film takes place in&#13;
the tiny Greentown, Illinois, in the&#13;
early part of this century —&#13;
supposedly, the time and place of&#13;
Bradbury's childhood. The film&#13;
stars Vidal Peterson and Shawn&#13;
Carson as Will Halloway and Jim&#13;
Nightshade, two boys that inhabit&#13;
Greentown and first discover&#13;
"Dark's Pandemonium Carnival,'&#13;
as it roars into town one night on&#13;
the carnival train. The boys are so&#13;
eager to see the carnival, in fact,&#13;
that they sneak into it the night&#13;
before it opens, and find, to their&#13;
horror, a mystereious myriad of&#13;
fiendish beings, hellish rides and&#13;
other oddities. They find, for&#13;
example, a merry - go - round that&#13;
goes backwards, and, as it does it&#13;
turns back time for its riders,&#13;
turning adults into children.&#13;
By day the carnival is&#13;
seemingly 'normal', bringing to&#13;
LTO R: Vidal Peterson, Jason&#13;
Robards and Shawn Carson in&#13;
a scene from "Something&#13;
Wicked This Way Comes."&#13;
life the dreams of the inhabitants&#13;
of Greentown. But Will and Jim&#13;
know the truth, and when Mr.&#13;
Dark discovers that they know he&#13;
searches the town for them, using&#13;
whatever evil, supernatural&#13;
powers he has at his disposal.&#13;
One of the most striking things&#13;
about this film is its&#13;
cinematography. Greentown is a&#13;
Rockwellesque little place, from&#13;
the revolving barber pole to the&#13;
town saloon. The whole 'look' of&#13;
the film is pure Americana, as are&#13;
the film's characters.&#13;
Vidal Peterson and Shawn&#13;
Carson are two of the best child&#13;
actors I've seen in some time. Sort&#13;
of a Tom Sawyer - Huckleberry&#13;
Finn pair, there is simply nothing&#13;
put - on or exaggerated about their&#13;
performances. Jason Robards is&#13;
excellent as Charles Halloway,&#13;
Will's father, an aging librarian&#13;
who, in the course of the film,&#13;
discovers how to be young again.&#13;
Jonathan Pryce exudes a cool,&#13;
suave sort of evil as the sinister&#13;
Mr. Dark.&#13;
Surprisingly, the one problem&#13;
with the film is its screenplay,&#13;
which was done by Bradbury&#13;
himself. The early part of the film&#13;
is often disjointed and hard to&#13;
follow, a series of events only&#13;
loosely strung together in any&#13;
coherent way. The plot tightens up&#13;
later in the film, but the early part&#13;
is definitely weak. For the most&#13;
part though, "Something Wicked&#13;
This Way Comes" is a lively film&#13;
adaptation of Bradbury's novel —&#13;
Disney material yes, but good&#13;
Disney material, not corny. The&#13;
film's special effects are very&#13;
good, and several sequences in the&#13;
film are actually (believe or not!)&#13;
scary without being bloody or&#13;
violent. This is one of those films&#13;
that Disney used to be so well&#13;
known for, the film that most&#13;
anybody, of any age, could enjoy.&#13;
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Thursday, May 5,1983&#13;
Skylight Opera&#13;
to hold auditions&#13;
Skylight Comic Opera, Ltd. will&#13;
hold auditions for its 1983-84&#13;
season May 10,12 and 17 from 3 p.&#13;
m. to 7 p. m. Call 271-8815 to&#13;
arrange an appointment.&#13;
Auditioners should prepare two&#13;
selections (in English) either&#13;
from the productions slated for&#13;
the 83-84 season, or from a work&#13;
by the same composers. Bring&#13;
along a picture and resume if&#13;
available.&#13;
1983-84 Skylight Season:&#13;
Sept. 21 - Oct. 9 - TRIAL BY&#13;
JURY — Gilbert &amp; Sullivan;&#13;
JUMPING FROG OF&#13;
CALAVARAS COUNTY — L ukas&#13;
Foss&#13;
Oct. 26 - Nov. 13 - THE TURN&#13;
OF THE SCREW — Benjamin&#13;
Britten&#13;
Nov. 30 - Dec. 31 — H.M.S.&#13;
PINAFORE — Gilbert &amp; Sullivan&#13;
Jan. 25 - Feb. 12 - LA CALISTO&#13;
— F rancesco Cavalli&#13;
March 7 -11 — THE STUDENT&#13;
PRINCE — Sigmund Romberg&#13;
March 28 - April 22 — TINTYPES&#13;
— Revue of American&#13;
popular music&#13;
Oriana Trio to&#13;
present concert&#13;
The Oriana Trio, the Parkside's&#13;
resident chamber ensemble, will&#13;
present a free program for junior&#13;
and senior high school students in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha at 10 a.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, May 11 in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The trio will perform works by&#13;
Mozart and Brahms and will&#13;
discuss those composers and their&#13;
work as well as demonstrate individual&#13;
instruments.&#13;
Music teachers desiring more&#13;
information and reservations can&#13;
call the UW-P Fine Arts Division,&#13;
which is sponsoring the program&#13;
at 553-2581. Deadline for making&#13;
reservations is May 6.&#13;
A critic's critique of the Oscars&#13;
by Dave Schroeder&#13;
Nowthat a couple of weeks have&#13;
passed since the night of the&#13;
Academy Awards, I would like to&#13;
reflect upon Oscar night.&#13;
Overlooking the inferior entertainment&#13;
(I mean, who was the&#13;
sadist that inflicted that opening&#13;
number on the public?), the unprepared&#13;
presenters (Matt Dillon&#13;
and Kristi McNichol, for example,&#13;
who never bothered to try to&#13;
pronounce their nominees names,&#13;
let alone learn how to pronounce&#13;
them) and some heartrending&#13;
acceptance speeches (Mickey&#13;
Rooney and Richard Attenburough,&#13;
namely), I want to&#13;
focus on who deserved to win, and&#13;
who did not deserve to win. So&#13;
much for overlooking these&#13;
things.&#13;
Let's talk about those who richly&#13;
deserved their awards. Jessica&#13;
Lange, you may have received the&#13;
award for Frances rather than&#13;
Tootsie. Even though I picked&#13;
Kim Stanley as my choice, I still&#13;
predicted that the Academy would&#13;
pick you, and I say that you were a&#13;
good choice.&#13;
Lou Gosset, Jr. Congrats. You&#13;
deserved it, along with James&#13;
Mason. You both had superb&#13;
performances and I found that it&#13;
was hard to pick between the two.&#13;
Ben Kingsley, you made Gandhi&#13;
worth the ticket price. Single -&#13;
handedly you gave the movie life,&#13;
and made this sterile view of a&#13;
great man's life interesting.&#13;
John Williams once again&#13;
proved that he is the man to go to&#13;
for a fantastic musical score. He&#13;
earned his fourth Oscar for E.T.,&#13;
leaving the rest of the contenders&#13;
in the dust.&#13;
Probably the most deserved&#13;
award of the night went to Meryl&#13;
Street for Sophie's Choice. This is&#13;
probably the most flawless performance&#13;
ever brought to the&#13;
screen, by anybody. Frankly, I&#13;
think she deserves the award for&#13;
the next four years.&#13;
I really thought I was going out&#13;
cm a limb predicting that the&#13;
Academy would pick Missing for&#13;
Best Adapted Screenplay. It only&#13;
proves that there is justice hiding&#13;
somewhere in that Academy.&#13;
Now for those flicks that won for&#13;
political reasons rather than the&#13;
quality of work that was done for&#13;
that certain award. What I think&#13;
happened is that the Academy&#13;
decided that since it was going to&#13;
give Gandhi a lot of the awards&#13;
that E.T. deserved, that it would&#13;
give E.T. a lot of smaller awards&#13;
that it did not deserve.&#13;
Now I loved E.T., but the only&#13;
thing spectacular about the visual&#13;
effects was the little creature&#13;
itself. This is one of the many&#13;
technical awards that&#13;
Bladerunner deserved.&#13;
Best Art Direction and Costume&#13;
both to who? Gandhi!?!?! What&#13;
happened to awarding people with&#13;
vision who had to come up with&#13;
something from nowhere, who had&#13;
to translate that nothing into&#13;
something physical and tangible&#13;
and yet complimenting of the&#13;
story? My gripe is that most of the&#13;
sets from Gandhi were probably&#13;
taken right out of a book, same&#13;
with the costumes. And many of&#13;
the sets were already there. In&#13;
Bladerunner, a new vision of our&#13;
planet was created, unlike any&#13;
other brought to the screen, and&#13;
the imagination and the vision&#13;
that took is four times worth the&#13;
time it took to drape the cloth and&#13;
make the mud houses for the&#13;
thousands of people in Gandhi.&#13;
Fran Liebowitz says of Gandhi,&#13;
"Since when do they give Costume&#13;
Awards for diapers?" My&#13;
thoughts exactly, Fran.&#13;
Best Screenplay (Original),&#13;
Best Picture, Best Director. Why&#13;
did Gandhi win all these awards&#13;
when almost every nominee in&#13;
each category was superior in&#13;
their products? Here are some&#13;
answers given by critics and&#13;
Academy members alike:&#13;
"Gandhi has a great message;"&#13;
"E.T. has enough recognition&#13;
from the box office;" "E.T. was&#13;
too simple a movie;" "Anyone&#13;
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who can put that many people on a&#13;
screen deserves an award;" on&#13;
and on and on go the reasons. In&#13;
very few instances is it mentioned&#13;
that Gandhi is the best directed or&#13;
best written, or even the best&#13;
overall film.&#13;
My replies to these answers:&#13;
Gandhi had a message of peace,&#13;
love, and understanding. Doesn't&#13;
that sound an awful lot like E.T.'s&#13;
message? Box office receipts&#13;
don't mean diddly - squat when&#13;
your peers do not give you the&#13;
recognition you deserve. Isn't&#13;
taking something very complicated&#13;
and molding it into&#13;
something simple so it can reach&#13;
out to all people and touch their&#13;
lives one of the grandest parts of&#13;
filmmaking? Isn't the award&#13;
given for the quality of the work&#13;
and not the amount of p eople in it?&#13;
Here are some of the reasons&#13;
that I think Gandhi cleaned up in&#13;
so many categories (many critics&#13;
concur in these opinions). There is&#13;
a resentment in the Academy for&#13;
Steven Speilberg due to his&#13;
phenomenal success along with&#13;
his young age. Academy members&#13;
don't think that movies should be&#13;
commercialized as E.T. was.&#13;
"Serious" movies are the only&#13;
movies that should get the award.&#13;
Voting for Gandhi would make the&#13;
Academy look good. As one critic&#13;
from Hollywood put it, "Gandhi&#13;
stands for what every Academy&#13;
member would like to be. Moral,&#13;
tan, and thin."&#13;
You know something is fishy&#13;
when the man who wins the&#13;
directing honors, namely Richard&#13;
Attenburough, states in more than&#13;
one TV appearance that Steven&#13;
Spielberg is a more talented&#13;
director than he is, and&#13;
Speilberg's film is more finely&#13;
directed than his own. Some&#13;
critics even believe that Gandhi is&#13;
not even directed particularly&#13;
well in the first place.&#13;
My problem with Gandhi was&#13;
that the film was so totally&#13;
sterilized that it tended to bore&#13;
me. Attenburough could have&#13;
taken a good lesson from Franco&#13;
Zefferelli when he dealt with the&#13;
same message and a similar&#13;
character, Francis of Assisi, in&#13;
Brother Sun, Sister Moon. The&#13;
film was better written, directed,&#13;
and acted all around, and most&#13;
people have not even heard of it.&#13;
The top honor in the Academy&#13;
Awards, at least the last time I&#13;
had a look, was Best Picture, not&#13;
Best Message, nor Choice That&#13;
Would Make The Academy Look&#13;
Best. Must fine films be excluded&#13;
because they piss - off the&#13;
government (Missing), or they&#13;
are in a foreign language (Das&#13;
Boot), or they are lighthearted&#13;
and popular (Tootsie, E.T.)?&#13;
These were many of the reasons&#13;
given as to why these pictures did&#13;
not get certain awards. Now I'm&#13;
not saying Gandhi is a bad film,&#13;
but I can name at least a dozen&#13;
pictures from 1982 that are far&#13;
more worth the money.&#13;
If you want to see the "Must&#13;
See" pictures of 1983, they were,&#13;
in order of quality:&#13;
1. Sophie's Choice&#13;
2. E.T.&#13;
3. Moonlighting&#13;
4. Missing&#13;
5. The Verdict&#13;
6. Diner&#13;
7. The World According to Garp&#13;
8. The Four Friends&#13;
9. An Officer and a Gentleman&#13;
10. Bladerunner&#13;
11. Tootsie&#13;
12. Tex&#13;
13. Poltergeist&#13;
14. Das Boot&#13;
15. Frances&#13;
If I were to go on, Gandhi would&#13;
come in around 25th. Many of&#13;
these movies you may not have&#13;
seen, or even heard of, but all&#13;
have something very important to&#13;
say and are highly entertaining,&#13;
much more than Gandhi. I'm not&#13;
saying that these were the only&#13;
movies worth seeing, but they are&#13;
the cream of the crop.&#13;
Write Ranger a l etter&#13;
Taste the difference Kraeusening makes.&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE &#13;
Whaf Time.,&#13;
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RANGER Thursday, May 5,1983&#13;
Men's Baseball&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
On Wed., April 27, the men's&#13;
baseball team lost a doubleheader&#13;
to Madison. The first game was a&#13;
very good game, according to&#13;
Coach Oberbrunner, even though&#13;
the Rangers lost in the last inning&#13;
7-6. The losing pitcher was Mark&#13;
Schmitz. In that game the hitters&#13;
were Joe Krisik (2 for 3) with 1 urn&#13;
and John Hyatt (2-2-1) with 2 runs.&#13;
In the second game, the losing&#13;
pitcher was Scott Hartnell&#13;
Parkside lost 4-2, but received&#13;
some good hitting from Scott&#13;
Gerhartz, Scott Breznk and Tom&#13;
Tatge. The Rangers lost this game&#13;
on a controversial call where the&#13;
Madison leftfielder trapped the&#13;
ball. Coach Oberbrunner said,&#13;
"The umpire just didn't have a&#13;
good look at it, but we all knew it&#13;
was trapped. Even the player&#13;
himself said he trapped it."&#13;
On Thursday, April 28, the team&#13;
faired much better, beating&#13;
Carroll College 14-1. The winning&#13;
pitcher was Jack Rubach. "He&#13;
should get all the credit," said&#13;
Oberbrunner. Rubach had hit and&#13;
no runs through 9 innings. This is&#13;
the second time in Parkside&#13;
history that this has been done.&#13;
The last time was in 1974. There&#13;
were 3 home runs for the Rangers.&#13;
They were by Krisik, Rich&#13;
Salisbury and Hyatt.&#13;
On Sat., the team lost a&#13;
doubleheader to Lewis (2-1) and&#13;
(5-1).&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
This past weekend, the&#13;
Women's Track team was suppose&#13;
to travel to Eau Claire for a meet.&#13;
Because of transportation&#13;
problems (the team wasn't&#13;
supplied with a van), many team&#13;
members ran the Bonne Bell 10k&#13;
race in Milwaukee on May 1 instead.&#13;
&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
Sue Meyer was the top finisher&#13;
for Parkside, placing fifth out of a&#13;
field of 800. Donna Driscoll was&#13;
not far behind finishing eighth.&#13;
Official times could not be obtained.&#13;
"The first part of the race&#13;
was against the wind and uphill.&#13;
The second part was downhill and&#13;
with the wind," commented&#13;
Driscoll.&#13;
Linda Pfilestifer ran the 10k&#13;
course in 49 minutes flat and was&#13;
closely followed by teammates&#13;
Carol Romano (49:44) and Sandy&#13;
Pellegrino (49:49). Pellegrino,&#13;
who is a 300 meter sprinter&#13;
commented, "I just wanted to&#13;
finish under 50 minutes, which I&#13;
did."&#13;
Women's Softball&#13;
The Women's Softball team&#13;
finished second in the Whitewater&#13;
Tournament losing only to the host&#13;
school, 1 - 0. The team defeated:&#13;
NE Illinois 4-1&#13;
Platteville 6-3&#13;
Oshkosh 1-0&#13;
The Warhawks didn' t score the&#13;
winning run until the seventh&#13;
inning. "It was a very disappointing&#13;
loss. We played extremely&#13;
well against Oshkosh and&#13;
Whitewater. We seem to play&#13;
better against the tougher&#13;
teams," commented Coach Linda&#13;
Draft. Their overall record is 27-7.&#13;
Today, at Petrifying Springs&#13;
Park the team plays against UI -&#13;
Chicago (3 p. m.). Tomorrow, the&#13;
first round playoffs for the&#13;
District 14 championship begins.&#13;
Parkside will host Superior. The&#13;
playoffs are a best two out of&#13;
three. Game times are 12 noon and&#13;
2 p. m. If the team splits the&#13;
doubleheader, they will also play&#13;
Saturday at 11 a. m.&#13;
These games are very important&#13;
for the Women's team,&#13;
because if they lose their season is&#13;
finished. But if they win they go on&#13;
to play the Minnesota champions.&#13;
National Qualifiers&#13;
With only three weeks&#13;
remaining of the season, the track&#13;
team members are trying to get&#13;
qualifying throws, heights and&#13;
times for Nationals.&#13;
Walkers Will Preischel and&#13;
Mark Manning have qualified in&#13;
the 10k walk. Rod Condon this&#13;
weekend walked a 10k in 50:41,&#13;
which is only about 11 seconds off&#13;
the qualifying time.&#13;
Manning and Tim McMillian&#13;
tied for first place in a 20k race&#13;
this weekend, both qualifying for&#13;
the TAC Nationals to be held this&#13;
summer. Their time was 1:36.56.&#13;
Both Manning and McMillian&#13;
bettered their personal bests (by 5&#13;
minutes and 1-1/2 minutes&#13;
respectively). "It was a good race&#13;
— a real confidence builder,&#13;
because we didn't kill ourselves,&#13;
yet we both qualified," commented&#13;
Manning.&#13;
Thus far, Coach Lucian Rosa is&#13;
considering taking pole vaulter&#13;
John Anderson to Kansas City if&#13;
he can vault 15-6. "If John can&#13;
jump 15-6 then I feel he has a good&#13;
chance of becoming an NAIA All&#13;
American, stated Rosa.&#13;
Rosa is also considering taking&#13;
marathon runner Ted Miller.&#13;
Miller recently competed in the&#13;
Boston Marathon but Rosa doesn't&#13;
feel this will hinder Miller. "Ted's&#13;
a very gutsy runner. Last week at&#13;
a meet against Whitewater, he&#13;
was having blister problems and I&#13;
told him to drop out if he was&#13;
feeling bad, but he wouldn't. He&#13;
should do well at Nationals."&#13;
For the women's track team,&#13;
Deb Spino qualified for the 10,000&#13;
meter run two weeks ago in a&#13;
meet at Carthage. Although the&#13;
wind was very strong, she led for&#13;
much of the race. Then her knee&#13;
began to bother her and she was&#13;
forced to relinquish her lead.&#13;
Spino finished second in 37:45.&#13;
Anderson vaults to new heights&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
There is always an exception to&#13;
every rule. Most people's image of&#13;
a college athlete includes the word&#13;
young — a recent high school&#13;
graduate. John Anderson is the&#13;
exception to that rule.&#13;
Anderson, a 30 - year - old&#13;
Communication major has been a&#13;
pole vaulter on Parkside's track&#13;
team for three and a half years.&#13;
Before Anderson came to&#13;
Parkside, he attended Milwaukee&#13;
Area Technical College (MATC)&#13;
where he received a degree in&#13;
Barbery. He then spent 4 years in&#13;
the Marines. In '77 he enrolled at&#13;
MATC to obtain a degree in&#13;
Cosmotology. He worked in a&#13;
salon for 2 years before enrolling&#13;
at Parkside in the fall of '79. He&#13;
took two classes — a philosophy&#13;
and a business class.&#13;
"I was a pole vaulter in high&#13;
school and I always had the desire&#13;
to vault in college but I didn't&#13;
think I was eligible. One day&#13;
before semester break, I was in&#13;
the gym and I asked Bob Lawson&#13;
(the track coach at the time) how&#13;
do you join the track team? He&#13;
said to take 12 credits next&#13;
semester and asked what I did. I&#13;
told him I vaulted and he said&#13;
okay, come on out," said Anderson.&#13;
&#13;
His first season at Parkside,&#13;
Anderson found tremendous&#13;
improvement in himself. In high&#13;
school, the highest he ever vaulted&#13;
was 11 - 6, but after a few months&#13;
of getting back into shape, he&#13;
vaulted 13 - 0. He now has a personal&#13;
best of 15 - 0 indoors and 14 -&#13;
6 outdoors. He is only one inch&#13;
from beating the school record in&#13;
the pole vault. "I progressed a lot&#13;
that first year, I learned a lot from&#13;
Lawson, plus I had someone to&#13;
work with. Bob Meekma really&#13;
pushed me. Now it's like I'm MI a&#13;
plateau," commented Anderson.&#13;
Although Anderson has been&#13;
jumping higher than his first&#13;
season, he feels he hasn't improved&#13;
at the same rate. "I was&#13;
very consistent about a year and a&#13;
half ago. I would place at every&#13;
meet. This year I wasn't very&#13;
consistent. I feel this is due to the&#13;
lack of practice. During indoors,&#13;
we would only get the gym once a&#13;
week. Outdoors, the weather&#13;
hasn't been that great for&#13;
vaulting," he said.&#13;
Coach Rosa admits Parkside&#13;
does not have the best facilities for&#13;
vaulting but acknowledged that&#13;
Anderson will go to high school&#13;
gyms in the Racine - Kenosha&#13;
area to practice.&#13;
Anderson feels he works as hard&#13;
as someone who vaults at 17 or 18&#13;
feet. His workouts certainly&#13;
reflect this. Monday is overdistance&#13;
running (300's) and&#13;
weights. Tuesday is sprints (165,&#13;
100, 50 yards) and vaulting.&#13;
Wednesday is a pace workout&#13;
(200's) and again vaulting.&#13;
Thursday is basically the same&#13;
workout as Tuesday, but includes&#13;
rope climbs also. Friday, Anderson&#13;
does 15 - 20 sprints. He also&#13;
tries to get in the pool, so that he&#13;
can vault in the pool. This is&#13;
something he has been doing&#13;
recently and he feels it has helped&#13;
him greatly in mental preparation&#13;
for the meets. Anderson also does&#13;
30 minutes quick walking at least&#13;
every other day.&#13;
"John is very hardworking - one&#13;
of the most hardworking men I've&#13;
ever seen. He tries to help the&#13;
whole team and me by recruiting.&#13;
We've gotten a couple from the&#13;
Basketball team because of him,"&#13;
commented Rosa.&#13;
After this season, Anderson has&#13;
one more outdoor season left. (A&#13;
Bone spur made him redshirt a&#13;
season). He feels that it is very&#13;
feasible that he will be jumping&#13;
close to 17 feet. &#13;
8 Thursday, May 5,1983 RANGER&#13;
*"0 BOTTLED UNDER U S BMW"*&#13;
1,1&#13;
B* JOSEPH [ S EAGRAM &amp; SONS !U«C IN O BALTIMORE MO SO S»" t&#13;
JSO ML • SO PROOf&#13;
Scholarships&#13;
Continued From Page 1&#13;
for science went to Janet Rohde,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The Sam Poerio Award of $100,&#13;
named for the late Kenosha&#13;
educator and athletic coach, went&#13;
to Terry Ann Ferraro, a&#13;
Psychology major, Kenosha.&#13;
Three "Big Eight" Milwaukee&#13;
accounting firms sponsored&#13;
scholarships for three UWParkside&#13;
business management&#13;
students in accounting. (The&#13;
awards were funded by the firms&#13;
and their employees who are&#13;
Parkside graduates): The Ernst&#13;
and Whinney Scholarship of $500&#13;
went to Donella Elsen, Kenosha;&#13;
the Deloitte, Haskins and Sells&#13;
Scholarship of $250 went to Barbara&#13;
West, Kenosha; and the&#13;
Peate, Marwick, Mitchell&#13;
Scholarship of $125 went to Henry&#13;
Gondeck, Kenosha.&#13;
Earlier, the Milwaukee Chapter&#13;
of the Financial Executives Institute&#13;
scholarship in accounting&#13;
and finance of $200 w as awarded&#13;
to Ms. Elsen.&#13;
CERTIFICATE AWARDS&#13;
Certificates of recognition citing&#13;
students for academic excellence&#13;
and creative achievement and&#13;
awarded by the academic&#13;
disciplines went to:&#13;
Kim Bowen, Kenosha&#13;
(Education); Natalie Bredek,&#13;
Kenosha (Applied Computer&#13;
Science); Dino A. Druding,&#13;
Kenosha (Mathematics); Brian&#13;
Ebener, Kenosha (Political&#13;
Science); Donella F. Elsen,&#13;
Kenosha (Business Management -&#13;
Accounting); Gary Jonker,&#13;
Kenosha (Eng inee ring&#13;
Technology); Susan Marcinkus,&#13;
Kenosha (Psychology); Sandra A.&#13;
Milligan, Kenosha (Geography);&#13;
Ronald Parker, Kenosha&#13;
(English); Dan Rock, Kenosha&#13;
(Philosophy); Sharon L. Shaver,&#13;
Kenosha (Earth Science); Brian&#13;
Todd, Kenosha (Medical&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
EARN $500 OR MORE each school year.&#13;
Flexible hours. Monthly payments for&#13;
placing posters on campus. Bonus based on&#13;
results. Prizes awarded as well.• 600-526-&#13;
0883.&#13;
PIANO PLAYER WANTED for rock / blues&#13;
band. Call 654-4456 or 654-3624.&#13;
TYPING: For professional and speedy&#13;
service, call Debbie, 681-3522.&#13;
WANTED: Editor for lengthy, complex&#13;
novel. Work needed on grammer, spelling&#13;
and re-typing. Paper, etc. supplied. Pay&#13;
negotiable. Call Pam, 553-9819 or 552-9435.&#13;
WANTED: Motorcycle helmet, used and in&#13;
good condition. Call Karen in the Ranger&#13;
office, ext. 2295.&#13;
RUMMAGE SALE: Books, plants, rummage.&#13;
Unitarian Church, 625 College Ave., Racine,&#13;
Saturday, May 7, 8-4 p.m. Wide selection.&#13;
Cheap!&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED in becoming an&#13;
R.A. for 83-84 please call the housing office&#13;
at 553-2320.&#13;
FOR SUMMER SUBLET: Professor's 5 room&#13;
apartment in Racine, 2 bedrooms and&#13;
baths, well furnished, indoor swimming&#13;
pool, tennis courts, air conditioned. June,&#13;
July, August, $400 a month. Call 553-2320.&#13;
SUMMER ROOMMATE NEEDED: Wood&#13;
Creek, non - sm oker. Dick O., 552-9175.&#13;
SITTER NEEDED, Fall semester, a.m. only,&#13;
my home, West Racine. Schwaabs, 637-1921.&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
SEASON&#13;
PARKSIOE ONION&#13;
CAMPING&#13;
RENTALS&#13;
• 2 MAN TENTS&#13;
• 4 MAN TENTS&#13;
• SLEEPING BAGS&#13;
• GROUND PADS&#13;
• GAS HEATERS&#13;
• GAS LANTERNS&#13;
• COOK STOVES&#13;
• COOKING KITS&#13;
• ICE CHESTS&#13;
• WATER JUGS&#13;
• CANTEENS&#13;
• VITTLE KITS&#13;
• CAMP SHOVELS&#13;
• BELT AXES&#13;
• HUNTING KNIVES&#13;
• POCKET KNIVES .&#13;
• COMPASSES&#13;
• FIRST AID KITS&#13;
• FLASHLIGHTS&#13;
• CAMP STOOLS&#13;
• FISHING RODS&#13;
• FISHING NETS&#13;
• FISH BASKETS&#13;
ADVANCE&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
NECESSARY&#13;
CALL: SS3-2409&#13;
PART TIME HELP WANTED - Kenosha&#13;
professional woman needs someone to do&#13;
light housekeeping in home, $5 per hour,&#13;
flexible schedule. Call 658-4746 evenings for&#13;
details.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
IS EVERYBODY IN? The ceremony is about&#13;
to begin, the Mindless voice&#13;
LEAVE THE TREES ALONE Barking Duck •&#13;
The Termites&#13;
TO ALL CLOSET CHESS PLAYERS: Stay&#13;
there.&#13;
BARKING DUCKS wear combat boots - Sole&#13;
Surviving Termite&#13;
BARKING DUCKS are warm, considerate,&#13;
loving and kind - If you remember the soap.&#13;
BDL&#13;
MAUREEN &amp; CARA: We've never seen a&#13;
better highway pickup technique than what&#13;
we saw Tuesday. Had much practice&#13;
before?&#13;
Technology); Kristine S. Wendt,&#13;
Kenosha (Business Management -&#13;
Marketing); Barbara West,&#13;
Kenosha (Business Management -&#13;
A c cou nti ng) ; M a ril yn&#13;
Weschenefski, Kenosha (Art);&#13;
Wendy Westphal, Kenosha (Earth&#13;
Science).&#13;
Gary Albright, Racine&#13;
(Business Management / Applied&#13;
Computer Science); Ray Anderson,&#13;
Racine (Applied Computer&#13;
Science); Rosalind&#13;
Auberry, Racine (Economics);&#13;
Karen Bolander, Racine (Art);&#13;
Judith L. Braun, Racine&#13;
(Business Management&#13;
Produ ction Opera tions&#13;
Management); Carol Burns,&#13;
Racine (English); David Carls,&#13;
Racine, (Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene); Michael&#13;
Curtis, Racine (Chemistry);&#13;
Joanne F. Drewek, Racine&#13;
(Business Management&#13;
Finance); Eugene Dunk, Racine&#13;
(Political Science); Paul&#13;
F r e d e r i c k s o n , R a c i ne&#13;
(Engineering Technology); Mary&#13;
Ginther, Racine (Communication);&#13;
Anne Gontek,&#13;
Racine (Communication); Giam&#13;
Xuan Hoang, Racine (Applied&#13;
Science); Rachel King, Racine&#13;
(Communication); Suzanne&#13;
Landis, Racine (Music); Robert&#13;
Ludwig, Racine (Art); Jennifer&#13;
Meisner, Racine (Political&#13;
Science); Patricia Mulligan,&#13;
Racine (Economics); Sandra&#13;
Pishney, Racine (Psychology);&#13;
Kathleen Pomaville, Racine&#13;
(Communication); Linda Randelzhofer,&#13;
Racine (Music); John&#13;
Reese, Racine (Industrial and&#13;
Environmental Hygiene).&#13;
Marie Baronowski, Oak Creek&#13;
(Medical Technology); Julian&#13;
Brown, Milwaukee (Dramatic&#13;
Arts); Jon Corson, Elkhorn&#13;
(Mathematics); Joy Hegemann,&#13;
Waterford (Psychology); Greg&#13;
Irwin, Lindenhurst, 111.&#13;
(Engineering Technology);&#13;
Judith A. Larsen, Gurnee, 111.&#13;
(Business Management - Administrative&#13;
Management); Todd&#13;
L. Laszewski, Caledonia&#13;
(Mathematics); Bonnie L. McDonnell,&#13;
South Milwaukee&#13;
(Business Management - Personnel&#13;
Administration / Labor &amp;&#13;
Industrial Relations); Regina&#13;
Montgomer y, Caledonia&#13;
(English); Irene Vilona, Fontana&#13;
(Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene).&#13;
THFE IRESIDE&#13;
RESTAURANT &amp; L OUNGE&#13;
OPEN DAILY 11:00 A.M.&#13;
Complete American • Italian Menu&#13;
Fri. Fish Dinner $250&#13;
Sun. Special Turkey Dinner *3&#13;
95&#13;
Featuring Deep Pan or Thin Crust Pizza&#13;
NEW SPECIALS COMING:&#13;
• Deep Fried Breaded Rabbit&#13;
• Bar - B - Q Ribs&#13;
Complete Carry Out Service&#13;
Food • Beer • Wine • Liquor&#13;
2801 30th Ave., Kenosha&#13;
Ph. 551-0600&#13;
th the exciting taste of&#13;
uiith Rock n roll stirs mm&#13;
Seven &amp; Seven&#13;
' 1982 SEAGRAM MUSK CO., NYC A MERICAN WHSKEV. A BLEND 80 PROOF "Sa*HJp" and "7UP" are trademafc of t he Se^Up Company&#13;
Seagrams </text>
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              <text>Faculty Senate passes revision in yearly calendar formula</text>
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              <text>Thursday, April 28, 1983&#13;
faculty Senate passes revision&#13;
yearly calendar formula&#13;
llIA11'ilI9,the Faculty Senate&#13;
,PUDide passed a proposed&#13;
__ in the calendar formula,&#13;
.IIepltinto effect either the Fall ,'Il. f1( the fall of '85. Currently&#13;
.. academic calendar at&#13;
fllIaide carries a fall semester&#13;
'14weeo, and a spring semester&#13;
'lIweeO. The proposed revision&#13;
.... for the calendar to be two&#13;
lI1aJI«d 15 week semesters.&#13;
.., divisions have had time&#13;
IiIIled problems in the fall&#13;
..... , as some lose up to 3 or 4&#13;
sessions with the Thanks'" . break . e-Vlng&#13;
, incomparison to the spring&#13;
schedule.&#13;
The proposed calendar is&#13;
balanced in terms of days of the&#13;
week, in that a three credit course&#13;
meeting on either a MWF roster&#13;
or a TR roster would have 45clas~&#13;
hours every Fall and Spring&#13;
semester. WIth the exception of&#13;
Good Friday afternoon. In classes&#13;
that. meet once a week, any&#13;
particular academic division may&#13;
PROPOSED REVISION&#13;
Event&#13;
Instruction begins&#13;
Labor Day recess&#13;
Tbanksgiving recess&#13;
Instruction ends&#13;
Finals begin&#13;
Finals end&#13;
Commencement&#13;
Instruction begins&#13;
Spring recess"&#13;
(after 8 weeks of class)&#13;
Good Friday recess&#13;
Instruction ends"&#13;
Finals begin'&#13;
Finals end"&#13;
commencement"&#13;
Instruction begins&#13;
Independence Day recess&#13;
Instruction ends&#13;
request that the registrar include&#13;
a note in the timetable that either&#13;
adds or deletes a session when&#13;
there are other than 15 meetings.&#13;
The calendar also holds breaks&#13;
of 2-1/2 or 3 weeks hetween&#13;
summer and fall, aDd 3 v.-eets or&#13;
more hetween Fall and Spring .&#13;
The spring semest ... will begin an&#13;
average of two days earlier. and&#13;
end an average of nine days&#13;
earlier thao the present formula&#13;
(see table). .&#13;
IN CALENDAR FORMULA&#13;
Range&#13;
Late Labor Day&#13;
Mon., Aug. 28, 29, 30, 31&#13;
Moo., Sept. 4, 5, 6, 7&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Wed., Dec. 13, 14, IS, 16&#13;
Thurs., Dec. 14, IS, 16. 17&#13;
Wed., Dec. 20, 21, 22, 23&#13;
Sun., Dec. 17, 18, 19, 20&#13;
Mon., Jan. 15, 16, 17, 18&#13;
Mon.-&amp;t., March 12·17,&#13;
13-18,14-19,1:'&gt;-20&#13;
Fri. afternoon&#13;
Sat., May 5, 6,7,8&#13;
Mon., May 7, 8, 9, 10&#13;
Sal., May 12, 13, 14, 15&#13;
Sun., May 13, 14, 15, 16&#13;
Early Labor Day&#13;
Wed., Aug. 27, 28, 29&#13;
Mon., sept. 1, 2, 3&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sal.&#13;
Sal., Dec. 13, 14, 15&#13;
fofon., Dec. 15, 16, 17&#13;
Sal., Dec. :?ll, 21, 22&#13;
Sun., Dec. 21, 22, 23&#13;
Mon., Jan. 12, 13, 14&#13;
. Mon.-&amp;l., March&#13;
9-4, 10-15, 11-16&#13;
Fri. afternoon&#13;
Sal., May 2, 3, 4&#13;
Mon., May 4, 5, 6&#13;
Sat., May 9, 10, 11&#13;
Sun., May 10, 11, 12&#13;
Mon., June 12·18&#13;
July 4 or Mon., July 5&#13;
Sat., Aug. :'&gt;-11&#13;
~ University of Wisconsin· Pari&lt; ide&#13;
0.28&#13;
Union expansion still&#13;
under consideration&#13;
b~J....... 8_ ...·PIoI1lll~&#13;
S&lt;Jme bme ago. the StDdmt Uf&#13;
Office Initiated 0 commIlt to&#13;
loot into the p&lt;8lbili of espa~&#13;
the l:nion buiIdI ..&#13;
committee ed 01 the po1tft1l of&#13;
use as well .. ot the srow1b of the&#13;
Union O\'e" four \..-n lbol&#13;
committee hlI$ .....•.... 'Iw&#13;
p1eted a ud thol&#13;
UlDon .- to be espaDlled If It&#13;
to pI'e\'ent future crowd!&#13;
1"be DU"ector of the l:nI....&#13;
\Ii illiam ,'ieIlulr •&#13;
committee ond cemJIlftl1ed tho&#13;
'"If il Hbi grO'lOth~ four&#13;
j ear period as to """liuo&gt;e&#13;
the no tlour j-ears. ,."OIIId&#13;
big trouble "1'1lia study CllClclutSed&#13;
that oddihoool poce rould&#13;
del Ulltel y be 1IIed&#13;
specifIcally '",be dUll&#13;
needs to be. DlIed ollll ad&#13;
d,tionol meettnl room oDd&#13;
\ouI1Ie ar_ would help olIo"u,l&lt;&#13;
space problems "&#13;
After the commt fi&#13;
proposal, they ~ t to&#13;
Assistant Chancellor earla Stof(Ie&#13;
and her stoff II \bell&#13;
presented 10 Chancellor&#13;
Guskin aod hi Execub&#13;
mittee.&#13;
1"be ............ thot the Ilioa&#13;
\COmposerOtto Luening back 5th year&#13;
lIIwoukee·horn composer Olio&#13;
,-"" a pioneer of electronic _In tile U.S., will be a visiting&#13;
for the fifth consecutive&#13;
IIIf al Parkside from Wed-&#13;
... ,April 27 throulh Sunday,&#13;
-, l.&#13;
11II Ylslt will culminate in a&#13;
COIlCertof his works and&#13;
IItwo Milwaukee friends,&#13;
Burt&#13;
!lowneofy UW • Milwaukee,&#13;
Levy of the Wisconsin&#13;
llay&#13;
tory of Music, on Sun-&#13;
, 1&#13;
llte """;'t, to be performed by&#13;
'P faculty and gradua tes as&#13;
• guest musicians from&#13;
and Kenosha, wlll&#13;
...:t 3:30 p.m. in the Comtim&#13;
Arts Tbeater as part&#13;
1IIe Now Music at Parkside&#13;
~iIolCltl is $1.SOfor students&#13;
• citizens and $3 for tbe&#13;
....!"'b'ic. A public reception til..... the concert.&#13;
i&#13;
le visi~ .UW - Parkside,&#13;
n~ win lDstruct music&#13;
lion atudents, meet with&#13;
Di\aic:ians, composers and&#13;
tors, and present a talk&#13;
to 1he public, at 1 p.m. o~&#13;
~ April 29 .inRoom D·1l8 of&#13;
_... mwucabon Arts Building.&#13;
by Luening to be per·&#13;
.at the concert are Organ&#13;
18, Bass Trio, Fantasia&#13;
~~ Ollte and piano, and&#13;
~ a Delicate Air for&#13;
Otbe quartet.&#13;
. rs performing in the&#13;
ot Otto Luening" concert U:.p facully members&#13;
.I:~eever, piano; Timothy&#13;
, - .... t; Mark Eichner, :ot: Glenda Mossman,&#13;
'n and Daryl Durran,&#13;
1lrJn' UW-P graduates to&#13;
are John Nepper,&#13;
and Marjorie Roth,&#13;
Roger Ruggeri, double bass,&#13;
principle bass of the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony, also wlll perform, as&#13;
will Milwaukee area musicians&#13;
Steven Joyal, baritone and&#13;
William Wielgus, oboe. Kenosha&#13;
Symphony member Cynthia&#13;
Crump, horn, will also perform.&#13;
Luening has just finished a&#13;
commissioned symphony for the&#13;
Sage Community Symphony in&#13;
Bennington, Vermont, which wlll&#13;
be premiered in June. He recently&#13;
completed another commissioned&#13;
work, for the Music SChool at&#13;
Rivers in Weston, Mass., titled&#13;
"Sonority Forms," a piece for solo&#13;
piano. At the work's premiere this&#13;
summer Luening will share the&#13;
stage with John Cage, the well·&#13;
known American composer of&#13;
"chance" music.&#13;
Luening, wbo will be 83 in June,&#13;
has had a distinguished musical&#13;
career. In celebrabon of his upcoming&#13;
birthday, the Manhattan&#13;
School of Music in New York City&#13;
will perform a concert of Luening&#13;
works as a tribute to the composer&#13;
whose musical influence spans&#13;
over five decades.&#13;
Luening studied in the vibrant&#13;
European musical climate of the&#13;
1920's at the Zurich Conservatory&#13;
of Music, the Munich State&#13;
Academy of Music and the&#13;
University of Zurich and was a&#13;
private student of Ferrucclo&#13;
Busoni. A flutist, Luening has&#13;
performed in orchestras con·&#13;
ducted by Busoni, Nikisch and&#13;
Strauss. In the U.S. he has served as&#13;
executive direc10r of the opera&#13;
department at tbe Eastman&#13;
School of Music, chairman of the&#13;
theory department at the&#13;
University of Ariz~na, and&#13;
chairman of the mUSIC departments&#13;
of Bennington and Barnard&#13;
Colleges.&#13;
He hegan teaching compositioo&#13;
at Columbia University in 1944&#13;
and is credited with wide influence&#13;
on the generatioo of&#13;
students he taught until 1968 when&#13;
be was named professor emeritus.&#13;
At Columbia he established his&#13;
reputation as a pioneer in electronic&#13;
music. He collaborated&#13;
with Vladimir Usachevsky on the&#13;
first concert of electronic music in&#13;
America, held at Columbia in&#13;
1952.Luening also served as co .&#13;
director of the Columbia - Prin·&#13;
ceton Electronic Music Center at&#13;
its inception in 1959.&#13;
Luening, who has writtel'l an&#13;
autobiography, cootinues to write&#13;
musical compositions. He hlI$&#13;
received commissions from the&#13;
League of Composers, Louisville&#13;
Philharmonic Society, the&#13;
Chamber Orchestra of the ew&#13;
York Phitharmonic Symphony,&#13;
American Opera Theater and the&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony.&#13;
In 1980 Luening conducted the&#13;
world premiere of a work for&#13;
chamher orchestra commissioned&#13;
by UW - Parkside, "potawatomi&#13;
Legends," based on the lore of the&#13;
potawatomi trihe, the dommant&#13;
Indian people of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin in the 1830's wben&#13;
Luening's maternal great&#13;
grandfalher established a&#13;
homestead near Franklin.&#13;
Graphics System chnWl at F ir&#13;
In COIIjUDl:Ii&lt;la Wlth the&#13;
puter Fair 00 Saturdoy. Apr •&#13;
Parkside re5eJlrchers will&#13;
demonstrate a newly ..... ind&#13;
Evans .. SUtherland PS 10-&#13;
teractive erophlcs CoInpu~ 0111&#13;
a. m. and 2 p. m. 1ft the moIecuIIt&#13;
graphics lab of the Iloameclical&#13;
Research Institute. G.--.cpabt&#13;
122.&#13;
1"be SISO,OOO computer gropbiCS&#13;
system ,.... a gift ... the un&#13;
from EvollS" SUtherland. 0 lab·&#13;
based compu~ ftrm.&#13;
CbemisttY Prof Keith ani.&#13;
INSIDE • • •&#13;
*&#13;
Honors visitors&#13;
*&#13;
Python review&#13;
*Job&#13;
*&#13;
lett&#13;
2 Thursdll y. Apr iI 28. 1913 RANGER&#13;
I&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Score one for Kasten&#13;
¥!1thho1dt.. em """,,mod Illcome as pusbed by the While House as a&#13;
y 01 cradlllll down on nc:h tax &lt;Maters who allow mlerest revenue to&#13;
10_ ed II a good Idea that would have saved the government&#13;
many mlUJona of cIoIJan .. c:h&gt;'ellr. W,UlholdJng.s also one 01 the most&#13;
elf u • 01 taxi .. the unearned recoroe.&#13;
Bob .... the R"P'bIiean from \II 1SCOfISlD put a stop to that.&#13;
Ilespondlnc 10 pn!IOIUn! from • StXIdenly • powerful banking lobby,&#13;
... pusbed f.... repeal 01the wlthholdtnlllaw againal the dictates 01&#13;
n s-rty. c:hhold&lt; a ma)Only in the same Senate thai passed&#13;
... in t/r first place&#13;
Republicll .. ha aJwa been the party 01 busmess. bul the hankers.&#13;
til .... /rIp eo!' lit too far What IS the thinking in the&#13;
ba'*blI commWllt) thaI allows ... !__ to push f... such an actiCII&#13;
Tbty mull • a~ 01 lboir newly tarnished image. 11le comprom&#13;
bill. II Oland&lt; no.... practically insures that the withholding&#13;
U _ cern 10 s-aa&#13;
Even n&gt;on! ...... OIlhan the actual repeal itsell ..... the way Kasten&#13;
ndIed II He broke a1m0ll ewry ...,ueman's rule in the Senale,&#13;
01 the Senate 10take a 1eS"'" look at sUffening the parliamentary&#13;
....... nd c:ha0lbll the way the Senate operatel from no'" on, It Is&#13;
Ullheanl 01 f.... freohman Sen#t... 10 take thaI kind 01 .COon in an&#13;
..... a1... tiCIIllke the Senate. whic:h has long oper.ted .. Ing many unwrillell&#13;
ruIs and ""Ilemen's ."..,...,enta. 11le Senate will never be&#13;
",lte the me&#13;
• malter 01 f.d .t mnind&lt; one 01 • certain other lresbm.n&#13;
t... from W.consln. no so very long .go.&#13;
J&amp;ners to the editor&#13;
Editor defended&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
Old law could be big trouble&#13;
opinion about something she's&#13;
witnessed7~ U this is your expectabon,&#13;
that expectation seems&#13;
a little unfair. Could you remove&#13;
yourself 10 those expecl.tions??&#13;
Anolber thing Henslak holds&#13;
the rights to on this camp.- Mr.&#13;
Preston, Is the editorial page of&#13;
the paper. Vou do remember don't&#13;
you, al one point she even had a&#13;
weekly "OPINION COLUMN" by&#13;
the lamous Bruce Presion on that&#13;
page. Were you oot free to express&#13;
your thoughts and opinions,&#13;
regardless of what they were?? It&#13;
seems to me you were. Hensiak's&#13;
policy has always been, "if it&#13;
doesn't carry illegal (slanderous)&#13;
libelous, delamatory content, and&#13;
malt .. deadline, I'll do my best to&#13;
get it on page two." That's the&#13;
opinion page, that's where her&#13;
story or column or thoughts were&#13;
located. Objectivity has very little&#13;
10 do with page two of the Ranger.&#13;
As a "veteran columnist," Iwould&#13;
think you sbould koow that.&#13;
She even printed your letter,&#13;
and she is under NO obligation to&#13;
print any letters. Hensiak is fair&#13;
about freedom of expression,&#13;
wouldn't you say?&#13;
Curiously unintelligent sort 01&#13;
contradicts your description 01&#13;
what you were Mr. Preston. I&#13;
belie'\'e it said innovative and&#13;
unique1~"? Again, perhaps to&#13;
some you were. To Hensiat you&#13;
obviously were oot. "That is an&#13;
Issue of choice." to quote your&#13;
very own closing statement.&#13;
Hensiak has that choice reserved&#13;
too.&#13;
The point is Mr. Preston, belore&#13;
To t/r edi lor'&#13;
Manng wcrked with Pat Hen·&#13;
1000er than Bruce Preston&#13;
It Is hie that I un·&#13;
derIland Irr methodII 01 operali&lt;ln&#13;
ter than /r doos ,I'm not sure. I&#13;
_rn ure- how~vrr, that Mr.&#13;
PresIon has lJeIUn to put his foot&#13;
lnIo hi mouth f... the umpteenth&#13;
lime In Ii leiter last week, Mr&#13;
PresIon objected 10the oporuonthe&#13;
editor of this paper has developed&#13;
aft ... see, .. what she c.Ued "a&#13;
CUtlOIIJlyuruntelligent group" put&#13;
on a sorl 01 demonstration in tbe&#13;
l;Non Bazaar o\'er this X • rated&#13;
film&#13;
OIthal .. e hould, but ror a lew&#13;
mmutn, lei. l..-get about the&#13;
... ODD' cu.IY Let'. forwet&#13;
about the consao.-ness it raised&#13;
on thi c.mp.-. and let's take a&#13;
look at some of Mr. Preston's&#13;
attacks on this paper's editor. The&#13;
criteria one uses to make a&#13;
Judeement .re mOIl likely so deep&#13;
• _ted. that Hensiak probably&#13;
can't defUle exactly wbat criteria&#13;
she Iaed she ...as socialized to&#13;
-..oaate certain actions with&#13;
Cft'Iain thoUllhts as were the rest&#13;
of .. 'Having seen Mr. Preston in&#13;
some of the rarnolls communicali&lt;ln&#13;
classes Ithink it only&#13;
lair he ahouId know that.) What&#13;
HIIIIiak w was somellli .. she&#13;
mllly dic~l't 8pI&gt;I'OVe of. She&#13;
found It curlOU5 that someone&#13;
ouJcI perhapa put on such an act&#13;
r Preston. Is that not Irr right~&#13;
the edilor 01 a S-per have to&#13;
r move her If f{om human&#13;
01I0Il much tJia t she can't&#13;
• jud emenl .nd f... m an&#13;
commercial sexual acts between&#13;
consenting adults in private ... ) I&#13;
requested further explanation.&#13;
The petition carrier explained&#13;
that some thousand years ago, a&#13;
law was passed in the state of&#13;
Wisconsin, which allowed rather&#13;
drastic punishment for noncommercial&#13;
sexual acts of consenting&#13;
adults in private. So, if&#13;
someone asked you about your sex&#13;
. life, or just happened to walk in&#13;
on something, there could be&#13;
serious consequences, {l was in&#13;
shock&gt;. The petitioner continued&#13;
.to tell me that personnel working&#13;
for the justice system had some&#13;
sort of right to question and&#13;
"hassle" the common - folk about&#13;
just exactly what they had been&#13;
doing in bed. (Some of us would be&#13;
embarassed about our response.)&#13;
Nontheless, I decided to do a&#13;
lillie research into this dilemma&#13;
about noncommercial sexual acts,&#13;
which sounds like something&#13;
directly out of a computer or&#13;
perhaps a fortune cookie. The fact&#13;
of the matter is, lhere is indeed a&#13;
law out there in this fine state that&#13;
makes noncommercial sexual&#13;
acts punishable by law. This is a&#13;
law that kind of puts your justice&#13;
system into the sack righl along&#13;
next to you. How pleasant: not to&#13;
mention crowded. Recently the&#13;
state assembly. has passed a bill&#13;
repealing the law, and the state&#13;
senale is likely to pass the bill,&#13;
however, there does seem to be&#13;
some slight opposition to the&#13;
passing of this repeal.&#13;
Apparently some see the repeal&#13;
.. the condoning It sin. II1II It&#13;
encouragement ol_m ...&#13;
sexualacls, SOmeeven feel UIIIf&#13;
encourage homoleXUllltr&#13;
Whatever the "- far&#13;
postion, the chances lIlatdie:&#13;
won't pass are lairly dim, ••&#13;
seems that the churdlea Ia ..&#13;
stale can't even get ... larl&#13;
stand on this issue.&#13;
The bill would oot make ...&#13;
either sexual "Aalt •&#13;
prostitution, or combiDaU.&#13;
thereof, wbat il woulddo Is"&#13;
legal cohabilalilll and leIIlIlIadI&#13;
between single people. "...,&#13;
probably a lot It lIlat .....&#13;
already. There is. One IlIsIIII&#13;
asked me if it was ever II •&#13;
forced law. No ..,. to .,&#13;
knowledge has recenlly ..&#13;
arrested for being In \be ....&#13;
. bed, but I may be wrq •&#13;
probably depends SOlD........&#13;
one's interpretation It NOJl.&#13;
COMMERCIAL. HowimpenIIIl&#13;
No matter, my OIIIyadvIce.1I&#13;
watch out for any IIlIIJ JIIIIIt&#13;
before the stale senate _ •&#13;
way through to passing \be Iill&#13;
would ima~ne thaI if \be II1II&#13;
doesn't pass the law far -&#13;
insane reason, it wouldbe ....&#13;
idea to stop whatever 'f'IIIt&#13;
doing, because oow tblt \be 1st&#13;
has been broughl lD \be ....&#13;
of the law enforcers ...&#13;
==&#13;
II&#13;
do your best to control&#13;
And if anyone has lII1 ......&#13;
accurate" informaliOll,b1':&#13;
means, write in. I'm sa:':'..&#13;
of research I did OIIIy&#13;
.surface. No gossip slarifJ ~&#13;
by Pal Henslak&#13;
Editor&#13;
A few days ago someone approached&#13;
me and asked me to sign&#13;
a petition. I asked for a verbal&#13;
explanation as to what the petition&#13;
was about, and the person&#13;
responded, "Just read it." So I&#13;
did. The petition dealt with an old,&#13;
as a matter of fact a somewhat&#13;
prehistoric act on and against&#13;
noncommercial sexual - acts of&#13;
consenting adults in private. A bit&#13;
bewildered by what I had read,&#13;
(something like: We, the un·&#13;
dersigned do request the state of&#13;
Wisconsin to pass the bill&#13;
repealing the illegality of nonone&#13;
publicly attacks someone else,&#13;
one must question whether or not&#13;
they would he willing to give up&#13;
the rights they are criticizing&#13;
another for. If you aren't Mr,&#13;
Preston, then mayhe you should&#13;
think twice about what you have&#13;
accused HerlSiak of, and realize&#13;
that while she is a good editor she&#13;
is also a person. She has rights&#13;
too. She is very fair about the&#13;
rights of others in this newspaper.&#13;
There's no reason to be ashamed.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
and&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Cootinued On Page Eight&#13;
- E.-r G)an.ger NewS~ -~ F==&#13;
PhOIoE.-r&#13;
eopyE.-r&#13;
BUSine.. ~ MIM&#13;
Distributlon 1M....&#13;
Assistant Business IM=&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jo lene Tork iIsen&#13;
Herbert Kubly&#13;
STAFF&#13;
B Sharon Aken, Terry Byrne, Maureen Burke, ~&#13;
Puf~k~r • Phillips, Carra Cariello, Catherine ......~&#13;
a r1Cla Cumbie. Dan Dowbower Michael KellIS.&#13;
Kortendick, John Kovalic Rick Lu'ehr Robb LueIIt', l(ItlIr&#13;
Ra y b "JIf!I/I1I .urn, Napolean Scarbrough Dave Schroedel" Tunkleel. . I&#13;
RANGER· . ttlrr ". JI/III'&#13;
responsibl IS,wr.'tten .and, edited by students of UW . Parkslcle and&#13;
PUbl' h e or ItS edItOrial policy and content .-od""iIIH"&#13;
RAN~E~ ~ver,! ThurSday during Ihe academic ;ear el&lt;cepf during bf'H~&#13;
Written pe s p.f1~ted,by theynion Cooperative Publishing Co" Kenos/'l.,&#13;
All corres~:~SSIOl1 ISrequired for reprint of any porlionof RANGER, Ity of ~&#13;
Park.side Be ~ce shOUld be addressed to: Park.side Rangel", Unlv«'S f/III&#13;
Leiters t~ Ih: E~·t 2000" Kenosha, Wisconsin, 531&lt;41, eel on 'l~ "&#13;
paper with ,lOr Will b,e accepted if typewritten, doubtes~ ~&#13;
cluded for ::"\: In~h margms. All letters must be signed and a teffPhO"'&#13;
Names will ~I Ic.atlon. •&#13;
Deadline' I Wllhh,eld for valid reasons. TM R,lNGI"&#13;
reserves a~~ et,fer~ IS ~day at 3 p,m, for publication on Th~'Cont.II'lI""&#13;
delam.,o editorIal priVileges in refusing to print letters whldl&#13;
ry &lt;nnlent,&#13;
ibefense costs Wisconsin, .McLean, an expert on t e&#13;
Secretary laFollette says Refonnation, hits lecture circuit cinelost an average of $3,200&#13;
~amilY in 1982and the average&#13;
l":ay in Kenosha lost $3,300from&#13;
..... and loss of jobs due to in-&#13;
~ military spending, said&#13;
tary of State Douglas&#13;
~ette. '"&#13;
&amp;Numerous studies indicate&#13;
military spending does not&#13;
IlII ale jobs, but actually&#13;
~ns the unemployment&#13;
:'tion," LaFollette said in a&#13;
_ release.&#13;
~iiicited one study in particular,&#13;
.. Dr James Anderson, called :;...n.pting Our Cities." The&#13;
_ says that Wisconsin would&#13;
especially hard hil, owing 10&#13;
~ state's lack of defense inHonors&#13;
program schedule&#13;
set for Schon visit .&#13;
and business faculty and students&#13;
titled "Reflective Professionals"&#13;
at2:30 p.m. in Molinaro Room 1l0.&#13;
An expert 00 urban planning&#13;
lSI! technical Innovation, Donald&#13;
• , will be an Honors Program&#13;
~uished VISIting Scholar at&#13;
PsrIside on Monday, May 2&#13;
IIroUgh Wednesday, May 4.&#13;
Schona Ford Professor in the&#13;
~ent of Urban Studies and&#13;
Plsnning at the Massachusetts&#13;
Ioslitule of Technology, will&#13;
~r in a series of programs for&#13;
-..ts, faculty, staff and the&#13;
..... al public.&#13;
Sc:bon's visit is being coorIiDsted&#13;
by students in UWhrkside's&#13;
Honors Program,&#13;
IIicb is directed by Prof. Lee&#13;
layer, communication.&#13;
Scbonis an urban planner who&#13;
.. madeimportant contributions&#13;
• understanding how social and&#13;
II:bnological changes affect&#13;
llieIy. He is an authority on&#13;
.. tivityand the development of&#13;
Idmical innovation, educational&#13;
lIform and organizational&#13;
~. He holds a bachelor's&#13;
..... from Yale University and&#13;
_'. and PhD degrees from&#13;
IIrvard.&#13;
Scbon has written more than 50&#13;
U1icles for professional and&#13;
"'iy publications and has&#13;
.a.ared five books.&#13;
1111966,Schon helped establish&#13;
..... - profit Organization. for&#13;
IIdaI and Technical Innova tion,&#13;
Washington, D.C., a group&#13;
tIIcerned with community and&#13;
SIi&amp;Itborhood development, low -&#13;
• bouaing and health and&#13;
..... tion programs. Schon has&#13;
~ numerous posts in govern-&#13;
-, industry and education,&#13;
~ng an appointment as a&#13;
IIIl8rdi associate at the Kennedy&#13;
IIIlooJ 01Government at Harvard.&#13;
Scbon'smajor public address&#13;
till be an Honors Program&#13;
ltIture titled, "Making Things:&#13;
~ective Conversations with&#13;
·lerials," at I p.m. on Monday,&#13;
IIsy 2in Molinaro Hall Room 105.&#13;
The remainder of Schon's public&#13;
lIPoarances are: Monday, May&#13;
A talk on education and&#13;
cal change at 2:15 p.m. in&#13;
Hall Room 161; and a&#13;
;::'ion of technology and&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. in Com-&#13;
~tion Arts Building Room&#13;
!'bosday, May 3: A presentation&#13;
"increaSing Professional&#13;
'veness" at 9 a.m. in the&#13;
1_aitb Room of Wyllie Library&#13;
.... rning Center' a talk on&#13;
:ng and organiting in highlY&#13;
cal teams at 11:30 a.m. m&#13;
Room 113; an Honors'&#13;
rarn Seminar titled&#13;
. lion" at 12:30 p.m. in&#13;
lIJlication Arts Room 132;&#13;
a &amp;eminar with psychology&#13;
Ranger Needs&#13;
Writers!!!&#13;
dustries.&#13;
Other Wisconsin cities to be&#13;
hard hit include Madison, losing&#13;
an average of $2,600 per family'&#13;
Milwaukee, $3,100; La Crosse:&#13;
$2,400; Green Bay, $2,600; Appleton,&#13;
$2,400; and. Eau Claire,&#13;
$1,900.&#13;
Wisconsin voters, he noted do&#13;
not want defense industries in this&#13;
state. "Last September, more&#13;
than 75 percent of Wisconsin's&#13;
voters Supported a referendum&#13;
calling for a nuclear weapons&#13;
freeze," he said .&#13;
"Studies show that tbe $221&#13;
billion military .budget for 1983&#13;
will cost American Workers over 2&#13;
million jobs," he added.&#13;
Parkside English professor&#13;
Andrew McLean is in Weimar,&#13;
West Germany this week to ad •&#13;
dress the German Shakespeare&#13;
Society on the topic of "Reformation&#13;
Themes in Shakespeare."&#13;
The general theme of the meeting,&#13;
which marks both the 500lh anniversary&#13;
year of Martin Luther's&#13;
birth and Shakespeare's birthdate&#13;
on Apr. 23, is "Luther and&#13;
Shakespeare. "&#13;
McLean's invitation to address&#13;
the group resulted from bis&#13;
scholarship in early 16th century&#13;
literature as well as his studies of&#13;
Shakespeare. He has edited the&#13;
first account 01 the continental&#13;
Reformation published in 1531and&#13;
is currently editing the first&#13;
English lives of Marlin Luther,&#13;
Huldrich Zwingli and Johannes&#13;
Oecolampadius, three early&#13;
Reformatioo leaders, published in&#13;
1561.&#13;
Last week, McClean chaired&#13;
two seminars at the annual&#13;
meeling of the Shakespeare&#13;
RANGER n.u ..... y •• 11.191:1 3&#13;
ANDREW McLEAN has been appe_1ng al many She&#13;
and Reformation seminars_&#13;
Association 01 Amenca. lic:ll&#13;
met is Aslland, Ore. n.. ....&#13;
a\\ended by Shakespeare oc:IIoIan&#13;
from througbout the U . &amp;Dd&#13;
Canada, examined the Reformation&#13;
OODtext01 Shakespeare'&#13;
"lIIlill!E~H~P~f Bezhad Samlmlattracted the attenllon A CONTRACT RENEWAL HE.A~I.NG for I ~o:C~~on by the Science Division Executive&#13;
of faculty and sludents. Samlrnl IS appe~I~~ Chancellor Ratner said he would announce his Committee denying renewal of his contrac _ Ice •&#13;
H;~;':;w;t~dentsaysthe classes are habit.,: ~onmng&#13;
got work for honors beca.- the some indication ri what you dif she does oIfers'her a weat deal&#13;
from the class. Perhaps the - Proesel feels she his gotleD ao&#13;
ference between you and your uch that if she didn'l take lbe&#13;
entrance into the course, and y~ ~ again sbr wouJd 1ft&#13;
and your exit from the co.urse. herself d m .&#13;
Proesel went on to explaon that "" .&#13;
the paper was difficult for some ri S· . a rs leatu re&#13;
the sludents, beca~ .it puts the pring semln II burden ri responsIbility on the&#13;
student to he aware 01 the boo&#13;
changes. It ceptioos 01 howis the StudeDts he or she ~.per- computers ,&#13;
rare&#13;
Sometimes that's nol easy to pick&#13;
OO'~Explainlng Things lets the&#13;
studenls have control aver the&#13;
class. They decide whal .will be.&#13;
lt's fun to be able to take 'I where&#13;
you want. That gives the c1a&#13;
re&#13;
SS&#13;
. g Because the classes a&#13;
:ea;;::'ari, the st~ts an get&#13;
actively involved. he&#13;
Proese) also said that 1&#13;
seminars allowed students to feel&#13;
that what they have to offer IS&#13;
worthwhile. Students can express&#13;
nl "1bere's no themselves ope y. have&#13;
right and wrong. It's o.k. to&#13;
an ~inion." run&#13;
The classes make yoo .&#13;
h gh a certain creative&#13;
t rou "A class like&#13;
process.. " 'd Proesel,&#13;
Imagination, Sthinka&#13;
.&#13;
1&#13;
eatively&#13;
"makes a student cr&#13;
and pull oot what ~ ::.x~&#13;
from the matenal. think "&#13;
hard but it makes you. n' ex&#13;
ak'. the classes 15 a -&#13;
T encon:ProeseI wouldn'l ha,'O&#13;
per.:.oo She currently has the&#13;
rru· to graduate edits necessary&#13;
cr . ti "bul ProeseI "with distinc on, taking&#13;
'd that she wouldn't stop&#13;
sal Seminars and wurse the Honors&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Edilor&#13;
To have taken 18 credits within&#13;
the Honors Program, and still&#13;
want to take more course w?rk&#13;
"for hooors" says a good thing&#13;
about the hooors program onks~&#13;
campus. Students at Par I.&#13;
have the option of takmg thel~&#13;
course work for honors, a~.ts&#13;
they so choose to take 15 c I&#13;
"for honors," they can graduate&#13;
''with distinction."&#13;
• Jayne Proesel has taken 18&#13;
edits inhonors course work, and&#13;
~e plans on taking ~ore. class~&#13;
nd the same directIon this&#13;
u er g fall "When I first started&#13;
camm. . ,. said in the Honors 8emmars, .&#13;
P I "1 didn't know anything&#13;
a=f'them. I guess that's why I&#13;
k them The classes sounded&#13;
~:eresting' and for me it was well&#13;
worth the gamble."&#13;
The Honors seminars C?l"re.nt?;&#13;
being dfered are "I~ag~~tio:x_&#13;
nd "Explaining Thilll!s.. '"&#13;
a .. an ll1Slde u. plaining Thmgs I~ tha t lets&#13;
Parkside survey t ":': of what&#13;
students get a th'::' differenl&#13;
happe!1s ID ·nation explores&#13;
disciplines. Imagl ts of creative&#13;
the different face mester Ex.&#13;
thinking. NextII s:nd Technique&#13;
plaonmg Thlngsedunder the Honors will he offer&#13;
Program. both&#13;
Proesel has experienced. .&#13;
. d Explammg Imaginahon ani' . g Things Things "I n Exp allUn&#13;
. de is based on your&#13;
your gra nd a paper In the&#13;
participation, a. the ~truetor paper you must give&#13;
Adull education cla at&#13;
Par ... ide this spring I~':for&#13;
computer d....&#13;
business .-Is,&amp;Dd a short "" ....&#13;
on book collecting. 01&#13;
Andy McLeall, a profEnglish&#13;
here, wiD be teec:IllDl •&#13;
cJass on collecting rare, &amp;Dd DOl..&#13;
rare booIls. McIan his :.lea;..&#13;
eltJlOI:ieoce coIiel:tiDIdaims lbIt pr8JSIng books, &amp;Dd .~ __&#13;
'ng books older ~ -&#13;
='''is beller thaD _oillll&#13;
stoe.... ~......... botll&#13;
The dass wiD be .. -&#13;
Ii... at Parkside &amp;Dd __ the&#13;
SEE &lt;SLItewide EsteulDO&#13;
Educatim Networ!tl oetwarl&lt; DO&#13;
Mmdays and WecI.-da)'S.&#13;
begiming May 9, The ... IS '::&#13;
CooLlcl the UW - Es\eDllall&#13;
further details IS aIIo oIferiDI a&#13;
The ~m... 01 perIIlDII&#13;
class 10 . busioeu apcomputers&#13;
10 level elMs.&#13;
p1ications. An entry hat ooftware&#13;
the """"'" "" ...... w &amp;Dd&#13;
and hardware are avau.: that&#13;
how to - the eqwpmThe ~&#13;
best meets your .-Is&#13;
Thursday. April 28. 1983 RANGER&#13;
Job Hunting&#13;
explored in workshop&#13;
A senes 01 free worUllopo 00&#13;
lOb - hunl1~ ISbei~ IDitiated at&#13;
Parkslde by !be Officer of Career&#13;
PlallDi~ and Placement and !be&#13;
Alum.. Associatioo.&#13;
"., two • hour w_ps. to be&#13;
held 011 !be second Tuesday 01&#13;
ch month begilUUngMay 10at 7&#13;
p m. III U .. on 106. ,,;11 stress jobkIng&#13;
tips and potential&#13;
strategies&#13;
Donald Cashen. actl~ director&#13;
01 UW • Parkslde's Placement&#13;
olfice said speakers at !be first&#13;
011 WIll be MIChael Elliot.&#13;
manager of corporate salary&#13;
administration for Tenneco·s&#13;
Automotive Divisioo in Deerfield,&#13;
m.; Susan Katehadorian, senior&#13;
employment counselor in tbe&#13;
personnel Office at !be First&#13;
Wisconsin ~ ational Bank in&#13;
Iilwaukee ; and Gregg Pfarr,&#13;
loan olficer and assislant cashier&#13;
at !be Pleasant Prairie Branch of&#13;
the First National Bank of&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Cashen. who also will speak at&#13;
!be first sessioe, said !be initial&#13;
workshop will be loosely structured&#13;
and !be agenda will be set by&#13;
participants. Subsequent&#13;
workshops will focus on jobs in&#13;
sales. education. high technology&#13;
and business&#13;
Shrub and tree care topic&#13;
of discussion at the Rondelle&#13;
Properl) maintaining the trees&#13;
nd shrubs around your home is&#13;
an rmportant, though often bafRing&#13;
Iaak&#13;
Kart hroeder, U.W - ExI&#13;
nolon Horticulture and 'alural&#13;
He ource gent for Racine&#13;
County and tar 01 WRJ 's "The&#13;
Garden how:' will discu&#13;
proper tree and shrub care al the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater on&#13;
Wednesday, May 4 "., program&#13;
will beolfered at I p.m. and 7 p.m.&#13;
Included "ill be informalioo&#13;
about tree and shrub .. lecnce,&#13;
placement 00 property, proper&#13;
planting, trimming and pruning&#13;
techniques. ferlilizatioo and pest&#13;
control. Schroeder will also answer&#13;
questicns from the audience.&#13;
Reservatioos for this program&#13;
are requested and can be made by&#13;
calling the Rondelle at 631-2154&#13;
Monday through Friday, beginning&#13;
Apr 20. There is no admission&#13;
charge. The Golden&#13;
Rondelle is located 00 the corner&#13;
ol 14th and Franklin Streets in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Ttis program is a cooperative&#13;
effort with radio station WRJN.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
$100.00 REWARD •&#13;
Information on subslance when waler Is added ils' size&#13;
1ncr_l5lo20ll .... andlumslorock. -&#13;
(.11 In., 652.2173&#13;
---~.zq&#13;
PROFESSOR LEE THAYER'S "Communication and the Modern World" class has _&#13;
sludylng the effecl of graffiti on civilization, and decided 10 have a T-shirt show. The resuliis&#13;
shown above. Thayer Is fifth from Ihe rlghl.&#13;
Disability Council gets award 1&#13;
The Wisconsin Council on presented for the Wisconsin residential facilities and the&#13;
Developmental Disabilities was Council's ability to work ef- Council's efforts to track 8mIIIr&#13;
given the "Outslanding Council fectively on legislation and in legislation in other stats. Also&#13;
Awar~". by the National b~ild.iJ.1g coalitions a~ong menU.oned was the COUllCD"&#13;
ASSOCiation of Developmental disability groups. The Council was establishment, with more thu.&#13;
Disabilities Councils at their also recognized for its efforts in other disability grouPB of till&#13;
annual meeting in Washingtoo, D. documenting the multiplyling Wisconsin Survival GrOOp wbidI&#13;
C. on Mar. 19. effect of Federal developmental works on slate budget iaoueI.&#13;
The Wisconsin Council is a slate disabilities funds. L. J. Ganser, M. D. Caa:O&#13;
and federally mandated body The award noted the Council's Chairperson, and J~y. Wit.&#13;
which represents people. WIth work on development of tenmyer, Council Executl"&#13;
developmental dtsabrltttes. legislation to prohibit Director, accepted !be awardato&#13;
Members are appomted .by the discrimination in zoning for reception in Washingtm Governor and are responsible for .&#13;
overseeing how services are&#13;
provided to people with such&#13;
disabilities as mental retardation,&#13;
cerebral palsy, chronic mental&#13;
illness and o!hers.&#13;
The Outstanding Council&#13;
Award, giyen annually, was 'PAB&#13;
MORE ADVENTU&#13;
A BUMD&#13;
~&#13;
••&#13;
THAN&#13;
•&#13;
. Can you picture yourself&#13;
~ down a cliff? Or&#13;
shooting the rapids? Or&#13;
crossing a river using only&#13;
rope and your own two&#13;
.,...,,,,::&gt;J1lan ds?&#13;
You'll have a chance&#13;
to do all this and more in&#13;
ArmyRarc.&#13;
Adventure training like&#13;
this helps you develop&#13;
many of the qualities you'll&#13;
need as an Army officer.&#13;
Qualities like selfconfidence.&#13;
Stamina. And&#13;
the ability to perfonn&#13;
under pressure.&#13;
lf you'd like to find out&#13;
more, make a date to see&#13;
your Army Rare Professor&#13;
of Military Science.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALL lOU CAN BE.&#13;
Cont,l(:t Address:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
MarqMfte, Uni't.&#13;
.rmy ROTC&#13;
ClllI COned (414) n"7lfS/712'&#13;
Communications&#13;
P AB rocks with "High Rise"&#13;
Friday, Apr. 29 in the Union&#13;
Square. The doors open at9 p. m.&#13;
and !he band is scheduled to begin&#13;
after the Student Awards&#13;
Banquet. Admission is free .&#13;
Parkside and Age lD are&#13;
required. Come ou,t and see&#13;
Kenosha's own High Rise.&#13;
Geology&#13;
. Dr. Peter H. Schultz of the&#13;
Lunar and Planetary Institute in&#13;
Houston, Texas will be giving two&#13;
talks next week which will be co -&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Geology and Physics Clubs and&#13;
!he Racine Geological Society.&#13;
The first talk will be held Thursday,&#13;
May 5 at 7:30 p. m. in Grq&#13;
103. The talk is titled "Target&#13;
Ear!h Effects of Large - Body&#13;
Impacts". The second talk&#13;
"Planetery Catastrophes," will ~&#13;
held Friday, May 6 at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Grq 103.&#13;
Chess&#13;
Sign up now for \he Chess CluQ'S&#13;
SprIng Tournament in the Union&#13;
Rec Center. The tournament will&#13;
be held May 3 and 4, and has a $1&#13;
entry fee for Parkside students.&#13;
For more info, \he Chess Club&#13;
meets Tuesday nights from 6 - 10&#13;
p. m. in Union 207 and Wednesdays&#13;
from 1 to 4 p. m. in Moln&#13;
D - 133.Who says you have to slay&#13;
for four hours? Just pop in for a&#13;
few qUick ones,,0O1&#13;
Our Psychotherapy for Chess&#13;
DIsorders Committee will be&#13;
addressing the topics, "Postal&#13;
~hess:. What are the Costs?" and&#13;
Caslting Queenside: A Freudian&#13;
Interpretation." Be there.&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Peer Support will he sponsoring&#13;
a lecture titled, "Herpes. 8eUeIt&#13;
It Or Not," on May 3 at 12_11&#13;
Grq 10.1.Speakers will be 0-&#13;
'Jenkins, a counsel... at FIIIIIlJ&#13;
Planning of Racine; Dr. Jolmas.&#13;
midt, a Kenosha physlclaD; ...&#13;
Dan Geshrick, an epldemloll(lsl&#13;
in Racine. There will be a fIiII&#13;
during \he talk.&#13;
All Communications ModIIIt&#13;
students are invited to a 1'Sbll'&#13;
and Tell I Munch and Mi.....&#13;
. night on Mooday, May 2 illMOUI&#13;
D-l01 from 5: 15to 6:05.'I1lere wII&#13;
be a three minute oral pr-:&#13;
tation by the students who'-&#13;
up on Apr. 4, and free JXlII"'I'lL&#13;
Come early to set up yourJrOje&lt;l&#13;
Contact Janet Wells at 553-2SSI.&#13;
further information.&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
The Parkside Dart ream. II&#13;
going to hold the first ParbidI&#13;
Open Dart Tournam ....1OIlFridI1,&#13;
April 29 at I p.m. III !be III&lt; ~&#13;
Center.&#13;
There will be two '"""":&#13;
competitions inVOlved'.~lI\&#13;
the event will be indiVliDdivt..-i&#13;
The other part will be will&#13;
cricket matches. Eacb pori&#13;
require a ooe dollar ...:.: ill&#13;
All entry fees will be flrtI&#13;
the form of prize ~ afdIO&#13;
place will receive 50....,;,;;:;. ....&#13;
entry fees. seeood .-- IIU1&#13;
receive 25 percent.af !be.", 15&#13;
fees. Third place wlU ......fDII1l'&#13;
percent of the ... try f~&#13;
place will receive !be . e/fGl1I10&#13;
percent for her ~r hi':"; .&#13;
All other places wlU t dIO&#13;
hearty hand clasp and a po&#13;
back. IriD be&#13;
The top two 301p1ayerJ ....&#13;
eligible for entry in !be PCridIl&#13;
Challenge. The ~ !0Uf f~ ttl&#13;
players will be e1ig1: r.,Jl!l&#13;
Parkside Challenge a .to .-&#13;
memhers are welcome&#13;
also.&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
... Thurlday. Aj&gt;rll 21,1913&#13;
Performances excellent in 'Balance'&#13;
by DickOberbruner&#13;
'I!Ie parkside Dramatic Arts&#13;
I*dpiiDe has done it again. Their&#13;
;,.,diDOIl of Edward Albee's "A&#13;
peUcate Balance" is expertly&#13;
aer/armed. Directed by Lee Van&#13;
ilI'e. tbis absurd play need not be&#13;
~ understood - all loose&#13;
j,eads do not tie up at tbe end.&#13;
pIis important is realistic&#13;
...... t... portrayal, made diflIlIIlbythe&#13;
fact that all of Albee's&#13;
.. Dons are mad, and a com- ilrflbie setting from which tbe&#13;
.. clneSs projects itself. The&#13;
... without a doubt, meet these&#13;
..-es .&#13;
.... the iead roles of Agnes and&#13;
ftIiIS are Lee Law 1er and An-&#13;
.. Brbel. These two work well&#13;
...... as the husband and wife&#13;
~y close in feeling but far&#13;
.,art spiritually. Lawler&#13;
dllDands quite a bit from her&#13;
ACJlI"l. ThoUgha few monologues&#13;
.Mmded memorized, her strong&#13;
pge presence is just what the&#13;
iii! . alleged "fulcrum" of the&#13;
lIIIlily needs.&#13;
Brheltakes Tobias to the limits&#13;
If steadfastness. Tobias is the&#13;
ieVe through which the bruising&#13;
pISt and the oppressive present&#13;
are strained. In portraying this&#13;
paeid stoic, Brhel releases the&#13;
lIIloti0ll81 side gradually as the&#13;
play progresses - until tbe end&#13;
wbeIl Tobias' much needed out1IIInt&#13;
is subdued by his abnormal&#13;
pty.&#13;
1beir "best friends H who barge&#13;
iIIIO their home for no apparent&#13;
.... n are Ednat and Harry,&#13;
played by Liz Schoenoff and Scott&#13;
Illicheisdorf. A good first time&#13;
perfll1Ilanceis turned in by Miss&#13;
SCboenoff. Despite some&#13;
mechanisticmovement, her dry,&#13;
I1118ttachedapproach is appropriate&#13;
for the hollow Agnes.&#13;
IIer husband, Harry, is equally as&#13;
Ilzarre. Reichelsdorf's on - stage&#13;
Ouidity brings an eeriness to a&#13;
!Iceless character.&#13;
wlUJ Lire.&#13;
PiCTURED, left to right. is Andrew Brhel, Pat Casclaro. and&#13;
Lee Lawler. in a scene from the Parks Ide produdlon of Edward&#13;
Albee's play "A Delicate Balance."&#13;
Pat Casciaro plays Agnes'&#13;
sister, Claire. Aided by ber&#13;
alcoholism, Claire is both boastful&#13;
and sassy. At times, Miss&#13;
Casciaro's voice is louder than&#13;
circumstances deem. However. in&#13;
portraying Claire's flagrant&#13;
demeanor I her abilities come to&#13;
the forefront.&#13;
Rebecca Julich plays Julia, tbe&#13;
emotionally displaced daughter of&#13;
Agnes and Tobias. A four time&#13;
divorcee, Julia seeks identity, but&#13;
her needs are low in priority. Miss&#13;
Julich excels in energy and&#13;
crispness as she fights back&#13;
against impinging forces.&#13;
The living room set is beautiful.&#13;
Crafted by Charles Erven, it's&#13;
strong visual lines and colorful&#13;
interior strikes a fragility in&#13;
combination with Jon SChoenofI's&#13;
lighting. The comfortable setting&#13;
is rounded out by Barbara&#13;
Thompson's costumes. Behind the&#13;
guise of conservative apparel&#13;
hides not so conservative&#13;
characters,&#13;
Delicately handled by Van&#13;
Dyke, "Balance" is fun and&#13;
provacative. Exposing internal&#13;
madness through the creation of&#13;
tension is the drive of this play,&#13;
and the Players do a terrific job in&#13;
doing just this. All involved with&#13;
this production deserve a round of&#13;
applause,&#13;
Write Ranger&#13;
a letter&#13;
Acl\lAll.Y, I ST,LJ.&#13;
Il1IIC PRlOL&lt;N ....llll&#13;
F/.AIOE' Bl'D,uox,. lJ&lt;tSOS&#13;
F~YI&gt;.iT&#13;
15 L.IF~ .,J"usr A NlEf2.(HiPr!'J&#13;
S~vr.&lt;.&lt;E FoR ~ €R. ?&#13;
o~ IS T'lt611t6"50/"'1(" Ft~,&#13;
UL-Tll''O'lAT'E'",RO\l,.IT'l' iltAT&#13;
WE'" F\~ SENTIeNT" 8ENlrS.&#13;
M\Xr SEf'lRc.1-lFoR?&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bll!!k&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24HOURTELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.O.I.C.&#13;
c ~~ VJe llEt..IE'\.lIi JJ.J&#13;
A- suP£~~ BEINe:,.&#13;
w 1fll&lt;&gt;Jf f~ ~s"'"&#13;
~IEflt(£(;AAfU&gt; 70R 00&#13;
we Sr/ll\f\..&lt;{ t:::l€l'J'l' 1*£.&#13;
EXISfe-r.Jc.£ Or GOO&#13;
A-S E~IL" AS ~E"ot&gt;&#13;
PIP?&#13;
/+--&#13;
7Je{i~6tE&#13;
:8tt.kt ItCf&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Fun with Dick&#13;
Wortd news-with a twist&#13;
Am .... oa.nr&#13;
• • •&#13;
• • •&#13;
American commercialism&#13;
touches everything E 0ppression.&#13;
For example. are&#13;
familiar wlth the Peter ~.lanibaJ&#13;
Law' "You have the ngbl&#13;
remain silent You bal lbe&#13;
to figure ou if the actul£ ...&#13;
ment is gi\1Dg you a correct answer&#13;
or mak~ .... up '!bill.&#13;
ho" you pick out the squares 1be&#13;
first O\-erthrow c:ont1'Olled by&#13;
that ruling 00 I umu a&#13;
OOIllingenl I.U over, In ch&#13;
casea rUlber o~ ill&#13;
played until there IS a d r&#13;
",oner Once a day e play a&#13;
secret coup tn hich you,&#13;
oppressed naln •&#13;
rev·011 against the l'U1i,.;&#13;
tingenl. Your sut.... jUCl.1&#13;
leaves your II\:&#13;
disarray, which is PIl"""",,le for&#13;
the . ibJation Once you are&#13;
and killed you can no er play&#13;
The wourded and the&#13;
play on .. The P. L&#13;
in revoJutionar)" count.n&#13;
terrorist • owned teJn&#13;
stations are ho III&#13;
• • •&#13;
the san&#13;
TAP BEER )0( MON. THRUTHURS&#13;
RAIL DRINKS 75&lt; ,. P 'TIL 12 •&#13;
GAME ROOM PITCHER U"&#13;
Hwy. 32 between ladne • Kenoslta&#13;
.'&#13;
, .'. EVERY DAY ..&#13;
L;-,&#13;
.. /.~ ....I .1~U!!C&#13;
~ ..&#13;
J Sheet Music &amp; Books&#13;
J Instruments &amp; Supplies&#13;
J Soles &amp; Service&#13;
SPfCIAL DISCOUNT&#13;
WITH PAlICSIDf J.D.&#13;
2425 Genevo St., Racine&#13;
Ph. 681·3261&#13;
NORTHSIDE&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
6 Thursday, April 28, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Pythons retain irreverent humor in life'&#13;
I&#13;
b, Rkk Ladlr&#13;
"Mool)' P, than's Meeni'1l of&#13;
W .. IS one of the moot perverse.&#13;
repulsl'1l, aDd cisgusting films I&#13;
have ever In OCherwords I&#13;
loved .. err mll,"te of it,&#13;
'"The I IlIng of Life" ill about&#13;
you mlght the ~n1ng&#13;
of lif But you might also&#13;
poel II b presented U&gt; the&#13;
bWlrte yle the p,1hoos IEric&#13;
Idl, John CI e, Graham&#13;
pman, T rry Jones, M,chael&#13;
Palin, aDd T rry Gilliam have&#13;
perf ed '" er the yea... The&#13;
movie ID the lorm of 3 shcrt&#13;
lr ,ach 01 which provide a&#13;
loot al a difl retII P8rt of hie'&#13;
birtb, ar deall1 etc 1bese&#13;
ete ranlle from the&#13;
ewhat aIJJy (a huge Catholic&#13;
t mily nalng 'Every perm is&#13;
cred') 10 the ridiculous fa&#13;
.. lauranl f.. turing 'authentlc&#13;
fbwaJjan cuaine an a medieval&#13;
du.n,_ atmosphere). to the&#13;
iIdJy llrotesque Can IInmellOe&#13;
ctiner vomlling incetaanlly aDd&#13;
.. Ung until he explodes), The&#13;
Pylbcns have Illven ll1is fiho the&#13;
me wOlldoriuUy weird quality&#13;
which made tbelr T.V. show so&#13;
popular One thing I have always&#13;
admired about the Pythons is&#13;
their ability to alter traditional&#13;
slyles of comedY; cbaracters&#13;
move from sketch to sketch with&#13;
seemingly no 10000c.sketches are&#13;
ended will1 no resolutioo of the&#13;
story, etc. Were someone else to&#13;
try 10 do these, the viewer would&#13;
eDdupfM1Slraled. But the Pythons&#13;
do it with such slyle tbat it all&#13;
seems ahoGSt normal.&#13;
When I reviewed 'Mooty Python&#13;
Task Force on Unemployment&#13;
talk- HEating Well for Less"&#13;
ary Bnnlllall Peterson, a&#13;
Home Economi I lor the&#13;
UNverslty of W_n - ExlonIIon,&#13;
willlalk 011 "Ealing Well&#13;
fer t-" al the """t ..-Iing of&#13;
the Roane In the 801 Task Force&#13;
00 Unemployment Peterson will&#13;
delmbe wa to mainlJlin proper&#13;
nulrilloo at low C06I, and will&#13;
explaan how to save money while&#13;
mop",nll'or aroeeries.&#13;
Peteroon' presentation ",ill last&#13;
bout_. ball hour Inlormalinn&#13;
bout her topc aDd bstings of&#13;
1ofGrma_ about food aardenlng&#13;
will he available.&#13;
The meeting will be held&#13;
Thursday, April 28 at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Crystal Room of the Memorial&#13;
Hall Auditorium, 72-7th Street in&#13;
Racine. The meeting is free and&#13;
open to the ",bhc.&#13;
The Task Force on Unemployment&#13;
is made up of concerned&#13;
agencies and unemployed&#13;
volunteers. Its ""pose is to help&#13;
jobless people tbrough the phase&#13;
c:X unemployment. For more inlormation&#13;
caD the Task Force&#13;
office at 636-3237.&#13;
Student internships available&#13;
College tudents interested in&#13;
warkt"ll III 5UJIlmer jobs in their&#13;
chooen professional fields should&#13;
apply n"", lor the thousands of&#13;
corporate and governmental&#13;
InlemshiP8 and work • study&#13;
opportunili .. available.&#13;
ccordmg to The Scholarship&#13;
Bank. most Internships are&#13;
_nrcI by major corporations&#13;
aDd P8Y 10 the range 01 two to&#13;
lhr lhousa nd lor the summer.&#13;
ny wW pay students N!localioo elq:........ These intemshiP8 are&#13;
good .... rte:a of lrainlJlll aDd may&#13;
d to pennanelll employment as&#13;
well as invaluable contacts in the&#13;
student's chosen field. In addition&#13;
internees can qualify fo;&#13;
scholarships and other financfal&#13;
aid from many of these employers.&#13;
Many deadlines are near for&#13;
these programs. Students interested&#13;
in receiving more in.&#13;
formatiOll aboutlhese internships&#13;
aDd scholarships should send a&#13;
business size stamped sell - addressed&#13;
envelope to The&#13;
Scbolarship Bank, 10100 Santa&#13;
tonica Blvd. Suite 750, Los&#13;
Angeles, CA. 90067.&#13;
In Th. ParbJd. Union&#13;
FEATURING YOUR&#13;
FAVORITE CANOY,&#13;
NUTS AND SNACKS&#13;
SOLO THE OlD&#13;
FASHIONED WAY&#13;
SpecIa17&#13;
California Mix&#13;
Carrlbean Delicacy&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
Wcrtch for BIg&#13;
End 01 Y.ar Sal.&#13;
lAIalW11l1lle UooIen "IN,&#13;
DI..-ctly Aaou from IIle Info. Or.&#13;
Live at the Hollywood Bowl' a few&#13;
months ago, I expressed the hope&#13;
thai "The Meaning of Life" would&#13;
he better. My hopes could not have&#13;
been fullilled any better. II you&#13;
bave a weak stomach, it may be&#13;
better for yoo to avoid this film.&#13;
But if yoo're looking for a wildly&#13;
funny, irreverent, somtimes&#13;
gross. motion picture experie~e,&#13;
go see "Monty Python's Meamng&#13;
of Life".&#13;
Parkside student&#13;
spends semester&#13;
on Golden Pond&#13;
A uw Parkside student is&#13;
spending this semester working&#13;
on Golden Pond.&#13;
But it has nothing to do with the&#13;
movie.&#13;
Andrew Parenteau, of Racine,&#13;
who is a junior majoring in&#13;
communica tion, is working as an&#13;
intern wi th the Tennessee Valley&#13;
Authority (TVA) at the Golden&#13;
Pond Visitors Center of the 170,000&#13;
. acre "Land Between the Lakes"&#13;
wildlife and recreation area in&#13;
western Kentucky.&#13;
Parenteau is working in the&#13;
center's computer - based&#13;
thea ter and planetarium and is&#13;
performing a variety of communication&#13;
- related tasks including&#13;
production of multi -&#13;
media programs geared toward&#13;
enhancing the public's UDderst.anding&#13;
aDd appreciation of&#13;
the environment.&#13;
Parenteau's internship will&#13;
Prizes have been awarded in&#13;
Parkside's Student Art Show, on&#13;
display in the Comm. Arts Gallery&#13;
lhrongh May 6. Sponsored by the&#13;
Art Addicts and the Parkside Art&#13;
Discipline, the show includes over&#13;
50works selected from 180entries.&#13;
First prize of$4ll was awarded&#13;
to William Joseph Greider of&#13;
Racine, for his work "Cracker&#13;
Jacks," an offbeat creation that&#13;
features a cardboard box&#13;
eqUipped with a peephole throngh&#13;
which viewers can see a jungle.&#13;
like environment populated by&#13;
dragons, people, and a toad. A&#13;
mirror placed a t the rear of the&#13;
box creates an illusion of&#13;
spaciousness. Greider fashioned&#13;
the work from paper, clear glass&#13;
marbles, plexiglass aDd watercolor.&#13;
So it goes ..&#13;
Closing cuts, spot qUizzes&#13;
and juicy gossip&#13;
Wustum Art Institute tour&#13;
by John Kovalic&#13;
Well it's that time of the year&#13;
again. 'A few short week~ 'til the&#13;
end of it all. Yep, that s r-ight.&#13;
Summer's just 'round the corner&#13;
and them thar birds is coming&#13;
north again. As the school year&#13;
grinds to a close, I'd like to leave&#13;
you with a few thoughts for the&#13;
future.&#13;
But I won't. Instead, I'll just try&#13;
to insult a few more ci you out&#13;
there. I know there aren't many&#13;
people left whom I haven't insulted&#13;
but heck, what's lire&#13;
without a challenge? So far my list&#13;
of insultees includes wargamers,&#13;
physicists, politicians, preachers,&#13;
feminists, accountants, PSGA,&#13;
dart players, Ranger staffers,&#13;
YMCA residents, and Santa Claus.&#13;
IIthat list isn 't darned impressive&#13;
I don't know what is.&#13;
So let's see ... who really gets&#13;
on my nerves whom I haven't&#13;
already verbally abused?&#13;
How about hard - rock fanatics?&#13;
No, too easy. Anyway, I don't like&#13;
taking advantage of the mentally&#13;
ilL Word has it that there are still&#13;
a few around the place. Why else&#13;
, would AC/DC and Black Sabbath&#13;
hother churning out record after&#13;
monotonous record? But then, I&#13;
suppose some people get off on&#13;
miDdless vocals and bubble gum&#13;
guitar riffs.&#13;
I guess I've a ttacked sports&#13;
writers and basketball players&#13;
enough already. Spot quiz: Why&#13;
did the hasketball player cross the&#13;
road? Answer: To get three&#13;
extra credits. &lt;Only kidding&#13;
guys, you really are pretty brighf&#13;
as well as being horribly&#13;
hemuscled to boot!)&#13;
Speaking of mindless apes,&#13;
continue through May 13. Upon&#13;
complelion of his work at Golden&#13;
Pond, Parenteau will be required&#13;
to prepare a paper relating his&#13;
technically - ociented experience&#13;
to academic aspects of communication&#13;
for Prof. David&#13;
Habhel who is Parenteau's UW _P&#13;
internship supervisor.&#13;
Parenteau is the first uw - P&#13;
student to enter an internship with&#13;
the TVA.&#13;
Cash awards of $25 were&#13;
awarded to Steven E. Pfarr of&#13;
Racine} for "Brothers in Song,"&#13;
an oil painting, to Theresa&#13;
Schiffer, of Wilmot, for "Nudes,"&#13;
an itaglio, and to Susan Schimian&#13;
of Racine, for "Sign of the&#13;
The Racine Art Association of&#13;
the Cbarles A. Wustum Museum&#13;
of Fin~ Arts announces a special&#13;
bus triP 10 the Art Institute of&#13;
Chicago and the Terra Museum of&#13;
American Art in Evanston&#13;
lllinois. '&#13;
The tour will take 'place&#13;
Saturday, May 7, and will begin&#13;
with a tour of the present exhibit&#13;
at the Terra Museum _ "Early&#13;
anybody watch the '&#13;
protestors at "Ernma VinOUS&#13;
O.K., quick hand count. H::.,e1I."?&#13;
people were hored ofllheir ~&#13;
the whole episode? !'robabl '"&#13;
many as who were bored Y ..&#13;
watching the movie. y~&#13;
Rumor has it that YOUCOU1d 1lOdI.&#13;
more skin in "Leave .eatdl&#13;
B t&#13;
ea ver , ot "Bh .,groups'to&#13;
protestors should have llpentu:&#13;
time protesting more obvi&#13;
VIceS. Like r~cism in "8unlIII~&#13;
Whoops. Think I just 0I108ded&#13;
the feminists again.&#13;
PSGA- The Emplr.8lrIkooOat&#13;
I suppose ODe thing thai '*&#13;
become palnlully obvious&#13;
wri ting lhis column over tho ~&#13;
is the total apathy Ii tho a.;:an&#13;
Parkside student I mean, It'l-:&#13;
hard to be sensational hero&#13;
anymore. I'd have to write&#13;
something like "Malturbati,.&#13;
isn't just sex with 1Om_ ,..&#13;
love" to even raise any "YebrOwa.&#13;
Then the mly comp1alnt I'd ..&#13;
would be from a one _ ......&#13;
Afghan .m~ who would k&#13;
as sacrlligaous.&#13;
Hell's teeth! In LondOIl ...&#13;
the~ raised tuition coati we oeCUpled&#13;
the adminiltrati,.&#13;
building for three daya! WbIt&#13;
happened to the campuslil-blIaf&#13;
the sixties? Granted, tho lure af&#13;
free beer aDd an excuse not to ...&#13;
any. work for three daya w. Ille&#13;
maIO reason most of US atteDded&#13;
the occupa tion in the fin! place,&#13;
but that's quite heside tho palalt&#13;
Speaking of professional ....&#13;
radicals, anyone notice wbat 1&#13;
fine job Phil Pogreba is daiIlI.&#13;
head honcho of PSGA? NO,I..... ,&#13;
think so.&#13;
Well, Philip "I'm nat II8I'111111d,&#13;
they are out to get me" ""Cr*&#13;
seems to he into surveys at ...&#13;
moment, and tbe rift ~&#13;
himseir and the Senate is aboIi ..&#13;
wide as the gaps in the ReIpu&#13;
defense strategy. Talk at a paIaao&#13;
coup is rampant, and CIadt&#13;
"String 'em up" Betz aDd "BJa"&#13;
Jim Kreuser could not be readlld&#13;
for comment.&#13;
But somebody has baen buyiJw&#13;
up a lot of small arms 1'llCOIIlIJ.&#13;
Times," a watercolor.&#13;
A lithogr aph by ChriIt&lt;lpIIlr&#13;
Dorf of Racine has been purchased&#13;
by the Parkslde library III&#13;
represent this year's show. Darf'I&#13;
work will be on permanent dlapIJ1&#13;
in the library.&#13;
Prizes awarded in Parkside's Student Art Show.&#13;
Rebels in American Art". nil&#13;
exhibition ref ... s 10the tum .0/.&#13;
the - century American artiaD&#13;
known as "The Eight" who&#13;
protested academic art. At ....&#13;
same time visitors will be ableta&#13;
view the painting Gallery" IIIf&#13;
Louvre by Samuel F. B. ~&#13;
which has received IDterna~'"&#13;
recognition since being ~&#13;
by the Terra recently. . ta&#13;
The tour will then conl\llllO&#13;
the Art Institute 01 ChiClla ta&#13;
view the exhibilion "M~UrJ;&#13;
shuis: 17th Century U&#13;
Painting" which features 4O-or:&#13;
from the Royal Picture Ga11tI1ted Holland. Artisls repros.a aDd&#13;
include Rembrandl, vl!lIIeer&#13;
Frans Hals. ....&#13;
. Tbe tour departs f_ retuJlI&#13;
Wustum at 8 a.m. and : lor tbe&#13;
by 6 p.m. Tickets are ........&#13;
general publiC, $22 for beJ'I 0/&#13;
citizens and $20' for ~l!lIIlI! ""&#13;
the Racine Arl _aU ~&#13;
ticket price includ&lt;:"del~ ..&#13;
coach transportatiOll&#13;
Det&#13;
a",_&#13;
to both museums a. .....,dI iI&#13;
ments on the return lrtp.&#13;
not included. till! or 1/1&#13;
For more inl~nna call tilt&#13;
make reservations&#13;
Wustum at 636-9177.&#13;
-&#13;
7&#13;
Wisconsin's record fishing&#13;
The Lb. -, Oz .• Place and Year way. 1952.&#13;
follow: Perch (yellow),&#13;
Largemouth Bass, 11-3, Lake Winnehago, 1954.&#13;
Ripley, 1940. Sauger, 4-5, Mississippi&#13;
Smallmouth Bass, 9-1, Indian 1971.&#13;
Lake, 1950. Atlantic Salmon, 12,;), Lake I&#13;
Rock Bass, 1-12, Big Green Michigan, 1975.&#13;
Lake, 1971. Coho Salmon, 24-6, Lake&#13;
White Bass, 3-12, Pelican Lake, Michigan, 1975.&#13;
1963. Chinook Salmon,&#13;
YellowBass, 2-2, Lake Monona, Menominee River, 1973.&#13;
1972. Sturgeon, 94-3, Menominee&#13;
Bluegill, 2-4, Squash Lake, 1971. River, 1968.&#13;
Bullhead (black), 2-9, Trappe Sturgeon (lake), 180,;), Lake&#13;
Lake, 1967; Winnehago, 1953.&#13;
Bullhead (brown), 3-12, Nelson Brown Lake Trout, &lt;Great&#13;
Lake, 1972; Lakes - run), 29-9, Lake Superior,&#13;
Bullbead (yellow), 3-3, Nelson 1971.&#13;
Lake, 1972. Brown Lake Trout, (inland), 14-&#13;
Channel catfish, 44,;),Wisconsin 8, Rush River, 1974.&#13;
River, 1962. Rainbow Trout, 24-4, Lake&#13;
Flathead Catfish, 61-0, Fox Michigan, 1973.&#13;
River, 1968. Splake (hybrid), 14-4,Ada Lake,&#13;
White Crappie, 4-8, Gile 1967.&#13;
Flowage, 1967. Tiger Trout, 17*, Lake&#13;
Muskellunge, 69-11, Lake Michigan, 1977.&#13;
Qlippewa Flowage, 1949. Walleye, 18,;), High Lake, 1933.&#13;
Muskellunge (hybrid) 50-4, Lac 'World's Record&#13;
VleIIXDesert, 1951. - Taken from The Bantam&#13;
NorthernPike, 38-0,Lake Puck- Great Outdoors Guide.&#13;
~ ...............&#13;
Fishing in Kenosha&#13;
the winner to airline tickets and&#13;
accomodations for two, 3 . days&#13;
and 2 - nights in Las Vegas. The&#13;
purpose of the contest is to draw&#13;
attention to Sport Fishing 10&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
RANGER Thursday. April 21, 19«1&#13;
Will Preischel and Mark&#13;
, Sporting event result wrapups: looking good!&#13;
Women s Softball pools of four.Parkside will he In the second game ho..... -er, .anI~_Ulledlor, • ana In&#13;
The Womens Softball team playmg agatnst PlatteVille, things went better for the team a the I k,lomeler .Ik I. I&#13;
finished third in the Circle Oshkosh and Northeaslern they "011 &amp;-3. The mIll,. plldler turday.t. m t held In&#13;
Tournament this past weekend. Illinois ..The women have heaten ...as Jack Ruhach ho came In .t .1... 011&#13;
-y defeated: PlattevtlleandOsbkosh,although 'theendolthetlurdllllU,."ith!be ra ee In 48 .nd nnl,.&#13;
,,~ 4-3 the game against Oshkosh was bases loaded and no outs a third 48 39 II...-&#13;
~:~~C~~gne 9-1 close. "Northeastern illinois is a was leadl,. 3-1 at un poinl Ume the .. AI d raced. 1&#13;
UI-Champagne 10.;) eight teams competing. real up and down team. They ...ill Ruhach rettred !be next this&#13;
The game against Chicago was The team played every day last prohably he our toughest eom- batters ...ithout any tits .nd the&#13;
a 10 inning ball game while the week, which resulted in their petition:" said-Draft. team went on to WUl &amp;-3' It,..&#13;
The first weekend in May the just a super job," OherbrunDer second game against Champagne being very tired and worn out. team will have a conference said.&#13;
wascalled in the sixth inning due "We're called to have the days playoff against Superior. Draft On Wednesday. April 27. the&#13;
tothe 10run rule. The team's only off," said Draft. feels they Will he the Iugher seed team traveled to Warner Par to&#13;
I~ was to SI. Xavier (6.;). Coach The team played against SI. team wi.th their 22~ record. The play a doubleheader .. ,tb&#13;
Linda Draft was very disap- Xavier Wednesday, which hoped game Will probably he played at Madison Coach Oberbrunner&#13;
pointed with the organization of to get hack the loss they suffered Petrifying Springs Park. feels the team should take one&#13;
the tournament The tournament at the Circle tournament.&#13;
. game. "Whenever you play a was originally an eight team This weekend the team will M ' Ba doubleheader a.... )· from home.&#13;
tournament but Draft received a compete in the. 8 - team en s seball you look for a split," he &lt;.'0 •&#13;
callwhen the season had already Whitewater tournament. The merited.&#13;
th Id he t· divi dod . by Maureen Burke begunsaying ere WOll not tournamen IS VI mto two The Men's Baseball team split a 'Ibis Saturday, the Rate v.-nJ&#13;
doubleheader with Ill-Chicago on he at home to face Lewis in a&#13;
April 22. In the first game, the doubleheader. Oberbrunner ts&#13;
Rangers lost 10-4. "We had loolti,. to "'ID that one&#13;
several opportunities to win it,"&#13;
3-4, Lake commented Coach Ken Oher- Men's Track&#13;
brunner, "but we just didn't have&#13;
River, out hitting shoes on."&#13;
The Kenosha Charter Fishing&#13;
Association, Michelob and&#13;
LaMacchia Travel Agency are&#13;
p,eased. to announce Kenosha's&#13;
Firsl Annual Michelob Lake&#13;
Michigan Fish - Off. Beginning&#13;
May 1 and continuing through&#13;
Sept. 15, area fishermen will be For information and reserable&#13;
to register all fish caught valions contact (414) 652-9400,or&#13;
1rbileparticipating on a Kenosha write Kenosha Sport Fishing at&#13;
Sport Fishing Charter. The 4927 -. 7th Avenue, Kenosha,&#13;
largest fish by weight will entitle Wisconsm 53140.&#13;
--.................................&#13;
&lt;::::::::;w;it;:::::::R~~:9:;;::::::~::;::;';:tt;;:::::.:.:.;.:.&#13;
~~~;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::;::::::::::;::::::::;:::::::::;::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::=:::=::::;::::::::;:::::&#13;
$50 FIRST&#13;
PRIZE&#13;
CHESS CLUB&#13;
SPRING TOURNAMENT&#13;
May 3-4 - 12:00-6:00 pm&#13;
ENTRY FEE $1.00&#13;
Location • Union Rec Center&#13;
SIGN UP IN REC CENTER&#13;
NOW!&#13;
Last day for registration • May 2nd&#13;
( Other cash prizes determined by&#13;
number of entrants)&#13;
....&#13;
Phy-ed experiences break-ins&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
A large numher of locker break -&#13;
ins have been reported this month&#13;
at the Physical Education&#13;
Building. The first was April 11by&#13;
two tennis players, who among&#13;
other things had their racquets&#13;
stolen prior to a match. Recently,&#13;
a hasehall player had $5 stolen&#13;
while he was at practice. "He&#13;
dented the locker in and took the&#13;
lock. He did leave my wallet. I&#13;
was pretty happy ahout that,"&#13;
added the player.&#13;
Ron Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Security commented that most&#13;
break - ins ...ere reported near the&#13;
da te 0( the first one. Brinkman&#13;
also said the thief used boll cuue-s&#13;
to cut the locks. The broken locks&#13;
were found !ales" in a field near the&#13;
physical buildi,.&#13;
According to Dr. Wayne Dannebl,&#13;
Athletic Director, break -IllS&#13;
are ooe 0( the biggest problems in&#13;
the buildl,.. Because oIlhis, signs&#13;
were placed in both the Men's and&#13;
Women's locker rooms cautiooirc&#13;
people to keep lockers locked even&#13;
while taking a shower and not to&#13;
leave anythi,. si~ out. "It ISa&#13;
recurring problem. We'll go&#13;
through a dry spell for a lime.&#13;
ORCHARD&#13;
COURTS&#13;
STUDENT SPECIALS&#13;
SEPT. 1983APARTMENT RENTALS&#13;
FROM $110 PER MONTH •&#13;
• Appliances&#13;
• Carpeting&#13;
• Drapes&#13;
• Furniture&#13;
MODERN "LOFT" APARTMENTS&#13;
• Heat &amp; Water&#13;
• Electricity&#13;
• Parking&#13;
• Laundry Facilities&#13;
RENTAL OFFICE OPEN&#13;
April 21st - May 21st&#13;
969 wood Rood&#13;
MODEL APARTMENT AND&#13;
RENTAt OFFICE HOURS&#13;
Daily 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
PHONE 553-9009&#13;
Professionally leased &amp; managed by&#13;
CERTIFIED PROPERTY&#13;
MANAGEMENT, INC.&#13;
then 11 ha a ,. 01 br&#13;
IllS," comrnenllld 0&#13;
Security t the bu1IcIl"Il not&#13;
been Incrased ...., to • lack DI&#13;
manpower But m r&#13;
bel,. taken to PIJI'- the&#13;
thief Bnokman and (ba,&#13;
a pect iD mind The. ar ,..l&#13;
ceraJn !bal tM lI1lfl not&#13;
scm"""" (rom all the&#13;
"Weha,e. in mind. but&#13;
" lust can't accuse 10m &lt;l&#13;
lI1l",ery We m catctJ them red&#13;
• handed,'· commented Dalme1\1.&#13;
A&gt; 01 Apr" :!IIi. no one bad&#13;
apprehended&#13;
'AI.&#13;
IEIIIALS&#13;
.2 NNl TENTS&#13;
•• NNlTENTS&#13;
• SLEEPING BAGS&#13;
• GROUND PADS&#13;
• GAS HEATERS&#13;
• GAS LANTERNS&#13;
• CXX)KSTOVES&#13;
• CXX)KINGKITS&#13;
• ICE CHESTS&#13;
• WATER JUGS&#13;
• CANTEE&#13;
• VITTlE KITS&#13;
• CJWi&gt; SHOYElS&#13;
• BELT AXES .H ING I&#13;
• POCKET KNI&#13;
• CQW&gt;ASSES • FIRST AID ITS&#13;
• FLASHLIGHTS&#13;
• CJWi&gt; STOOLS&#13;
• FISHING RODS&#13;
• FISHING NETS&#13;
• FISH BAS ETS&#13;
DY_~&#13;
I YA.. n&#13;
... ESSAIY&#13;
CA L:&#13;
553-&#13;
•&#13;
Thursday, April 28, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Letters to Editor Coalinued From Page Two&#13;
Issue of movie embarrasses student&#13;
lhe highest atlendance of Ibis&#13;
semester Maybe if \he people who&#13;
were oojecting would have kept&#13;
their 0..... '11 personal opinions to&#13;
\hemsel ves \he uccess 01 \he film&#13;
wouldnt have been as great,&#13;
maybe. I am astounded at \heir&#13;
achms and reactions to the&#13;
shoVting of Lbis film We're all&#13;
adults and we can each use our&#13;
right to choose whether or not we&#13;
"ant to see a pornographic lilm or&#13;
not. What about \he students who&#13;
"ant to see a pornographic film,&#13;
sbouldn't PAB he able to pick&#13;
films with a wide enough variety&#13;
to salisty aU 01 \he students inchxbng&#13;
those that want to see a&#13;
pornographic movie.&#13;
As for carol Franks' letter&#13;
accursing \he Ranger 01 vicious&#13;
journalism. She was astowxled&#13;
that a university paper would&#13;
..Tite in sum a manner, instead o(&#13;
dealing with it as a valid issue .. l&#13;
agree with \he way \hey handled It&#13;
because itwasn't a valid issue, but&#13;
It was a ridiculous situation. Come&#13;
on let's not embarrass Parkside&#13;
any more and give Parkside a bad&#13;
image that makes us look so&#13;
naive. The group that protested&#13;
behaved naively towards pornography&#13;
and ~ constitution.&#13;
First \hey acted like \he students&#13;
at Parkside had never seen an x .&#13;
rated lilm and thought they were&#13;
protecting us from the evils of it.&#13;
Secondly they suggested censorship&#13;
by asking that the movie&#13;
not be shown. Come on American&#13;
educated adults suggesting such&#13;
an Un- American and unconstitutional&#13;
proposal as censorship,&#13;
it's ridiculous and embarrassing&#13;
to the rest of the&#13;
students here at Parkside.&#13;
Todd Bernhardt&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
I am embarrassed for Parkside&#13;
and its' students because of \he&#13;
acllons of a mUlOril)- 0/ \he&#13;
udenls This group 01 ludenls&#13;
an prolesbng ... eeks before&#13;
the shoWIng of an x • rated film&#13;
they wore suggesbng that It&#13;
sbouldn't shown on campus&#13;
The him became a very cont""&#13;
r I bject and thaI' what&#13;
I think .. completely ndlcu10us&#13;
and embarra ing to our&#13;
umver Ity Why hould the&#13;
Ihowtng 01 an x • rated film at a&#13;
Uri. ity "hieh expr andtea&#13;
" studftlta to have an&#13;
open mind cause ueh an uproar!&#13;
The whol ,dea 01 .1 becomIng&#13;
controv rslal i abaurd ,'obody&#13;
w gOing to he forced to ga see it&#13;
and PAD had a chance to make&#13;
money oil 01 the film. only if&#13;
people paid to it. The film had&#13;
Melvin Calvin gives energy lecture&#13;
He earned his PhD degree at the&#13;
University of Minnesota and did&#13;
post - doctoral work at the&#13;
University of Manchester,&#13;
England, before joining the&#13;
Berkeley faculty.&#13;
Men's tennis team wins over Beloit&#13;
a home meet, 2-7. The two single&#13;
matches the Rangers did win were&#13;
Tony Nielsen defeated Frank&#13;
Niehols (6-3) (1-6) (6-4) and Art&#13;
Shannon defeated Don Klumb (6-&#13;
4) (3-6) (6-4&gt;'&#13;
On Saturday, April 23, the&#13;
Rangers took on Moraine Valley_&#13;
Parkside came out victoriously&#13;
wilb a /inal score of 9.(). Whieh&#13;
brings the Rangers seasonal&#13;
record up to 8-2_ All single and&#13;
double matches were won,&#13;
On Monday, Ibe Rangers took on&#13;
Carthage College in an away&#13;
Frid.y.Apr." meet. Wednesday, they took on&#13;
MOv,. Apoc:~ypw~' (R) .....ill be shown III 1p_m. lind ,,11:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Carroll College in an away meet.&#13;
Admh&amp;ton., ft'lltdoor ,,, "tor P.rk:$ioe $fudwtlsand 51 for II gun!. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
UIrIOU.'" Stvolr&gt;lAWi!rds.' Spft'l.1n Main PI.ce. Admwion is $8. Tickets are a....ailable at the Friday, the 29, the Rangers will&#13;
unkIn tnform.'G"l (~I... take C di C II -&#13;
...... 'Y • Delk.'. "~nU"al'p m. in the- Communication Arts Thutre. Tickets are availabte en oncor a 0 ege In an&#13;
et,.. \.Wol"l tntormelocn C....t ... end at I'M FiM Arts Division Office. away meet, and then on Saturday,&#13;
~~~a al t »p." Unklt'l SQuere tNluring "Hi Rise" Admission is free. Sponsored bV the Rangers will take on the&#13;
Alumni in a home meet, which&#13;
starts at 1 p.m_&#13;
abel Prue . wirvung chemist&#13;
MelVInCalVInof \he University 0/&#13;
California Berkeley, will&#13;
I hi ...... rch on artifiCial&#13;
photooynlhesl , a process wilb&#13;
potentill for providing a&#13;
r....... abl tnergy resouree, in a&#13;
f public talk at ParllS,de at 11&#13;
a m on TUesday, Apr 26 in Grnq_&#13;
101&#13;
QlIVln IIuai .. knowledge o/\he&#13;
natural process of photooynthesis&#13;
In areen plants to develop arby&#13;
Cam CarrleUo&#13;
On Monday, April 18 the&#13;
ParllSide Rangers won over Beloit&#13;
College III an away meet 6-3. The&#13;
WInner of \he sillllles matehes&#13;
\liere cal i~leton over Ward&#13;
Krull 1&amp;-2) (6-2&gt;' Tony ielsen&#13;
del_led Clrll80llDer (6-4) (6-Il.&#13;
Art Shannon defeated Gregg&#13;
tilicial photosynthesis systems&#13;
which mimic plant mechanisms of&#13;
converting water into hydrogen -&#13;
a potential replacement for olber&#13;
fuels - and oxygen. Calvin is also&#13;
poneering the concept of uo;ing&#13;
green plants to produce&#13;
hydrocarbon. like materials of&#13;
SUItable molecular weight and&#13;
structure for fuels and materials,&#13;
including the use of genetic&#13;
engineering to impl'ove yield and&#13;
quality.&#13;
Mason (6-3) (6-0. Jim Wynstra&#13;
defeated Mark Gianelto (2-6) (6-4)&#13;
(6-4&gt;' In doubles Iram Cruz -&#13;
Nielsen defeated Bonner - Mason&#13;
(6-3) (6-2). Singletoo - Wynstra&#13;
defeated Krull - Gianetto (6-3) (6-&#13;
3).&#13;
On Wednesday, April 20, the&#13;
Rangers lost to UW-Milwaukee in&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
ThursdllY, Apr. 2.&#13;
CMt.aN'ATIONa' 4p.m for students starting In fall. call ext. 2OOOfOl'more information,&#13;
s.t\lnUiy. Apt'. JO&#13;
COM~T •• "AI. ~ n Pl.a ft'Oft'l t a.m. 104 p.m. Admission is Sl. Call ext. 2231 tor more&#13;
INorftWtkln&#13;
P\..AY A o.IKa'_ "I~' ...., 11MrepNled at Ip,m. onthe Communicallon Arts Theatre.&#13;
Su....,.y.~yl&#13;
K=SHIM ....IIIM ...... rcled at 'lp.1Tt at Main Piece. Students.llKUlty. staff and guests are&#13;
COMCa., at 1]0 p rot In I,. Comm\,WOiQlo(lt'l.NIs Theatl"e with Otto L~ing conductlf'lg. Ad.&#13;
~ SI.Jl) tor 'ltuOln'S""" Mnoor C,liDn$ lind S3for othen&#13;
-::~. ~lfllM ~ w II be r~t.u al 1:30 p.m, In the Union Cinema. Sponsored by&#13;
~y.Mayl&#13;
.OUHOrA.LE 'An ~l4'Wof the N.CiIrll9 ....n RewlUfion" by Father- Dan cabal (Capuchin&#13;
~ lat 11 Up m Ur'toon m Tlw propr.", b fnoeoJOdopen to the public.&#13;
_.ltJHO,. ~ SOlv.,.· a11 p.m. in lJntl:n107 Aflarewelc:ome&#13;
.. ICTURI( Me_,,. T",. R: .. ,KI', ..... c.on",er-wtiOnSW,fh Matef';als" by Dr. Donald SChon of&#13;
MIl' al 1p 1ft Mel.N 105 The pr'OQI""" \.sfr .. endopen lorn_PUblic&#13;
.. ECTURIl 'ECllIc.'1(Jl"land T.dll'lJal ChlI~" by 0l:JN,1dSchon at " 'S p.m. In MOLN 161. The&#13;
""... '" oc-n '0 Itloe puollc a1 no d'large&#13;
.. ICTURI( "TtdlnOlOOy and CNng4" by DcINIICl sctton of MIT .t 3;30 p.m. in CA 132. All are&#13;
"'corne to a",""&#13;
T....... Y.MlyJ&#13;
l.aCTU ••• ' .'J'I\ lI'l"" Galbra"l'1 COnt.~.Room, WLl.C Dr. OooiIld Sd'Ion of MIT will&#13;
I. on na.., "IiJ Prof .. oanal Effecl'......u .. Th_ program is frH anclopen to the public.&#13;
TAl.1t p no and ~ I,ng Sf! HigI'Ily TKhnical Tums··.t 11:30 a.m. in MOLN 113 by&#13;
Olw\eld SCIlOft The lalll. osoptn to .... publ,c al no dwlrg,e&#13;
MMINA. ' ..... 'netlOn· by DonaICl~ at 11 30 P m.n CA tn..11'IeMmlnar Is open to the&#13;
WIllie .., f'IO ,,.&#13;
HMINAR ."1« IW PnJInsoONls' al 2'30 pm. ,n MeLN 110 by Donald Schon. The pt'Clgram&#13;
for .. .-.d ... to !he .,...Ic&#13;
CONCa RT"t I P m Itlie tommlM'ltCalocn Arts 'fhNIlTe f"'uring the Parkslde Jan Ensemble&#13;
....,..1aIorl ,the 000r ,1 for S',*"tS.,.;JM\ior ci',zensancl S2forothen. .&#13;
W~y.MIIy4&#13;
CO'''IIHOUSI from 11 10 1 P m and' to 10 p m. In ~ uniOn &amp;.tzNr .....u featuring Gtoorge&#13;
• All ....... etcon\e ~td by PAS&#13;
" MINA. 'TlW'1l:ote~ 00 una Fa ", Hul •• "tI'Ie Mlntal 1'4 .. '''' ProfessiOn" by Prof Mary&#13;
ROI"Mroatl211GOft" m Tht Pf"09l'''''' 1$ frH erldopen 10tI'Ie PUblic .&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
IARN •• Of' ....,... eolI(j\ 101OO '1''''&#13;
F IbIII I'tOun Motoftly NY"'fll'lI tor&#13;
otac:lng pollen 01'1 (lI&lt;1'ICIUI Bonut bilWCl1 on&#13;
,",,"~ PI' e~ .. -.1 100114-&#13;
..,&#13;
f'f~ING se.VICEl Ca_ aarb654 Ul6alter&#13;
. - ..... "''''NO "L. ...y •• WAHTIE:D 101'rocll. b"'it!o&#13;
INI'ld C. 654 '"-56 or t60I )62'*&#13;
.0000NlA,a WANTI:D ) bl'droom '-'W&#13;
... 'h f~.-.c_ ren' ihartct tltO Pft" "*'th.&#13;
M(I'I Incl,*" '" I .. arodfvm,lu'" 011&#13;
OW tM et uum lOil...,,1 Of Ql91S1&#13;
Caft ... '* Din J&#13;
.... 50"' • ..,&#13;
..... V ....!'IMs.,., Pl. ,. COl"M DKIlIOOn&#13;
.., ""- l1uc'II&#13;
"un GIVI MI al..... • bit ,,*"t C...,.. I&#13;
.... u eDl.&#13;
KOOy.1 Only S....... Oa'n unr • ~y I'",&#13;
r..or' XO. He&#13;
t&#13;
1(.. M. Good luCIt! We',e rtlOting tor you I II&#13;
GOMeR It"$ ~prlng. cheef" up U,C&#13;
KEN ~ you get the ecMorship. O.J.&#13;
GAtL .• cleaMd out YOU' doset5. Brrhl'l9&#13;
&amp;n',ng&#13;
MOLl. y, 8rukfast on May 2'2. 5 pm .• aftH"&#13;
f~ il"fl't'19 C1lfTImeocemenl- Blanche and&#13;
POlly&#13;
EMMANUEl.' It \IIlIlI5lun. O,OA&#13;
HENSlAI( Wondertul lob on the Ranger thiS&#13;
.,... , We II m;u you l'Ib.t year&#13;
WANDERING You're trapped in a world I&#13;
nl'\'tr be~ed in, The Dock&#13;
GOO 0 LUCK 1'0.111 ecMar"!. candidates. You'l .... ,.&#13;
IRUCE Wh., one&lt;~ loot ,s big~ WIsiz •&#13;
IhlI" one'!. mouth, maybe it 's good 10 put it&#13;
n your ~tn. so you c.n't be hUrd&#13;
MOLl. Y: Tl'le cap and 1l0W'l'lIooIU. grUI Pat&#13;
lLANCHE It itloukl be iOme party. And&#13;
iIOI'I1_ post pany, see you lhere I Ed&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKINGI&#13;
5%% In...... t H Yo. Dally Ifs'¥j~e&#13;
Balance II 5500.00 or Mo... 1 --_.-.&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue 4235 • 52nd Street 410 Broad Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin Kenosha, Wisconsin Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414·658-4861 414-658.0120 414-241-9141&#13;
~5:~o~~~:c Blv~. 8035 - 22nd Avenue 24726. 75th Street -Rt.:.&#13;
414 _694_1~nSln Kenosha, Wisconsin (Paddock Lake) Salem, .&#13;
414-657-1340 414-843.2388------=-&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOO '-ROWI&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
Calvin is University Professor&#13;
of Chemistry at Berkeley and&#13;
former Director of the Laboratory&#13;
of Chemical Biodynamics and&#13;
former Associate Director of&#13;
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.&#13;
1&#13;
16 17 18 19&#13;
56&#13;
59&#13;
C&gt; Edward Julius&#13;
ACROSS 43 Angered&#13;
44 Prefix or suffix&#13;
John Wayne movie, meaning skin&#13;
"In --'s Way" 45 Elegance&#13;
5 Bakery employees 46 Mrs. Kramden&#13;
10 Prefix. meaning 47 Moslem title&#13;
vessel 48 Upper House (Fr.)&#13;
14 Eye part 49 Initials on a&#13;
15 Painter Claude - coin&#13;
16 Fusses 50 Type of firework&#13;
17 Vim (2wds.)&#13;
19 Walk like Amos 53 "_- corny as ... "&#13;
McCoy 55 Knocking sounds&#13;
20 Idol, a la Genesis 56 Apprehends&#13;
(2 wds.) 57 Show scorn&#13;
22 Part of m,p.h. 58 Dill herb&#13;
23 Was human 59 Smal' fly&#13;
24 Army officer (abbr.)60 More peculiar&#13;
25 -- Jane; ro 61 Actor Sparks. et&#13;
27 Ohio team&#13;
28 Part of a diamond&#13;
29 Try&#13;
30 Former campus&#13;
organization&#13;
31 Big name in&#13;
cartoons (2 wds.)&#13;
33 Car feature. for&#13;
short&#13;
34 Asian New Year&#13;
35 Harvey the cocktail&#13;
40 Pre---&#13;
10 Hi ss Harper. for&#13;
short&#13;
11 Fatty&#13;
12 "_- my prince&#13;
.111. .. "&#13;
13 Fish hawk&#13;
18 Prefix meaning foot&#13;
21 Classroom supply&#13;
26 Relative of ain't&#13;
28 Pointed remark&#13;
31 Author of "Our&#13;
Town"&#13;
32 Unit&#13;
33 Pianist Templeton&#13;
35 Side show attrllctfon&#13;
36 Nemesis of I&#13;
certain 40 (2 wds.)&#13;
37 - Eye&#13;
al.38 Invalidated&#13;
39 C&lt;!rtatn recipient&#13;
40 Ordinary&#13;
41 lionized&#13;
1 Affectionate ones 42 Abhors&#13;
2 Stated firmly 43 Word with maniac&#13;
3 Slows down or beauty&#13;
4 Purple shades 45 -- ear (listened)&#13;
5 "- old cowhand." "48 Posed&#13;
6 Tepee-shaped 51 Approximately&#13;
7 last in line (2 wds,)&#13;
8 Feted 52 Actress Darleen _&#13;
9 Stall in mud 54 High-speed plane&#13;
(Answers on JII8I S)&#13;
DOWN&#13;
WANTED&#13;
SIOO.OO REWARD&#13;
Information on substance when water is added its' size&#13;
increases 15 to 20 times and turns to rock.&#13;
C.II Daw., 652·2171</text>
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              <text>til' University of Wisconsin. Parkside&#13;
er&#13;
Thursday, April 21, 1983 Vol. 11 • 1'0. 27&#13;
pogreba; PSGA disagree over surveys&#13;
byBob Kiesling interacting with the students. It is&#13;
NewsEdltor hoped that- this will make the&#13;
,IIl&lt;IDplingto measure student student body view PSGA in a more&#13;
..., PSGA President Phillip favorable way.&#13;
:. has requested that all "So many students feel that the&#13;
..... involved with PSGA; - senators are an elite group that sit&#13;
...... justices, and executives back and make decisions without&#13;
participate in weekly poll - student input," Pogreba said.&#13;
~g to measure student "They don't regard student&#13;
t/fIiAl government as the true voice of&#13;
1IIe~am has been criticized the students."&#13;
• 'lIIIIlbet of senators, and is While most senators agreed&#13;
IIcause of the first break of with the idea of becoming more&#13;
...... 's administration from involved with the student body at&#13;
II...te. large, many disagreed with the&#13;
,.. said that the surveys way it was being carried out. One&#13;
.. designedto get PSGA more senator did say that they thought&#13;
.. ft!d wilb Its constituency. "I tbat the idea of a clique in the&#13;
lilted someinclication of how the major student organizations was&#13;
-*"l body was feeling," he "not necessarily a bad thing,"&#13;
.. however t because of better&#13;
I)Ie ri !be major goals of the cooperation between groups.&#13;
..." program is to get senators Most of the complaints centered&#13;
·tr~~~~~~~tr~tt~t~~tr~~~rttI~??rtttt\tttt?tttt~f~Itttttt~&#13;
cial Segregation&#13;
ic of conference&#13;
beat 'em."&#13;
The Justice Department,&#13;
reluctant of the interdistrict&#13;
remedy, was negative from the&#13;
beginning. "They opposed&#13;
everything we were for." He&#13;
added, "Under the Reagan administration&#13;
the department&#13;
stated, 'We think blacks should try&#13;
to make it on their own.'&#13;
"Everybndy has intended to&#13;
keep blacks in their placet" Wa~d&#13;
stated firmly. "Historically, this&#13;
.. (interdistrict remedy) is the only&#13;
• way of affecting change."&#13;
topic of discussion was Reactions to the plan weren't&#13;
"Iaool Desegregation: The that varied. The white population&#13;
~POUsCaseand its Policy." of the city feared that "if you get&#13;
"1911, Ward explained, a case too much black in one area, it may&#13;
.... ~ by the U.S. Justice go all black. Therefore, they&#13;
......,."t and was tried in 1971, wanted to stop them (blacks) in&#13;
,.ttoning whether IPS &lt;In- their tracks.&#13;
-polls Public Schools) was "The white students would then&#13;
Mly ri racial discrimination in move to the suburbs _ a big table&#13;
-.. !be school system. The where they could get first pick of&#13;
- found. they were, and service," he explained about the&#13;
~ an effective remedy effect the solution had.&#13;
... involving agencies other Ward is now a member of the&#13;
the school district. school board. "No district is less&#13;
AI lbat lime, Ward and his than 15% black. No one is sitting&#13;
lIIIdalel were granted court at the table alone." . ;--1Il to intervene, following Frank Gilliam, an asSOClate&#13;
-: the question of whether an professor of political Science&#13;
dillrict remedy was here is a close friend of professor&#13;
'-ranted. Ward He was responsible for&#13;
~1IIO,!be U.S. Supreme Court bringing Ward to Parkside. "It's&#13;
!bat such a remedy was giving the institullon a ,per.&#13;
~. It was implemented spective not usually gotten, he&#13;
~ the beginning of the 1981 proclaimed. He wenl on to say&#13;
i;Y&lt;ar. The remedy involves that Ward was a mollvaling&#13;
two of the eleven districts. speaker. "to bo&#13;
"'naining two are subjects of Ward's being here was s w&#13;
~uing court suit; it is ways of expressing the way of&#13;
..,;. .!ballhey too will become accomplishing things.&#13;
.. t!"Dlng parts of the in- "It raises issues needed to be&#13;
~~et remedy. raised that ~herwise may not be&#13;
IIddilion, the case decided brought out. d'&#13;
.... PIIbhc housing (pre- Gilliam summarized War s&#13;
~'!"tely black) must be lecture with the perspecllve of&#13;
~ tIlroughout the county, overcoming major disabil.ties -&#13;
loli; .beingconcentrated in the ointing oul Ward's ac:&#13;
ata'Uley·Also, it concluded that ~omplishments. desp.te his b1,\J'd&#13;
~ of Indiana was af· ness "Nothing IS given to you, he.&#13;
~~~Y obligated to actively said; directing his ~tytat~~t~&#13;
L::. .In. elimina ting past the black commUlU. hing&#13;
a:-:.~lion and indications of blacks should try to do so~~tty t~&#13;
,--. "We have a respons. I he&#13;
....."'" who has been "han- ourselves to be i~or:::'~,'~on't&#13;
~pPed" by congenital blind~ said. "What you ge ,J&#13;
f1w... bas Succeeded in his want to give to y:;::'-t the black&#13;
~~'on despite that fact. He suggests te for their own&#13;
~ of the twelve year students advoca. . in other&#13;
~ said, "The system is cause, per se, c~~~~ relevant • "ur ; all yOUhave to do is speakers con&#13;
~i;i~;;::~*~*:::;:*~~l~~;;~~;~::t:::::~:::::::~~~:~~~:~~:~:::::~~~t~~~::r~:~:~:::~tt:&#13;
around the rule saying that&#13;
senators are not allowed to work&#13;
on the survey du~ office bours,&#13;
as they cannot work in the office&#13;
and be out among the students al&#13;
the same lime. Senators are&#13;
required to spend three hours a&#13;
week working in the PSGA office.&#13;
Another complaint coocerned&#13;
the idea that senators should be&#13;
free to pursue their owo projects.&#13;
"I don't see why we have to do&#13;
something that's somebody's&#13;
personal business," said CIle. One&#13;
offered the suggestion that the&#13;
wcrk be done in a committee. not&#13;
spread CNer the organization .&#13;
Pogreba said the idea behind&#13;
the surveys was to get not only&#13;
senators, bul the other branches&#13;
of student government involved&#13;
with the survey. He asked that&#13;
student government members get&#13;
the opinions of five people they&#13;
know and ten people theY lido't&#13;
know each week. Students are&#13;
probably going to have two&#13;
reactions, he said, either positi, ..&#13;
or negative toward student&#13;
government.&#13;
Some senators took issue with&#13;
the way the petitions are worded,&#13;
because they don't allow any&#13;
expression of individual opinion.&#13;
One said the questions were&#13;
''pretty much loaded," because&#13;
they asked for obvious, yes or no&#13;
answers.&#13;
Pogreba plans to ha,.. the&#13;
student government wcrk 00 a&#13;
different survey every week.&#13;
Adding that everyone who is a&#13;
member of the student body is&#13;
welcome to submit surveys, be&#13;
said the surveys will reflect the&#13;
important issues at Parkside, So&#13;
far most of the ideas lor the ITiES I t.cl s~eys bave come from ,.,thin THE OLD ANIMAL FACIL oca Kr&#13;
the student government itself. ed Building The build ngs are curren Iy ng&#13;
Nickolas C. Burkel elected to&#13;
Wisconsin Humanities Committee&#13;
member COllUlllt J &amp;lid&#13;
m:enU)" ....... - elected&#13;
committee to I oecood&#13;
term&#13;
Burckel WllI - larfeI&#13;
the basia 01 1111 involvemeat til&#13;
area commuruli aDd&#13;
ocboIarly interfllt m Ioc:aI biItory&#13;
He is direct ... of the ArdlIws IDd&#13;
Area _rd1 C&lt;Dt&lt;r &lt;ARCI, I&#13;
reposillrY of local ............ t&#13;
records. area De papen DC&#13;
nua-ofilm, IDd eetIISUI data u&#13;
well as r.... _, odicall&#13;
and collechons of ... by local&#13;
authors. TIle ARC operlts ID&#13;
coojunchon with the tate&#13;
Hist ... ical Sooety. .~&#13;
Burcbel WllS co - editor of ~&#13;
award - wiming book ... K.........&#13;
Retrospective," which proW ..&#13;
poIilical, llbor IDd bu.. _&#13;
State HiltorlCJIJ&#13;
history. The&#13;
leaden the 1982 Award important&#13;
volume,&#13;
of ent&#13;
S«lety •• in Kmooba'a from&#13;
ell WIllI&#13;
the&#13;
110~~~~~~~e~~a flI&#13;
det.Us important events aDd&#13;
Kenosha·s cultural &amp;lid ....-Ie&#13;
Opera perfonned&#13;
A """ kiDd of event bIk~ ;o:te ~ed It&#13;
place at Parkslde du..... J&#13;
On SuDda)", April M at 3:30 p m poece ..&#13;
the UlDonOoema,I sptClal graup :::~:~: il""!lt1l&gt;ed of people alSoc:ialecl willi&#13;
Parkside ill ,......... lYO&#13;
perform the IIlIIIIcaI pcrtlCIII 01 the&#13;
opera '.U1~" wnttelll br&#13;
Edgerl ....&#13;
EdlertOD ia a _ It&#13;
ParltIIdt . .-jIrtIII ill.........&#13;
Nicholas C. Burckel, associ~te&#13;
director of the Library - Leamng&#13;
Center has been elected to the&#13;
Wisco~sin Humanities Com·&#13;
miltee, a non - profit organization&#13;
that provides money to public and&#13;
private groups for programs on&#13;
public policy, local history and&#13;
humanities - related lGpIcs.&#13;
Burckel is the second Parkaide&#13;
staff member to be elected to the&#13;
Madison . based committee.&#13;
which receives funds from the&#13;
National Endowment for lbe&#13;
Humanities and is composed 01&#13;
representatives of educatiOO.&#13;
oog~,boor,g~~nm~t~&#13;
the general public drawn from&#13;
throughout the state. Barbara&#13;
Shade, an associate professor 01&#13;
education was elected to the 25 -&#13;
New animal faci ities&#13;
developed here ~J_ TloaokIeIn&#13;
Plrhlde' Blamedl .. 1&#13;
Researcb In t lute IDd Ufe&#13;
Scieece Diaoplino ..... bave&#13;
a ..... AtlmaJ Care IDd H&#13;
Facitil)' The fad&#13;
houae a01lnllo UI&lt;ld for re.cbll"&#13;
&amp;lid researdl It is&#13;
ad)llCent to the Greenbo_ beodde&#13;
the Pby$ical P1aDt&#13;
Edwlrd ""'"lIeo, I ocllte&#13;
professor 01 life so....,.&#13;
""". flcilil)" ',. bull ~ ....&#13;
the old bous WII .. d not meet&#13;
lederll requ remenla "T&#13;
Federll stlndlrds for I.uul&#13;
e.... got ......... &amp;lid ..... doD'!&#13;
bave a lederalJ)· Ipprowd&#13;
ing )"ou cao't get Iederal f&#13;
... use 1DlJI1aIa:" be 5&amp;id&#13;
Inadequate facilibM ba&#13;
used by DeceBS.1 to&#13;
animals for -.J ea.rs It&#13;
Parb"le. The H" lltI&#13;
Coun1ry High y JR II old&#13;
houae thaI alU\ ened to an&#13;
alll.lllal ladli!) ID t. l1IiI&#13;
builq • Inadequate becatae&#13;
of poor IillbtJIIg. poor lemperl!W'e&#13;
control, UIllUltable ClIO .alllll'lI&#13;
eqUipment aDd many oU~r problems TIle _&#13;
..... unsui~Je for rentlO\ .. tilltIo.&#13;
therefore it ceased belng _.-able&#13;
in 1910. The raean:h&#13;
were mO'o-.d to the temporary&#13;
animal bo1&lt;ting fleWty I.&#13;
Greenquist Hall TIle G_&#13;
facility. biell has solely&#13;
used for )'e8I'S. llao .... un·&#13;
proper conditioDl for anamaI care&#13;
due to R\'ere temperature&#13;
changes &amp;lid Iaclt of ClIO .... blOI&#13;
equi1llll ent.&#13;
"Teaching &amp;lid ..-rdl&#13;
not be nw.nIaJned II an adequate&#13;
re&#13;
2 Thursday, Apr1l2!. 1983 ...&#13;
I&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editori I&#13;
Stiffer laws ill: answer?&#13;
With lIQIlle I~ 1IUcountry hran 01 thooe smaD chiIdreD 00 the&#13;
trIcycla bo are killed by the drunk driver 1be 18 year old drunk&#13;
dr~ ho killed lour people 10 that col1isioo, w'- his car went out 01&#13;
CIlIllnll or wbeD hr loot control lor whatever reason 1be drunk who&#13;
....... ed out 01 the bar .t I. m, ooIy to be robbed .Dd beaten by&#13;
aomeone more oeedy 1be -10 on aDd 00. people have begun to&#13;
uk ,-~.I op" Many leS have dodded that iller penaltieS are what is necessary&#13;
to lop "the drinker" problem In lIu5 country Stiffer laws have been&#13;
nlalled .t I t in thi tate,.Dd the penalty hasn't stopped the&#13;
cIrI"*,n.'1ber .r still drunken dr,vers, there are still people being&#13;
kiIIod theY are still rc allowed to come hack to society alter theY've&#13;
maimed or kl1Ied hile cInI'* 01 that theYshou1dn't be allowed to re -&#13;
tIIter IDCldy .lter theY've paid the debt society requires, but no one&#13;
to tNnk the prtee Is high enough to pay. thai theY would stop&#13;
~ Hal It reeUy lIlopped .nyone lrom gelting drunk'? .'&#13;
10 people are loolnrc lor the dillereol.nswer, Raise the driokmg&#13;
... 0 ooelbould drink before the .ge ol21. How many people will thai&#13;
lIlop' How many II will that save" Well, iIIIsaves one Iile •• t IS&#13;
orth u, but hat.bout the drunk driven over the age 0121. Who stops&#13;
them' ....bat.bout the ..... still uDder the age 0121. Do theYcontinue to&#13;
the same harder Il1ap 00 the wrist thai reeeet violators have&#13;
~ved' Or the penally to be made stifler again?&#13;
On thi c.mpus prDllr./N have been in the works to ralae the ~e1 01&#13;
.-d....- bout drlllklrc •• Dd being drunk. 1be campus IBDt ad-&#13;
• lire local .hatu&gt;enee just advoeattrc no cIruokenness. That seems&#13;
I tr TIle eflorta made ha~ been well thougIlt 1be Union bar shouldn·t&#13;
ve to open untU 2. m or belore 1\ •. m. It's been positive that&#13;
r:oIf lree 011 the .. ghta 01 big events in the Union. By stopp.ng the&#13;
~ .1 rller time on the nights 01 big events, the rush lor the&#13;
parltlJWlot isn'l everyone .1 once, trying to get to the closest bar. It&#13;
beeom • lrIekJe· out yslern M.ybe II's worked.&#13;
What m to be searched lor at this point, is an answer for a&#13;
probl&lt;m thai' been III the works since the beginning 01 alcohol. An&#13;
ovenU .nswer doesn't come lrom raising the drinking age, or stiffening&#13;
thr la • unl they .re enforced without exception, bul what does&#13;
ID IDorder IS. new socializatioo .boutdrioking.&#13;
WhY are our children 1OCia1ized through radio and television and&#13;
mapzl_ thai the lOCiaily .cceptable thing to do is drink? For the&#13;
edue tional well· beill(l 01. country, why aren't prll(ll'ams set up in the&#13;
aebooIa shoWlIl(lthe eflects 01 liquor to thooe same children who witness&#13;
the television commercials sayill(l lhat the weekend is for having fun&#13;
th lOme lraDd X beer. U they're old enougllto see the method, aren't&#13;
they old enough to understaDd the consequeneen&#13;
An issue like druokermess can't be solved by ooe simple law, enforced&#13;
OftJ'D1ghl,lor the good of a st.le. 1be socializatioo process is in need of&#13;
rework if we .re looking lor answers to the problems involved with _ennesa We didn't get to this stage overnight, and we won't pull out&#13;
01 It overmght. but there is a country searching for an answer to a&#13;
problem that they created themselves.&#13;
I letters to the editor&#13;
Nuclear awareness program of study; before it's too&#13;
late. Julie Neu&#13;
needed&#13;
Few -.ea today invoke as&#13;
muchlntenae leeling as the debate&#13;
_r, udear Weapons. This year,&#13;
IItudeots .t UW Parkside have&#13;
been presented with several&#13;
petitions cooeerDlng this topiC.&#13;
ltor1unalrly, instead ol an&#13;
lotelligenl, r.ctual debate. much&#13;
of the dlSCUSBioohas been based&#13;
on IrTational .ppeals to emotion.&#13;
Support..... 01 a nuclear freeze&#13;
bomhanl us WIth, "U we didn'l&#13;
opeDd billions of dollars on bombs,&#13;
could eununale hull(ler in the&#13;
.... ld "~ers 01 the appmoite&#13;
are lood 01 )'Ina. "We muat&#13;
our apeodiII(l to keep&#13;
pa th the R threal"&#13;
Botb 1It.temrnts re equaU)'&#13;
auntv 01 ov mplieation 1be&#13;
of laid... weapons aDd&#13;
del spend .... re much more&#13;
complex 11110 oIten ltIpPOrters&#13;
01 one view try to trill(l them down&#13;
to IUt·1ev I emotionalism. which&#13;
the eDd I to • doudi.ng of&#13;
I &lt;IS&#13;
1be 01 the Ull 'I)' IS to&#13;
eocoura.e Int Ih.ent .n·&#13;
y tlll.lion 01 I.cts In all&#13;
mlc. 'uclear eapons&#13;
re undoubtably one It thr moot&#13;
cruel I topics cuJTelltly faCIng&#13;
ma'*lnd. I think It' equally&#13;
enx:I.1 101' li.....·Parkside to try&#13;
Dd repIa the emotionalism&#13;
th the facts here .re the&#13;
to deal with the subject·&#13;
time lor Par .de to&#13;
eat.b1W1 a program deallll(l ..,th&#13;
r rm Certa1nly,&#13;
d llUId .ttract conSlder.bIe&#13;
student IDler 1be&#13;
DO hrr is DOl to lim.t&#13;
dlseusalon on cl r pons, to&#13;
do 10 llUIdultimalely be IUlCidal&#13;
Bultn cIiaewa .n without a&#13;
nd (lrllUDd In the I.cta&#13;
coo nl1l1 little&#13;
In. democratiC lOCiety, IIIs our&#13;
Dri 10 be.bI to openly&#13;
Inveatlp II! .hnoat aD) It&#13;
our duty 10do 10 It ... bout&#13;
111M UGlveraily ftCII(lJlIus&#13;
lbat duty .Dd bean • lormal&#13;
Preston blasts editor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am writill(l this in response to&#13;
your column 01 April 14. 1983 in&#13;
which you addressed the issue 01&#13;
Insensitivily. One 01 the examples&#13;
of insensitivity you gave was the&#13;
movement OIl campus to support&#13;
free ebolee in regards to media&#13;
eoosumptim aDd especially the&#13;
demonstration that movement&#13;
recently held at the Thursday&#13;
showing 01 the fJim "Emmanuel."&#13;
As organizer 01 that movement&#13;
and dernoostratioo I am particularly&#13;
lotrigued at the criteria&#13;
you use in determining insensitivity,&#13;
It seems that you leel&#13;
we behaved insensitive 01 others&#13;
feeHngs because we did Dot&#13;
conduct our c1emoostration as&#13;
those wbo opposed the film did.&#13;
Because .... did oot, "(stand) in a&#13;
SlDgJ. a rea , just makill(l (our)&#13;
stand known:' Because we&#13;
"created had leeIiII(ls for the&#13;
student I laculty opposition&#13;
demonstratim ,.&#13;
On the contrary, I feel that we&#13;
were beiII(l extremel)' sensi tive to&#13;
evef')' American's right lb choose&#13;
to consume wbate\.-er portims of&#13;
the media they wish. Also. by&#13;
including women Iwho freely&#13;
parhclp.ltrd. in our demonstration&#13;
we further stressed the&#13;
ngbt 01 the indiv.dual to choose&#13;
w"t he or she wants to do I hr.&#13;
uch unhke our lriends wbo&#13;
protested the film aDd distril1lled&#13;
leaOets tell~ every woman that&#13;
unless she behave exactly as they&#13;
do that she is debasill(l all&#13;
\\-omanbood&#13;
I am also Interested in your&#13;
labehDl our group "curiously uninteIl&#13;
t .. Just because we are&#13;
II'IDcwalJ and umque In WI' style&#13;
of e'lpre ion we become&#13;
"cunously uninlelligent." I fiDdit&#13;
ppalliDl that at an institution of&#13;
Iugller education your paper sees&#13;
fit to """ ard a group wtuch&#13;
demonstralA!d a great lack 01&#13;
_DUlty .n the presentation of&#13;
their Idea&gt; _alter .U, how much&#13;
otel1igeoce does ,t take to do what&#13;
I&#13;
WHA,. ARE WE DOING IN&#13;
NICARAGUA AND WHY ARE.&#13;
WE. SUPPORTING ,.HE&#13;
SOMOCIS,.A5?&#13;
./'&#13;
- WE HAVE TO SUPPORT&#13;
"THEM-NOBODY ELSE. DOES!&#13;
\&#13;
1 .&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
Tradition lives on on&#13;
by Pat Heasiak&#13;
EdItor&#13;
One 01 the most classic events of&#13;
spring is the alUlUal Brewer&#13;
Opener, which yielded a rousing&#13;
54 thousand at Milwaukee County&#13;
Stadium, lor what was actually a&#13;
rather blustery day. (Being an&#13;
Honorary Meterologist. I can&#13;
report that the weather had very&#13;
bttle ellect on the mood of the&#13;
crowd. For once I'm not complainingaboutweather.&#13;
How 'bout&#13;
that.) The watchers were bundled&#13;
and wrapped in everything from&#13;
parkas to ski jackets to two layers&#13;
01 the same. Nobody minded the&#13;
rather intrepid weather, as a&#13;
matler 01fact, it seemed to bring&#13;
the crowd a bttle closer.&#13;
Baseball, the all - American&#13;
every protestlX' has been doing&#13;
since the inception of the picket&#13;
hoe?&gt;.&#13;
I fiDd it questionable that extensive&#13;
media coverage was given&#13;
to those who protested the film&#13;
whereas our group merely&#13;
presented our issue on our way&#13;
into the theatre. Our faces did not&#13;
appear on the cover of your paper&#13;
and our voices were not heard on&#13;
local radio stations the next&#13;
morning. as were those of the&#13;
protestors .&#13;
This raises the issue of did tbose&#13;
protestors really believe in their&#13;
cause or were they merely&#13;
creating dramatic events for the&#13;
media.&#13;
A little known lact was that both&#13;
our group and their group were&#13;
made aware 01 the lact that the&#13;
media would be present at the 7' 00&#13;
showing that evening. We did ;"t&#13;
show up because we had made our&#13;
statement. U we would have&#13;
repeated our demonslration the&#13;
lack 01 spontaneity would have&#13;
cheapened our cause and we&#13;
would have been playing a seene&#13;
for the media. The otber group did&#13;
show up aDd I'm told they gave a&#13;
marvelous performance.&#13;
I. am '.'Shamed lhatan editor of a&#13;
Uruverslty newspaper would allow&#13;
her personal biases to get in the&#13;
way 01 objective reporting. I'm&#13;
glad there are enough intelligent&#13;
people at this campus who were&#13;
able to see beyond the parody 01&#13;
our _demonstratioo and receive&#13;
our IDlendedmessage: tha t people&#13;
are not be'DI rorced 10see this or&#13;
any other type 01 film; tha t it is an&#13;
ISSue ~ choice.&#13;
Sincerely&#13;
Bruce R. Prest";&#13;
Answers needed&#13;
for crime&#13;
To the EditlX':&#13;
i..~~· informed are you about our&#13;
J_lce system in the United&#13;
sport, lit to be seen by people 01&#13;
every size, of every talent. A non -&#13;
violent game, at least not violent&#13;
in lhe sense 01football, these guys&#13;
certainly don't attack each other.&#13;
II is a spectator sport, one that&#13;
develops a rather curious sense of&#13;
togetherness for 50 thousand&#13;
people who could otherwise care&#13;
less about who and what they are&#13;
sitting next to. To an extent the&#13;
spectators can get involved.&#13;
One curious gentleman at the&#13;
game offered a numher of people&#13;
a beer. Being one of those people&#13;
who can't stand beer, I gave up&#13;
my chance to the fellow sitting&#13;
next to me. He not only drauk my&#13;
beer, he had numerous cups of&#13;
beer, which provoked him to shout&#13;
States? Do you realize that there&#13;
are robbers, rapists, and even&#13;
murderers out on our streets&#13;
every day? These people have&#13;
paid a refundable deposit and are&#13;
free to walk around until their&#13;
court date. They have committed&#13;
a crime; some as serious as&#13;
munier, aDd by law most of them&#13;
can get out of jail by paying only a&#13;
returnable lee which they get&#13;
back the day they go to court. How&#13;
safe are we really? There have&#13;
been men who have raped and&#13;
bealen women, let out of jail, and&#13;
raped again while out on bail? Our&#13;
justice system says it is protecting&#13;
the innocent by its allowances.&#13;
But it is also giving liberty to the&#13;
guilty and endangering us innocuous&#13;
bei ngs.&#13;
In additi9" to the bail principle;&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
numerous otBcenities at ~&#13;
City. Under normal clrcumstances,&#13;
people .oDerllJJ&#13;
don't accept a dri,* lraIJ a&#13;
stranger, hut under IlOrIDlI scumstances&#13;
people d... ·t appreciate&#13;
listeniDl to wild •&#13;
scenities. Under tbeso clrcumstances,&#13;
most poopIo jailed&#13;
10.&#13;
Even though the B IaII&#13;
their opener this year, Ibo .......&#13;
didn't care. They w j.&#13;
practicing being loyal to ......&#13;
01 good 'ole Milwaukee 00,. ...&#13;
brought a tired city aliWe full 111I&#13;
fall. Most people hang CIIt1II!&#13;
hopes that the Brewers wiD I."&#13;
all the way again this year. 001&#13;
fellow even said, "Who carll •&#13;
they win the series. The!'s DOlIIIe&#13;
important parI. It's ~&#13;
that they get there again, aod.&#13;
they play againsl St. LouiJ diI&#13;
year, those birds better w.1dliL·&#13;
&lt;Obviously a dedicated lao.1&#13;
So the game of baseball qaia&#13;
takes on a meanill(l even do'l*&#13;
than the sport. The ~ III t1II!&#13;
baseball season is a special'"&#13;
tha t marks the end III a ....&#13;
winter and lets people lookforward&#13;
to a fun summer. E""'-&#13;
the Brewers don't win. JlaIoboI&#13;
does indeed yield a cerl8i1&#13;
heritage with it, and poopIomaking&#13;
the spectalor sport&#13;
something they can beinvolvedIII&#13;
U the Brewers lose it all in tIJe&#13;
end, we'll look back every .,..&#13;
and comment abOut what I ::&#13;
season has jusl taken ~',....d&#13;
most 01us will probablybe 'I"'""'"&#13;
for saying, "How 'boUt tIIID&#13;
Brewers."&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Sha fiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jell Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torki Isen&#13;
Herbert Kubly&#13;
G)anger E'" HawsEdItIr&#13;
-~ Foature ~E_~=&#13;
coPyEBUSi~==&#13;
Distribution MI......&#13;
Assistant BuSlnessMl;:&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Sharon Aken, TerrY Byrne Maureen Jlurk., .laB'"&#13;
~u~,!k!,r - Phillips, Carra ea'riello, CatMrine ~CI""&#13;
a rlc,a. Cumbie, Dan Dowhower, Micha.1 Kallal,&#13;
~ortendlck, Jnhn Kovalic, Rick Luehr, Robb LUe!H"'::&#13;
T&#13;
aYb.urn, Napolean Scarbrough Dave Schroeder,&#13;
unkiecl. ' ,&#13;
RANGER·s Itt ttl ¥, f//IIIIh&#13;
responslbl I f wr. en and edlled by stuclents of UW . Parkside and ,.,&#13;
PUblished~: .ts editorial ~IICy Md confent. andflOl.....&#13;
RANGER is p/ ~~U~SdavdUring the academic year except durino "'";SCOftIlll Written m.'~ . y the Union CooPet'"ative Publishing Co., Kenosha,&#13;
All corr~pon~:;'on l:.,reqUired for reprint of any portion of RANGER. IfYof 'IfItl1I"'"&#13;
Parkside. Box Nee ould be addressed to: Parkslde Ranger, Unlv~'&#13;
Letters 10 t 0: 2000, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53141.&#13;
"*"II"&#13;
paper With ~e Ed.ltor WMI be accepted if typewritten, doublespaCec! on Sf nllft'lbl'" '"&#13;
elUded tor Vl!rifi~;i~ margins. All lette.-s must be signed and 1I te'ephOI'Ilt&#13;
Names will be ·'hh . •&#13;
Deadline for let'f~ .elel for valid reasons. Ttl' RAH~&#13;
reserves all editor~ 11&#13;
$~day al.3 p.m. for publication on ThUrsd8'1'~.", "".,-&#13;
defamalory content: privileges In refusing 10 print let1en which&#13;
Ranger editor named SUFAC chair&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
upon the resignation of Luis&#13;
. IIdejuli Irom the chair of&#13;
;'u.r.A.C. (Segregated&#13;
rniversity Fees Alloca ~lOns&#13;
CoIDmittee), the committee&#13;
!leCted Pat Hensiak. th~ oew&#13;
",irperson. valldejuli had liaired the committee for two&#13;
,..rs and has chosen to resign&#13;
b,.n the position in order to&#13;
...,.,teIy train a new student to&#13;
Ilk' over the position.&#13;
"I've enjoyed the time I've&#13;
.... t ... this committee. It's heen&#13;
III aidto understanding the many&#13;
!Ul"ti .... 01a University. I feel as&#13;
11've done all I can do with this&#13;
""","ltee, and now it will he able&#13;
'" developmore in the positive&#13;
iIlOCti.... So, it's time for me to&#13;
move into something else" s .d&#13;
Valldejuli. ' 81&#13;
Valldejuli feels Hensiak will d&#13;
a commendable job as the chair o~&#13;
S.U.F.A.C. "Pat has been on the&#13;
committee for the past two&#13;
semesters! and she went through&#13;
the experience of budgeting the&#13;
segregated fees for this campus&#13;
She still has things to learn, but&#13;
she WIll do a fine job for this&#13;
committee, the students it serves&#13;
and the campus. She is a fa~&#13;
person and that's a necessity to&#13;
this committee."&#13;
~ensiak is currently the Ranger&#13;
editor. She has worked for the&#13;
Ranger for the past four&#13;
semestf7~ and intends to give up&#13;
the position of editor after 'this&#13;
Kenosha to hold&#13;
summer festival&#13;
Kenosha'sFamilyf'est '83 will he&#13;
!be IU'Stof a series of year Iy&#13;
festivals to he held on Kenosha's&#13;
lIkefrontduring the Fourth of&#13;
illy weekend.&#13;
Called a Hmajor civic event" by&#13;
tie mayor's office, the festival&#13;
Iillleature ethnic displays, street&#13;
W, and major entertainment&#13;
•.. mparahle to the likes of the&#13;
1'&lt;InrnyDorsey Band and country&#13;
....ie singer Eddie Rabbitt,"&#13;
IlCOrdingto Mayor John D.&#13;
Bilotti.&#13;
"The purpose of Familyfest&#13;
'83," the Mayor said "is to&#13;
provide good, cle~n and&#13;
wholesome activities for the&#13;
families of our area."&#13;
The festival is scheduled for the&#13;
afternoon and evening of the third&#13;
and fourth of July, and will&#13;
feature activities in the downtown,&#13;
Simmons Island and Harborside&#13;
areas.&#13;
~$~;;;;;;~;l;i;l;i;;;~;~;~~;~~~~~~;~~;~~;*~ii~E_&#13;
Letter&#13;
Who are you kidding?&#13;
To the Editor: compared to Bambi, considering&#13;
Who are these protestors kid- how much pornography there was&#13;
"'l! Emmanuelle, The Joys of a in it. If the ladies and gentlemen&#13;
IlIDanwas no more an X-rated had seen the movie before they&#13;
lIOYiethan Bambi. That's a bit of started complaining about it, they&#13;
.exaggeration, but I'm sure you would have seen how harmless it&#13;
1ft my drift. The only reason I was. As far as sex is concerned,&#13;
.... t, as was probably the same you could see more sex and naked&#13;
......, lor going for everybody bodies, i.e. female bodies in&#13;
_, was to see what all the particular, in movies like&#13;
eemmotionwas all about. It was a "Porkies," "Private Lessons,"&#13;
real disappointment. I was "My Tutor," and "Joysticks,"&#13;
!linking, "Gee, this movie must and all these movies got an "R"&#13;
lIe~lIy dirty or they wouldn't he rating. Now I haven't read in the&#13;
IlUlngsuch a big deal out of it." paper about these people&#13;
Now don't get me wrong, I wasn't protesting these movies.&#13;
lID'e1ygoing to see a lot of The mere act of showing the&#13;
adulterated sex. I've seen my film was, as far as I can see, was&#13;
IIlareof porno flicks at bachelor 1l to show a variety 01movies lor&#13;
Ilrties and with Iriends and this different tastes, and 2) \0 make a&#13;
IIicIt could very well have heen Continued On Page Four&#13;
$~::::::~:::::::-::::::;:~;~:::::~:::~~:'-:::;:"::~;:;:;~:::::::::::::'~~")~~ • • :....:o:o:.&gt;:o:::::::"$:.:::;»xo:~:o:-»:-:o:·::-.««-:-.-;:;:·.·:·:-:·:-:-.·.:::::::::::m::::::::~&#13;
I&#13;
la1er to th~Editor ...&#13;
CootlDuedFrom Page Two&#13;
hperson is lound guilty of a&#13;
~~~ even to the extreme of first r murder and is sentenced to&#13;
e in prison, he or she can be&#13;
IIroled after a short time In all&#13;
::=tuaUty,life in prison m";ns nil.&#13;
roccnt iocident exhibits this&#13;
Paint. Not loog ago a man came to&#13;
~I lor shooting and killing his&#13;
IieIcI and disposing her head in a&#13;
_.:.-He was found guilty and&#13;
--&lt;need to life in prison. His t:te is set at eleven years.&#13;
en years and this dangerous&#13;
::;111 he out on the streets of&#13;
II ca again. Is this justice to&#13;
~ the mnocent people who he is&#13;
10associate with?&#13;
~ething has to change in this&#13;
...~,- SYslemwe oow work with.&#13;
b;"""'ts here at Parkside need to&#13;
formmire involved! Become in-&#13;
'&lt;r ed, he aware, this is our&#13;
Btc,ldand we have to live in it.&#13;
_~me informed about our&#13;
ia Ice system a nd you will see it&#13;
.. &lt;lJelor a change. Write to a&#13;
foeIlecongressman about your&#13;
Per Ingg suggesting a change;&#13;
Iri haps no bail lor certain&#13;
• meg,or life sentence not being&#13;
Sta~easly II years confinement.&#13;
!hi on a small scale, great&#13;
""~ can happen when we hegin&#13;
Io~' We have to start&#13;
foeIi""'here. Express your&#13;
~ to a congressman. If we&#13;
all work together w~ G~ ~lp&#13;
change this system, by starting&#13;
small and ending big. This&#13;
country will he safer for all of us&#13;
and a beller place to live.&#13;
Name with-held&#13;
upon request.&#13;
"Lisa.·· the new glamor prl of&#13;
the world of per$ODIl comput&#13;
has star biru,. lor the ..,.&#13;
annual Compcter Fair at&#13;
Parkside: rrom 9 8.m. to" pm CXI&#13;
saturday. Apr 30 111 .. n PIal:e&#13;
The fair ..iII locus 011 IeCOlld&#13;
generation microcomputers&#13;
includi~ Apple·$l1..... • ell&#13;
8)1. magaziee calls .~ lDOIt&#13;
Important oo'elopmmt 1ft com..&#13;
peters in the last fl' yean"&#13;
• 'ational Apple ~&#13;
Brian Donahue .. ill pr ta live&#13;
demonslralioo or Usa I..'.......&#13;
which ioclude Slmplifi&lt;d&#13;
controls actl\'8t.ed by a device&#13;
called a mouse "Nell .-.places&#13;
conventional keyboard com.&#13;
mands. Lisa also hand! a f&#13;
range of computer c:bora&#13;
eluding word process.,. f&#13;
electronic mail. and '!a .....&#13;
other compute-s.&#13;
The ParlIs,de Computer ,&#13;
.. hlell is sponsori~ the fair,&#13;
pomts out the event .. an exceI1eI1&#13;
opportunity lor people conoIder&#13;
purchase of a or bome&#13;
computer to and a&gt;mpan&#13;
man) or the a&gt;mputen OIl todIy&#13;
New advances in child&#13;
raising explored at lecture&#13;
s~mester. "If the Board of&#13;
Directors for the Ranger re _&#13;
elected me, yes, Icould do the job&#13;
again. At this point though I think&#13;
I'm ready to give the position up.&#13;
Apphcations ~e being accepted&#13;
~or the new editor, and mine isn't&#13;
in the slack," Hensiak laughed&#13;
"I''!l. interested in leaving ~&#13;
position with the same feeling I&#13;
accepted it. I feel good about bow&#13;
the paper ran this year. Ifelt good&#13;
about accepting the job. We&#13;
certainly could have done more&#13;
but the job we did was well :&#13;
thought and well- done. There are&#13;
good people here," she said&#13;
Like Valldejuli, Hensiak· said&#13;
she's ready for a change. "I enjoy&#13;
S.U.F.A.C. I've been on the&#13;
committee since October aDd I&#13;
think it's a strong committee on&#13;
this campus. In a lot 01 ways I&#13;
t?Ink Luis built that reputation.&#13;
I II try to keep it up. A lot depends&#13;
on the committee people. Not&#13;
many of the decisions on the&#13;
Ranger or S.U.F.A.C. are made&#13;
by one person alone. It takes&#13;
collective thought and&#13;
cooperation, looking forward to&#13;
and I think the committee has&#13;
that." Hensiak added that she is&#13;
looking lorward to another good&#13;
year at Parkside.&#13;
An anthropological look at infant&#13;
bonding, including lather -&#13;
baby bonds,. will he the topic of a&#13;
free public slide - illustrated&#13;
lecture at Parks ide bY Linda&#13;
Briesemeister, an adjunct&#13;
professor of anthropology. at 7&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday, May 3 in loin&#13;
324.&#13;
Recent studies have ShOV.ll the&#13;
first hour after birth to he an&#13;
important time lor the development&#13;
01 some kinds 01 mother -&#13;
infant reaction, Briesemeister&#13;
points out.&#13;
Her own research has centered&#13;
on the lather - infant bond and&#13;
compares two groups of fathers&#13;
and infants. One group interacted&#13;
immediately after the child's&#13;
birth and the other group's lirst&#13;
hour together took place after the&#13;
infants had spent lour hours in the&#13;
Hf .... ·A .. '"&#13;
WA.'ED&#13;
$100.00 REWARD&#13;
Information on substance when water is added its' size&#13;
increases 15to 20 times and turns to rock.&#13;
C". In., 652-2173&#13;
,/tI£LEADERPte '-&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Regency MalllRacine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
. ear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women s w&#13;
"&#13;
RANGER Thursday. APfU2l. 191:1 3&#13;
High Tech the star&#13;
of Computer Fair&#13;
of&#13;
nursery&#13;
Briesemeister ..,u the&#13;
beha\1ors of each group am t!leir&#13;
possible imphcatiOllS for futun!&#13;
fathering and de,-elopmeDtof car&#13;
- ta)m~ kilt.&#13;
inee more mother are&#13;
working ou ·de the home, la&#13;
are often bei~ e peeled to lake&#13;
on more child care r pan.&#13;
S1bili • sa d The ;...,,- ......... W_T&#13;
behaviors exhibited shortly alt&#13;
birth mal faCIlitate both anot!lIer&#13;
infant and lather - OJIt I",&#13;
teractional sly! added&#13;
Roundtables scheduled&#13;
u nOIMJ accepting appliutiort for&#13;
Edito&#13;
for the 1983-84 audemic ur.&#13;
Applicant mu be rqi red&#13;
Park ide tudent planniD to t&#13;
•&#13;
at lea t 6 credit each m tet'.&#13;
Dudline for application :&#13;
oon, April 22, 1983&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
nd application&#13;
&amp; re ume to:&#13;
Thursday, April 21, 1M3 RANGER&#13;
Eagle population down this year,&#13;
environmental group says&#13;
. . ******Club Eventstdn~**:·1&#13;
Young Democrats organlzlngll&#13;
tak lace UWPDT ::;ar~~~:: c~:il':8n~a~q.'1 ,&#13;
The 1983 W,.cOQ5ln Young organizing local units of Yo~ aI2p.m. All events;1 lis ;~ent Trike Race Two is coming to race wm be held in the M:.\':_1Ilo&#13;
Democrats Convention will be Democrats, and present a panel 10 the UW-River a Parkside. Apr. 22 is the day. Just Concoutse on Wednesday A;""&#13;
held pr 22.24 al UW-Ri_ Falls discussion on women's Issues. center. information about when you tbought the halls were and Thursday, Apr. 21. Ii: ·21&#13;
Evonl planned melude The main orders of business will ~ m~ convention or about safe ... Trike Race Two! If y~u fee IS$10 per team, Which:::&#13;
bes by RepI Earl Gilson, he the formation of a Wisconsin ~ ~ local Young Democrats know four people wbo want to ~1O a T-shIrt for each team ...... bor&#13;
Harvey Stower. and Rlcbard Young Democrats platform and unit ~ntaet John Horn, con- $100 cash, send them to the Urnon and a pitcher of beer f... the_&#13;
Shoemaker, aJtd secretary of the e1ectioo of state offi~. (. chairman at 715-42&amp;-5991 Information Center to pick up an The teams must consist" tlIoi&#13;
te DouI LaFolJett.e . . yen l,on ident at nt form. Registration forms women and two men. Pri&#13;
Tile group will also conducl The convention WIll begrn or BIll Murat, state pres e nrybe turned in at the Student the winning team Will i:far&#13;
wtll'ksbopa on campaigning and Fnday al 7 p.m. and end Sunday &amp;l8-256-8065. ;::fe Office in Union 207. ,Ask for nounced during signup. 10-&#13;
Marcy. Sbe knows what s gOIng PSE Will hold an orientationfar&#13;
on. the initiation of prolpoeu..&#13;
Dart Team members ~re urged members on Thursday, Apr.1I1t&#13;
to turn in your 7st donation to buy 6 p. rn. 10 Moin 0-130. Furtbor&#13;
a new dart board as soon as information can be obtained at 1Ila&#13;
possible. Donations can be turned Loop 500 signup tablea.&#13;
in to Marcy at the Student Life Ch&#13;
Office. ess&#13;
The Dart Team is planning the&#13;
first annual state - wide dart&#13;
tournament for May 6, 7, and 8.&#13;
The Parkside Challenge is our&#13;
chance to show this state what&#13;
darts is all about. Parkside&#13;
students who wish to play for the&#13;
Parkside Dart Team may sign up&#13;
on Monday in Mol 126atlp. m. We&#13;
want to win! We want you! Join&#13;
the few, the proud the Dart Team ..&#13;
R ... 1la 01 the Ea&amp;Je Valley&#13;
Environmenta1i I' aMual mid -&#13;
wlnler bald eagle count&#13;
thrvuCboUl the Midwest reveal&#13;
cWy 508 .. lIleS 111 1983 compared&#13;
to IiS3 In I9IZ and &amp;15 111 11111 Tbis&#13;
18 a III dec ....... 111 total ... mbers&#13;
dosplte more obIerven In the&#13;
lIeid Tbis brll,- the WlDlering&#13;
&amp;1 poJlU Ia bon bA cit to wba t il&#13;
w about IS yean ago.&#13;
The ruaon f... the reclIctioo in&#13;
ealle ... mbers is unknown It&#13;
fallon a decline in bAld eagle&#13;
repro&lt;!uclJon throughoul Ihe&#13;
upper mldwe.t and cenlral&#13;
Canada &amp;Inna tut summer&#13;
Last year many people believed&#13;
thai bald eag! moved further&#13;
south iato rn&lt;ft southern stales&#13;
tilte Arkansas, Mississippi. Texas&#13;
and OItlahoma. If tJus were true&#13;
then the mild winter of '82-'83&#13;
sbould have aUowed the eagles to&#13;
stay in their more northern&#13;
winter1na areas. However. this&#13;
does net appear to be the case as&#13;
no eagles were reprted at Dams&#13;
02 - 6 00 the Mississippi River and&#13;
only a few were reprted along the&#13;
Wisconsin River.&#13;
The ...... Its of thts winles"s&#13;
count demonatrates the need for&#13;
more intensive and comprebensive&#13;
studies of wintering&#13;
eagles across the nation to gain an&#13;
understanding of bald eagle&#13;
movements and population&#13;
trends. Terrence Ingram,&#13;
Executive Director of EVE,&#13;
states "Studies utilizing radar,&#13;
radio: tagging, and color marking&#13;
are desperately needed if we are&#13;
10 learn the facts necessary to&#13;
save wr eagle In the wild. The&#13;
business and corporate community&#13;
as well as private individuals&#13;
are urged to support&#13;
these studies. The eagle's only&#13;
hope for the future. is for us to&#13;
determine what Its survival&#13;
requirements are while there is&#13;
still a viable population left in the&#13;
wild. We must then insure the&#13;
protection of those survival&#13;
requirements through whatever&#13;
means are necessary."&#13;
Who are you kidding?&#13;
__ Froe Pale 'l1lrft&#13;
profit They .... that "Porkies"&#13;
made over SIOO mUlioo last year&#13;
and thouIbl that maybe since&#13;
there wun't as nearly _ much&#13;
leX .. "Porl"es" that they could&#13;
get away Wllb it They were 32&#13;
people short of makJJlg a new&#13;
attendance record for any of the&#13;
movies so lar lhis year. If there&#13;
weren't any protestors, they&#13;
probably would have gotten a lot&#13;
more. ow, if the coUege was&#13;
showiJ18 a movie like "Deep&#13;
111roat" or "Debbie Does Dallas,"&#13;
then I could see these radicals&#13;
getting upset. Even I would have&#13;
second tboughts about the people&#13;
in charge of PAB.&#13;
I don't consider myself an&#13;
autbority on pornography, nor can&#13;
Iquote tons of books and articles&#13;
u.v-sItyolW~&#13;
PRESENTS PARADOX STUDIO THEATRE&#13;
THE WORLD&#13;
~D OTHER INVENTIONS&#13;
A PlAY BYLUIS0 !'RA1A&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27,1983 8:00p.m.&#13;
COM'.1lNCATlON ARTS THEATRE&#13;
Ad.,ence Tickets S3.SO General AdmIssJon&#13;
'2.50 Students/Steff/Senlots&#13;
et the do« 14,00 &amp; 13.00&#13;
For reSer.,lItions clIlI 553-2581&#13;
!lPECIAol orrEll. ITH THIS tDUPON~ One tIe et for this&#13;
stat PlUS one tld.et for fA Delicate aalance' (April&#13;
22-1~.2'-)O) for $4 In advance on'v at Union Info&#13;
C~~ter or F'ne Art~ OJ~lslon Office.&#13;
ADORnS&#13;
like Miss sahakian, but I tJunk,&#13;
that these radicals are making al&#13;
mountain out of a molehill. That,&#13;
movie didn't stimulate me in thel&#13;
very least. The only "rise" it got&#13;
out of me was a gond bearty laugh.&#13;
I tJunk if these ladies and gentlemen&#13;
don't want to see the movie&#13;
they should do like the rest of the&#13;
student body and just not go. If&#13;
they don't want to be bomharded&#13;
with criticism, then first research&#13;
what you are going to criticize.&#13;
And best of all, don't judge a&#13;
movie by its rating, sometimes it&#13;
can fool you.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
J.B. and Pam Rathmann&#13;
IVCF&#13;
Did God have a plan when he&#13;
created the world? For what&#13;
purpose did he create you and I?&#13;
Whatis God's will for your future?&#13;
Drew Trotter, Director of the&#13;
Elmbrook Christian Study Center&#13;
of the Elmbrook Church' in&#13;
Waukesha, will be addressing the&#13;
topic, "ln Search of God's Will",&#13;
on Wednesday, Apr. 27atlp. m. in&#13;
Moln. lOS.&#13;
Trotter has a B. A. in English&#13;
Literature from the University of&#13;
Virginia and an M.Div. from the&#13;
Gordon - Conwell Theological&#13;
Seminary in Boston, Ma. He is&#13;
currenUy working on a PhD. in&#13;
New Testament Studies at the&#13;
University of Cambridge in&#13;
England.&#13;
PSE&#13;
The tJurd annual Loop 500 will&#13;
be held on Wednesday, Apr. 27 at 1&#13;
p. m. on the Inner Loop Road.&#13;
The race is being sponsored by&#13;
UC accepting&#13;
applications&#13;
The United Council of U1I&#13;
..::'{{{:}"':"'': :'.'. .. . ..:.::::,::,:\{,}:,::,:,:,::::.:..... ." .;.:.::::::::':::.::,:. Student Government is .... ac-&#13;
:rirr::::::i::':::::'::::/,:{.:.:~Y~:~iB~Y.:i:~::.::t:::m:::::m:::t::::::::j:,::t??':'~:l~~;- :r!1~~~;rve jo~ 1 -~,.. - _.. ra~~~r ~~rl=. period of ~~~&#13;
.. Duties of the Legislative .......&#13;
MUMarquette Director include: (ba~ dina te and supervise the&#13;
UnlV·ersl·ty Of the Legislative AffaIrS com-&#13;
. mittee; Actively lobbY ~&#13;
of the United eouncll 1"'":;:... 1&#13;
before the Higher EGIcaAids&#13;
Board and tlle Leglslalllt:&#13;
Monitor all meetingS of :: :=&#13;
of Regents; Direct a ....&#13;
efforts to achieve ac:adelDkuwlegislative&#13;
reform m~ ....&#13;
System; and report on!.... UDitad&#13;
legislative issues to -&#13;
Council. ......&#13;
Applicants should have ..&#13;
knowledge of legislatiVeiIIlIO'_&#13;
the campus, state and ~&#13;
levels, and provide SOllIe sUd&#13;
Of writing ability and ha~&#13;
oral communicatiOdl skil\sU- ~&#13;
The deadline for app1l~ be&#13;
Apr. 29. ApplicatiOdl t5&#13;
submitted to: scott l\Is-:'r:'SI.,&#13;
President, 8 WI .:-. (.. '&#13;
Madison, WI 53703,.. --&#13;
263-3422.&#13;
~~~~t??ttt~~~:~:~i~:~:{i~:~:r~:r~:~:~:r~:n:;.&#13;
the&#13;
TAP BEER 30( MON. THRU THURS.&#13;
RAIL DRINKS 7S&lt; 10 P_M. 'TIL 12:30&#13;
GAME ROOM PITCHER $2,00&#13;
Hwy. 32 between Racine &amp; Kenosha&#13;
LSAT&#13;
Law School Admission Test Review&#13;
2 Saturdays, June 4 • 11&#13;
9 a.m.• 5 p.m.&#13;
FEE: $95&#13;
LOCATION: Lalumiere Language Hall, Room 205&#13;
MarlfJette University Campus&#13;
For more information contact:&#13;
. . MarlfJette University&#13;
DIVISionof Continuing Education&#13;
1918West Wisconsin Avenue&#13;
Milwaukee, WI 53233&#13;
124-734Snr 224-7499&#13;
The Chess Club is IJlO!'IOrIII&#13;
tournament on May tItlrd a&#13;
fourth. Sign up will be heldIll':&#13;
Union Rec Center 01\ the tIitt&#13;
Fee for the tournament will be"&#13;
for Parkside studenta. For IIlGIt&#13;
information, we urge yINtoatllld&#13;
one Of our meetinga. Tbe a..&#13;
Club meets Tuesday n1gbta fnm.&#13;
to 10 p.m. in UniOll207, .....&#13;
Wednesdays from I to 4 p.m. II&#13;
Moln. D-I33. Cash prizes lIlII III&#13;
awarded..&#13;
Geology&#13;
The next Geology N.....&#13;
will feature Dr. Eug_l. _&#13;
of the University of Neoada • LII&#13;
Vegas Department of Get- '••&#13;
on Mid Tertiary VoIc:uIsm II&#13;
Sou1ltbeherhenNldevadaM&#13;
The· Nia I'&#13;
WI on O!!day, Apr .• It&#13;
1 p.m, in Grnq. U3,&#13;
SCA&#13;
The Society for ereau..&#13;
Anachronism is .ponaorl,. a&#13;
lecture by Parkside prot_ JIll&#13;
Ruud on "Leif ErikIon .....&#13;
Viking Discovery 01 AmarIca.&#13;
There will be a talk and a ...&#13;
presentation beginning at I p, ..&#13;
on Wednesday, Apr. 27 atip.ail&#13;
Moln. 107. All are welcome.&#13;
If you still haven't beard, till&#13;
SCA recreates the middle ... _&#13;
as they were, but as they !boIId&#13;
have been. So if yIN ever WII1laII&#13;
to be a knight, a nobleman, •&#13;
even a wizard, comealoogand.&#13;
for yourself. A whole new wllld&#13;
awaits you.&#13;
Write Ranger&#13;
a letter rS&#13;
•Parkside student recounts his travels in Soviet Union&#13;
c...Unued From Last Week conversation. I SOOngrew tired. buy a botUe of wiDe and take tbe bioIOflY. A1tboullbbelqUll to the ralber m liar... The trip a10D&#13;
s;ncetheprofessorwasamemher a!'d decIded to turn in for the trolley back to my botel. During Pi~ is not maDdIltAlr}. aD ed .. to_therw~""".&#13;
Ii the Communist Part~. our night, The.genUe rocking motions the return trip, I was approached. le&amp;nlel:I tbat the Soviets fee/thol complel* mudd:Y ...... ad&#13;
tionswere answered WIth the of the tram SOOnput me into a as were many members of our children .. ho do belong ill tmetalroof •• Ilark Cllllltrall :;"ted Party rbetoeic, and in sleep from ~hich I did not awake group throughout the trip, by a becune bettor membon of ely 10 !be .... I.ad onIorly aputmeDl&#13;
die end. neither side was able to ~ntlI our arrtval the next morning young man who wanted to trade for it. At this parti",lIar P.lace. bull fouDd Ul the dey .&#13;
..,..wee the other of the validity ID KIev. with me for such things as blue the children _mod to ""joy the In !be e\'0I1In&amp;. .ueDllod •&#13;
Ii their respective positions. activiti"'italforded WewerelOld Ukr.,nl.n folk dance per'&#13;
An evening circus perfonnance that !be wel!kly .ctivily .t the forma com~ lb.&#13;
llIlJIIlIed out our day. Despite the palace was \be high point of each dIllI OI!f'emoay The Ire III&#13;
·ticalmessage delivered at the students week, and !rom the wbich the CClIID!I\ Ia&#13;
~g of the performance, the impressions I got. the aetmlies Inte In tballt by&#13;
ciJtus was very comparable to seemed very much Iilr.e lbme IntourtJI and III aole IUfllOM Ia '"&#13;
d the one - ring American fouad in 4-H Cluba --... .. • _.... lor ,-'"&#13;
11J'1.ely Since I bad !be eveDlng free. I touriIla&#13;
11ft • decided to take • lui to -- _ .lIIardl II&#13;
Thursday. March 10 Intourilt Hotel. The Russ wtloft I Atour of \be Ca III........,. em&#13;
11Ie morning was spent viewing sal in \be bar for • beer. Alter • one d the ..... Ililll d Klr¥&#13;
die rather impressive collection few mimi ... I IIruclr. up • COIl- cupoed our entire IDllr1IlJ&gt;&amp;. AI1or.&#13;
di!Played at the Pushkin Art v..... tiotl with • )'OIq man !rom bn., tour d the tp'OUIIdo •• ..-&#13;
GI1Iery. Among the more well the IIIiddIe - East who. I was of III tIIrouP Ibe Gold&#13;
lDOWJl art objects were Rodin's sboclr.ed to learn. was • Jewisb loIu um •• coilectlOD of ID-&#13;
"!he 11tink ..... as well as several Israelite! Since he spoke Yay lncately carved jewtlry. eallDl b t Mintings y ar IS s · t such as little Eng1isb. !be the ~_. Cotl..... Itiotl did u • _11 ..... _ ._ .rtifacta .nd :;:;"n and Picasso. My tour of was ra r spane; ~er ..... _ fOWlllmJ(j throu&amp;bout&#13;
-- h t ed that I mam .. to I.... tbal he was. !be.... AIt« the ..-m.&#13;
.... Deryw... s or en so -member 01the Israeli On"".1 d ended deep ,nlo \be&#13;
llIUIdgooutand take a few more Party. and that he was.1 Klr¥ catacomb 00 bleb Ibla&#13;
;etures of the city on the last day. Slate Univeraily stlMlying drama monutery i bulIt •• ad wtloft&#13;
11Ie afternoon was free for THE ETERNAL FLAME -a memorial to those who died during through • "Fneodotup _ Ex- • the remalDa 'aome r.thor&#13;
tIqlping al the Beryozi&lt;a shop. a the 900 day siege of Leningrad in WW II. Seen In the background cba." program. Unlortuoately. preaevedl of e!rom aU&#13;
U'e in which goods can only he is a mass grave for those 600,000 people. the Cotlvenatioo \but far bad d hfe who blted&#13;
bauibt with foreign currency. exhausted his English ~!be III1ddIe&#13;
...uy by tourists or Party Friday, March 11 jeans •.a down. coal, or .any - vocabulary, and he re-joioed !be ~ alten&gt;oclD&#13;
IlIIDbers. Little of the mer- The weather in Kiev was cold Amencan articles I mighl be m I"'rty he came in with. I IiDIIbod '-F~p • H_ .mise in the store interested and drizzly as we drove to the possession of. Since hia EnglIsh my beer, and headed back In my were .bIe to esdoaDp and&#13;
• and I took the Metro to Red hotel Dniepro. After checking in. and my Russian were both '!' law bolel, convinced lIlall bad made _"'_ th Sooriet UlilDta ...&#13;
....., to do some shopping at and eating a light breakfast. we quality. It .took me a while to the most interesting discovery d ;;;;jas caleb. cnmpte d _I&#13;
6UII the large central depart- toured this 1500 year old city, finally convmce him that I did not any_ otl the trip tIlus far. life .. lite for. _, m .. itoce. and view the changing pausing periodically to leave the want to trade. the Soviet 1:_ I ...... ' \be al.&#13;
" IIle guards at Lenin's Tomb. bus to visil the numerous war -. •_ 13 Ie"nooa Ib • )'DIIIII mao named&#13;
IiIlcetheceremonyendedat5:05. memorials. It seemed as though 8alurday,MarcblZ We lefl the hotel earty thla Andrew, hn I I rued ..&#13;
• lIhadtobebacktothehotelby the weather hecame tbe coldest We spenl the morning touring morning lor. two hour boll ride Il.udyioc ~ iD IlOl* d&#13;
1:11to make dinner. I made a mad and rainiest as we viewed "Babi - SI. Sophia and SI. Andrew into the country to vilit KaneY. becClllUDC.lra.... tar d ~D&#13;
.... f... the subway. and fought Yar". a monument to 100.000 Jews Cathedrals both filled with an where "'" saw the gr.~ and .uthors I eapec .lIy joyed&#13;
IlIh bwr to make it back to the who were massacred by the NaZIS innumeraWe amount of gold icons museum of \be Russian .utbnr hemg able to IIDdDIll_I We ..&#13;
latel at 5::1) on the dot. during World War II. It is in- dating from the sixth to the Taras Sbevchet*o. The trip al- like for And.... • Inslead of&#13;
Mlerdinner. we traveled across teresting to note that no guIde· fourteenth century. These highly forded us a cbance to see the rvr~ .rgwng over poIltlc:a1\do.,...&#13;
linto the train station where we books or lour guides mentioned ornate gold leal paintings serve to areas d the Soviet Uniem The as many people IIIthe 1II'O'lIIA!rom&#13;
tIarded the night train for Kiev. the fact that the Jews were show the wealth and power the l1'nd looIts very much lite the mid otber . achoola chaee to do The&#13;
lIIoe we were settled in our massacred, rather they prefer to churcb held in the Medieval and -westUnitedSlates,veryrich.nd alW1&gt;llOll ... very .'}V)''''K&#13;
......... most of us waodered say thaI itwas only Soviet citizens Modem Ages. fertile. Since we wen! punIed as paI1 of the lnp .&#13;
... " h h t th I who lost their lives. The afternoon was filled with a to why \be ~1ets bad • gram .... y t roug au e raID. This evern·ng.we went to a ballet PaIa .. shortage wilb so much fertile IaDd lIIItingwith people from other visit to a "Pioneer - ce I wed&#13;
JIlUps and drinking tea out of perfonnance by a young and where we saw school children al their disposa~ "'" our&#13;
..- with very trIlate silver rather inexperienced dance involved in extra _ curricular guide, and W'en! lold thal the&#13;
....... The tea was delicious and company. whose memhers. un- activities ranging from ballet to problem lies,not in prockIct!Oll but&#13;
Sltl1bargain at only 20t a glass. fortunately. gave a very poor&#13;
"gil the atlnosphere on the performance. Since the show was&#13;
• was very condusive to less than enjoyable. I decided to UWSP Semester Abroad Program&#13;
r----.I ~.'W!! ,-&#13;
Ir;'.~ ...... .....,..,&#13;
a;...&#13;
.J Sheet Music &amp; Books&#13;
.f Instruments &amp; Supplies&#13;
j Sales &amp; Service&#13;
SPECIAl. DISCOUNT&#13;
WrrH PARKSIDE I.D.&#13;
2425 Geneva St.• Racine&#13;
Ph. 681-3261&#13;
NORTHSIDE&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
RANGER ThurSllly, Apn121. 1913 5&#13;
Write or CIIU;&#13;
Or. Helen Corneli. Director&#13;
Intttrnational Progrwns&#13;
208 Main Building&#13;
University of Witconsin, St~ POll'lt&#13;
Stevens Point. WI 54481&#13;
Telephone: (715) 346--3151, 2717&#13;
EARN CREDIT WHILE YOU&#13;
LEARN-ON SITE-ABOUT&#13;
BRITAIN -Tour Europe for a month; settle&#13;
in suburbon london - $2600 Projected Cos1s -&#13;
POLAND -See unfamiliar cities of Eastern&#13;
Europe; live in Cracow with Polish stundents· 2400-&#13;
CERMANY -This semester gives you Munich,&#13;
music, art &amp; travel in the heart of Europe - 2800·&#13;
TAIWAN -Compare the two Olinas &amp;&#13;
Hong Kong, too -$2880 •&#13;
...&#13;
6 Thursday. April 21, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Student Art exhibits open&#13;
THE 1913 STUDENT ART SHOW OPENED this past Monday&#13;
evening. Running through May 6, the show Includes artwork by&#13;
Perksldl students in such medium. as painting. drawing,&#13;
sculpture. textile work and jewelry. The works are being&#13;
exhibited In the Cornm. Art. Gallery. Gallery hours are MondaY"&#13;
and Thursday trom 1·6 p.m .• and Tuesday and Wednesday from&#13;
'.10 pm The show I.being lurled by Jane Bride. Adminl.trator&#13;
01 the Cudahy Gallery of Wisconsin Arf af the Milwauk ee Art&#13;
MuMIlm.&#13;
PARKSIDE ART STUDENT&#13;
IRIAN PASSINO currently&#13;
.... an exhibll of hi. work.&#13;
entitled 'Underwater&#13;
Epl.odes I Chicken Soup&#13;
ChnNIlc ... • on display in the&#13;
0-1 sactlon of the library. The&#13;
work. wan cr .. tad in In·&#13;
c1apandant study under Prof.&#13;
Dout DaVlnny, and _. clone&#13;
wUlI Ie" tip end .prey color.&#13;
*** **************&#13;
: T An a"ordab'e eoening ~&#13;
tLouiGE ~&#13;
it fllelt De.. _ "''''''!JC'' ~&#13;
it CUSTOMER&#13;
*&#13;
: APPRECIATION HOURS ~&#13;
: 7:00 'til 1J :00 p.m. ~&#13;
it Wednesday thru Sunday&#13;
*&#13;
it Join us for an evening of "affordable&#13;
*&#13;
it good times" at the Lounge! Featuring&#13;
*&#13;
it a large dance floor. new sound system,&#13;
*&#13;
it cozy corners and generous cocktails,&#13;
*&#13;
it all at a truly affordable price!&#13;
*&#13;
it Highballs Only 25(&#13;
*&#13;
it Tap Beer Only 25( .....&#13;
it Top Shelf Cocktails Only 50( ......&#13;
it Premo Top Shelf Cocktails .. Only $1.00 ~&#13;
~ Admwion: 13.00 ~&#13;
it 7-11 p.m. Only&#13;
*&#13;
iC We fMel'Ve the nght to refuIe let'VCe at anytime&#13;
*"&#13;
it OPEN 6 PM 'TtL 1 AM WED. - SUN.&#13;
*&#13;
: AVAILABLE FOR PRIVATE ~&#13;
it PARTIES MON. &amp; TUES.&#13;
*&#13;
it ••••••••••••••••••&#13;
*&#13;
----------------------------,I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
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Valid 7-' f p.m. Wild.• Sun. Only I&#13;
'~:'=,:::.IROAO::..KEN0St4A """- 02'7588\&#13;
" .... Rac\ft.1 I&#13;
._--------------------------~&#13;
I&#13;
THISCOUPON GOOD FOR&#13;
FREE DRI K&#13;
Soviet travels continued&#13;
C&#13;
t1Daed From Page Five Nazi assault on the city. little about.&#13;
011 • The afternoon was spent on a&#13;
decided to skip the mormlll1 tour, general city tour, where we&#13;
choosing, instead, to YlSlt:: learned that it is forbidden to build&#13;
Iarrner's free market. and thO any modem structure within the&#13;
catcb up on. some of fi ~ city limits of Leningrad. Wben old&#13;
photographs I missed 00 our U'S t buildings are tom down, the new&#13;
day in Kiev die to mclemen structure must duplicate its&#13;
weather. predecessor&#13;
AIter hD&gt;Ch, we went out to the .&#13;
airp&lt;lrt where we boarded a late Thursday. March 17&#13;
anemoon Aeroflot flight to This morning, we visited. the&#13;
Leningrad. Although the flight Leningrad "House of FriendalteDdants&#13;
on Aerol1ot are not as ship". The meeting consisted of&#13;
f";~".dl, as those 00 American small group discussions with&#13;
airliners, an:! the passengers are . Ii Th ti not provided with son drinks and various specia ists. e mee ng&#13;
pearans, the seats on AeroOot an:! did afford a group of us the chance&#13;
the ride of the aircraft are equal to to meet with a Soviet "physician&#13;
that found on any other major who answered the questions that&#13;
were asked of him as best as he&#13;
airline. Once we had landed in could through an interpreter.&#13;
Leningrad, we transferred to the From him, we learned that the&#13;
Hotel Europskaya. AIter settling Soviet medical education system&#13;
into our rooms, we went down to almost completely parallels&#13;
an excellent dinner, and then took American medical education&#13;
a brief walking tour before tum- programs. We also learned that&#13;
lug in for the night. It should be most Soviet general - pracnoted&#13;
that the Europskaya is titloners, as well as obstetricians&#13;
comparable in luxury to the Marc are female, while most surgeons&#13;
Plaza Hotel, and yet the cost of are male. In addition, we were&#13;
rooms there are the same as in all told that the concept of nursing&#13;
the other Intourist hotels. homes is non - existent in the&#13;
Soviet Union, and that sons and&#13;
daughters and their families&#13;
usually provided care for elderly&#13;
parents.&#13;
After talking with members of&#13;
other discussion groups, I had the&#13;
distinct impression that most of&#13;
the specialists who headed these&#13;
group discussions were simply&#13;
stating the Party rhetoric in&#13;
response to various questions on&#13;
economic and foreign policy. Most&#13;
people, I believe, were disappointed&#13;
tha t there were no&#13;
students a t the meeting as we had&#13;
originally been promised.&#13;
The afternoon was spent touring&#13;
St. Isaac Cathedral and the Peter&#13;
and Paul Fortress, where we saw&#13;
St. Peter an:! St. Paul Cathedral,&#13;
the resting-place for the Czars and&#13;
their families from Peter the&#13;
Greatonward. In addition, we saw&#13;
the prison at the fortress where&#13;
many political prisoners were&#13;
held during Czarist times.&#13;
Our evening was spent at the&#13;
Gala Farewell Oinner, complete&#13;
with vodka, &lt;;hampagne, a seven&#13;
course meal and a Ukrainian folk&#13;
dancing troupe. The evening was&#13;
filled with toasts, singing, dancing&#13;
and a touch of sadness a t the&#13;
realization that we would soon&#13;
leave this country that we knew so&#13;
Wednesday, March 16&#13;
As we set out for Pushkin, to&#13;
visit the palaces of Catherine II&#13;
ard Pavel I, the weather was cold,&#13;
wet an:! foggy, a very distressing&#13;
thought when we foun:! we would&#13;
have to walk nearly half a mile to&#13;
our bus after the tours. Upon&#13;
touring these palaces, it seems&#13;
very strange that the Soviets&#13;
spent millions of dollars, and&#13;
countless hours restoring these&#13;
structures after they were gutted&#13;
by the Genuans in World War II.&#13;
The restara tiOD workers did a&#13;
remarkable job of refurbishing&#13;
the interiors of these buildings to&#13;
the highly ornate, and at times&#13;
gaudy condition they were in at&#13;
the time of the Czarist rule which&#13;
the Soviets fought so bitterly to&#13;
overthrow.&#13;
Upon our return from the&#13;
palaces of Catherine II and Pavel&#13;
It we visited the Piskaryovskoye&#13;
Memorial Cemetery. the burial&#13;
place for the 600.000 people who&#13;
died wring the 900 day siege of&#13;
Leningrad during World War II.&#13;
At the entrance to this awesome&#13;
monument, there is a small&#13;
n;tuseum where photographs,&#13;
diary excerpts and hospital death&#13;
records depict the oorrors of the&#13;
Kenosha Phone&#13;
654-2193&#13;
R.;!{:ine Phone&#13;
637-7211 or 552-9564 01[&gt;&lt;0 S"ppl~ Co.&#13;
510 College Ave.&#13;
Racine, WI 53403&#13;
Brosk&#13;
5810 7th Ave.&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140&#13;
10% DISCOUNT WITH PARKSIDE I.D.&#13;
• • •&#13;
Friday, Marth 18&#13;
Our final full day in !be&#13;
Umon began with a two hourSori,t&#13;
of L'Hermilage, the Czars ...&#13;
sonalart gallery inside the....!!·&#13;
Palace. It IS said that ,......&#13;
milage is so large that L'llor.&#13;
spent two minutes ai each if ,..&#13;
art, it would take YOU ::-"&#13;
years to tour the m "-&#13;
gallery is filled wi~ '!lie&#13;
French Impressloni.ts Ilubr&#13;
painters, and includes a '.. ~&#13;
by da Vinci and a sta~&#13;
Michelangelo. 'Phe gallery i'-lrlIP&#13;
a work of art, since !be in~&#13;
decorations are the same as---&#13;
the Czars lived in the la--&#13;
We returned to L'H~ ...&#13;
the afternoon to visit !be~&#13;
Room, a collection of go1d&#13;
smanship dating from !be~&#13;
mileniurn B.C. an:! .... Itwnio.&#13;
. through the 19th century A::::!&#13;
the objects found in this';";"'-&#13;
sword scabbards, bel.... :&#13;
hoxes for snuff, pocket "aldla,&#13;
and toiletry sets or gold &lt;II ......&#13;
the Czars squandered their ..&#13;
riches. It is strange to note tbIt&#13;
the largest diamond foundiD ..&#13;
Gold Room collection is &lt;II ..&#13;
bridle of a horse; and that 1Ia'&#13;
hay.&#13;
In the evening, we atteadedI&#13;
performance of "The Barbor "&#13;
Seville" by the KIrov Opla&#13;
Company. The performauce.1I&#13;
Russian, an:! is cOlllparabletAlW&#13;
by the Metropolitan Opera&#13;
Company ata fraction cf !beeall.&#13;
The tickels for our perf..........&#13;
which were for oox seats, _&#13;
about $7.50.&#13;
After the performance, I....&#13;
back to the hotel to do as ....&#13;
packing as possible sincewe_&#13;
depa rting for the airport eerIy II&#13;
the morning. Suprisi~ .....&#13;
comes easily, since 1 taw&#13;
tomorrow will he a hectic dIy.&#13;
Saturday, MarchI'&#13;
After a thorough inspecllCll "&#13;
our bags by Soviet Custams of.&#13;
ricers, and a three twr dell, ill&#13;
our flight from Helsinki tAlNew&#13;
York, we're finally winging our&#13;
way home. On refleclion, I&#13;
realized that the more Ilearned&#13;
about the Soviet Union, the .. I&#13;
really knew. :-:.. one major"'"&#13;
I ha ve, .is tha t I was not able III&#13;
learn more about the inhabitdS&#13;
of a country which makes up -&#13;
seventh of the earth's land .....&#13;
II Next years Russian semiDIJ'&#13;
will coincide with SprilWB'-&#13;
I ~l.n ••~ 'ii .......; ••i IA l1lrll more lD-&#13;
" . 11 IV'" :.:.:~ .....- -&#13;
formation ahout the trip aJntael&#13;
Oliver Hayward at 553-246'1, or&#13;
stop in his office in MolinaroHall.&#13;
Room 129.&#13;
tt~~~~t~~~?~(ttt~~~~~~r~t~tr~~;~;~;~;~;~;~t~&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Happenings&#13;
PAB's coffeehouse Cl)IIIlIIiuee&#13;
sponsored the annual ':~&#13;
Slage" last Weduesda~ 10&#13;
Union Bazaar. At .... JlOiIis:::&#13;
200 students crowded t!'" .&#13;
watching a vartety .r adS.::&#13;
c1uding jazz and JiopIIaI' 1O)Ie&#13;
groups and variety adS, .rs&#13;
jugglers an:! the famu::;:::-&#13;
Thousan:! Voices" . tile sf·&#13;
The show lasted the II! 111!1&#13;
ternoon, and pAD said ....&#13;
received more off~ for -:- If&#13;
they bad time for, ~~h of tbO&#13;
last year, when the ..... - ~ of&#13;
show had to be cut cUeto&#13;
interest. 'ViSGI'&#13;
The Parkside Fine Arts ~oreof&#13;
will hoSt a world predU_s ill&#13;
"Ulysses," a chamber ."';rillll'&#13;
concert form. The opera 18od .ill&#13;
by Mike Edgerton, a",.....&#13;
feature piaoo Wll'ks by&#13;
Vignieri. ted '"&#13;
The concert will he presen 10.is&#13;
Sunday, April 24, at ~. is III&#13;
the Union Cinema.&#13;
admission charge. . ,,,&#13;
~~:~:~;~:~:}}~~~:~:~:~:}~:~:~:~:~:}~:~:~:~:~:~~:MM*-:,;&#13;
~ Shots&#13;
luehr fearlessly predicts '83 baseball sea&#13;
byRobb Luehr everyone. Boston New Y k son sPits Shots Spots: I finally Cleveland don't ~tand a ~ha~nd of the division.&#13;
~something good to say about this ye~r. ce The National League West: l.&#13;
ge Steinbrenner .and .the My picks for the A.L. West: 1 San FrancISCO 2. Los Angeles 3. r,:.... In a recent interview Chicago 2. Kansas City 3' ~n Diego 4. Atlantas, Houston 6 ,.USA Today. he stated tJ~t he Califorma 4. Seattle 5. Oakland 6' ncmnati. A surprrsa pick. you&#13;
,..!doever increase the pr-ice of Mmnesota 7. Texas. This is ~ say. but I think that the Giants&#13;
.. dJeI' seats at Yankee Stadium year for Chicago. I think the Pale ca:1rlllt off this year. They were&#13;
,.~ as I live." The price of a Hose have the people and the -:;: n a few games of winning the&#13;
.. die' seat is $1.50 ... In the talent to reach the top of the heap thes~as: year. and should stay at&#13;
eL Herschel Walker has 10 the West although most of the e p or the. year.&#13;
lIII1Y'brol&lt;enloose. He rushed for other writers don't put Chicago on t~OS Angeles IS alwa¥s a serious&#13;
,. 1110 yards for the 3rd con- top. The Sox have a great slarting ~~ and they will he The&#13;
IIlIdive game to lead the New staff and one of the best catchers ~on er, as usual. But the team&#13;
1JfI!! Generals to a 23-22 victory 10 the Majors in Carlton Fisk Thereally watch IS the Padres.&#13;
,.!be Washington Federals. . . Kansas City and California .are the y acquired Steve Garvey from&#13;
,.. Ryan of the Astros struck the only other teams in the inf free agent market. and their _7 batters Sunday to move to division with the capability to take ;o:~ solid. Be on the lookoot&#13;
liIIiD 7 of Walter Johnson's all - the A.L. West. The Royals have a The ther three&#13;
.strike. out record of 3508. .. fine infield am a proven reliever mak 0 _ teams won't&#13;
lIdlinaDy. Joe Wolf decided that in Dan Quisenberry. They will be Atla:ta': serious challenge.&#13;
It,,,,wdgoto North Carolina. He, in the thick of the race all season beginning wrr~streak at the&#13;
lid lIBt he had to get out and long. California has Tommy John fluke and:;" as ~so"'bras a&#13;
.,erience the real world. The the man with the bionic arm and together a s~n ~ y ~&#13;
ililioo was made, according to they have a power hitling team year. Houston and eanc1nnati&#13;
fIIf, abouta half - hour before his Just a step below the Brewers. The aren't solid enoogh to make a run&#13;
... conference. rest of the teams are also - rans. at the title either.&#13;
lIiJ is also the time of year and wlll all be trying just to stay lf all goeS according to plan. it&#13;
_ every sports magazme and out ~ the basement In the final will be Milwaukee and Chicago in&#13;
rIllY newspaper devotes a large standings. the American League Playoffs&#13;
ldioo tn predictions for the Now it's 00 to the National and San Francisco and St. Loois U;&#13;
.mg season. In order to keep League: In the East. here's how I the National League Playoffs. In&#13;
,with my peers, I too have fIgure It to be: 1. St. Louis 2. the World Series look for a&#13;
llIlected my thoughts and Montreal 3. Chicago 4. Pittsburgh rematch of last yea'r's fall classic.&#13;
IIleIoped my own picks for this 5. Philadelphia 6. New York. St. Only this time the tables will be&#13;
JIIl'.1f yw think I'm full of bull, Louis is just too tough to be turned. Milwa;u.ee will have it·s&#13;
• just disagree with me. let me denied. They have the best overall first world championship since&#13;
.... Leave a note or write a speed in the Majors. and they 1957.&#13;
lIlIIranddropit off at the Ranger have the best relief pitcher In&#13;
.... And DOW . • • • Bruce Suller. They showed what&#13;
la's begin close to home. with they're made of in the World&#13;
.. American League East. My Series. Look for them on top again&#13;
_ces: 1. Milwaukee 2. this year.&#13;
1IlIim0re 3. Detroit 4. Toronto 5. Montreal is the closest to the&#13;
1IItoo6.NewYork 7. Cleveland. I Cardinals in talent and ability.&#13;
Ill' be somewhat biased. as are and will challenge them all season&#13;
.. of yw, but I think that the long. But I doo't think they have&#13;
liners will repeat as champions enough to stop the Redbirds. My '!be AL. East. They have the oot - on - a - limb pick is the Cubs&#13;
........ 1to take them to the top for third place. They've acquired&#13;
... , despite the losses of Pete Roo Cey as a free agent. Along&#13;
YlIckovichand Rollie Fingers. with Leon Durham, Bill Buckner.&#13;
~ still have three capable and potential rookIe of the year&#13;
IIUlers in Mike Caldwell Don Mel Hall. the Cubs have plenty of&#13;
1IItnn, and Bob McClure.' They power for the friendly confines of&#13;
Gilave the best offensive punch Wrigley Field. Keep an eye on&#13;
1110of baseball. and that won't them.&#13;
... much this year. Baltimore Pillsburgh and Philadelphia&#13;
IlIlbe in the thick of the race all might start out fast. but they&#13;
,.r, even without Earl Weaver won't be able to keep it up all&#13;
1nIWld. They have one of the best season. The Pirates don't have the&#13;
Iluting pitching staff in the horses to finish higher than foorth.&#13;
lInerican League. Detroit could and the Phillies, with the "Wheeze&#13;
IoiIb high or low in the division. Kids" team. don't have the&#13;
lIpenctjDgon if their pitchers stay stamina to keep it up. either. The&#13;
lIolthy. I think they should be Mets have an ice cube's chance in&#13;
lIIIe to puD off third. hell of gelling out of the basement&#13;
"""e's not much to say ahout r-...:.--i;:;-;;=;:-:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-:--;;;----,-;;;:----:-~-;:--,;:;-:::::::::--:;--,&#13;
lberost ofthe division. except that&#13;
Tllronto will surprise almost&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
~Q SERViCES . C"ll Barb 65,.· ..5]6&#13;
IA .5,00 weekdays or weekends.&#13;
~"M 'JIG or more each school year.&#13;
Itltlble hours. Monthly payment for&#13;
IlIttlf'lll post!!'s on campus. Bonus based on&#13;
~"s PrIzes awarded llS welL 800-526-&#13;
~ltl! 2 bedroom al Woodcreek beginning&#13;
~ 1s1.Call 552·9528before 8:30 a.m. or&#13;
l:ly I~me 11Inlef6led. Try to let me know&#13;
.... end 01 April. 'V,.., PERSONALS&#13;
Ttl. T~INS BARk, I snarl. The Duck&#13;
0tlI UE DUCK doesn't snarl.&#13;
• ;RWISE OR INNOCENT: always prank&#13;
III \/Ster.&#13;
:,~ DUCK: Is there an afterlife and how&#13;
.... "fTom midtown? Hopelessly Wan·&#13;
..... ~ PLAYER WANTED: for rock / blues&#13;
___ call 65 ..·04456 or 6.S4·3624•&#13;
•. ' GI1)9I"9 you was a memorable ex·&#13;
C4tto~C •. lov., Alex&#13;
!tilT': YOu're my bestess bUddy; watch&#13;
""a r~lJIation. love, Canada&#13;
0. l 21st is National Grope John Kovatlc'&#13;
~ GI....ell grope for the Queen. Halle a&#13;
1M. TRg~vea grope. See John K. tor deTails.&#13;
_ buT E BARKING DUCK ran out of soap&#13;
.-u.V.hold the sunflower seeds for now.&#13;
rt'B1 • Someone recently told me you're&#13;
'-C' eel To Emmanuelle. S.C.&#13;
~"'TIs::,~'sa disTant relatille, bUt not that&#13;
Folt 5U FOR RENT .&#13;
IfIIrt MMER SUBlET: professor's 5 room&#13;
bt ment In Racine, 2 bedrooms and&#13;
Daol S, 'oWl! furnished, Indoor swimming&#13;
JlJI,; ~niS courts, air conditioned. June,&#13;
'""It" ugust, S400 a month. Call 553·2320.&#13;
btg 2 bedroom apartment at Woodcreek.&#13;
• ..;nnlflo. June 1. Call 552-9528before 8:30&#13;
"'t ~nlghttlme if interested. Try to let&#13;
by the end of Apri I.&#13;
'''l PERSONALS (Cont.)&#13;
., """'H rats on SUFAC chair. Halle fun.&#13;
lOV' A&#13;
'¥o MADE my dream come true in one&#13;
"IA lie, Rick.&#13;
IIt"J.UlOUS. Robb.&#13;
IT-. A GROPE. See John.&#13;
1t",~E QUEEN'S FAULT.&#13;
I{ AGE SALE: 5303 • 33rd Aile.,&#13;
IIoutnosha Antiques, furniture, ctothes,&#13;
etltstShollres, moTorcycles, new skiS, hope&#13;
Sal ~~I"odSu':~ch,much more. Starts 9 a.m.&#13;
• • •&#13;
Sports Shots SpotS: Art&#13;
Schlicter, former Ohio State&#13;
quarterback and presently with&#13;
the Baltimore Colts. has a slight&#13;
problem. An NFL investigation&#13;
has disclosed that Schlicter has&#13;
inculTed heavy gambling debts.&#13;
On a $200.000a year salary. he has&#13;
almost $400.000in debts. His life&#13;
was threa tened by the people he&#13;
owed. so he agreed to tell&#13;
government investigators who the&#13;
gambling figures were. in excha&#13;
Ille for protection. The NFL is&#13;
considering suspending him from&#13;
NFL play for at least a year.&#13;
Gambling is not new to the NFL.&#13;
however. Back in the early 60's, a&#13;
few Green Bay Packers. including&#13;
Paul Hornung, were investigated&#13;
for placing bets on gam~.&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS TO TED&#13;
MILLER, Miller. a Parkside&#13;
junior finished 99S in the Boston&#13;
Mara thoo Monday. Miller's time&#13;
was 2:43.10. He was the first&#13;
Racine finisher.&#13;
Taste the difference Kraeusening makes.&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 21, 1913 7&#13;
I Whitewater sponsors raod race&#13;
The fIlth amual 't\li-.ter&#13;
Half -Marathon and Slmul~&#13;
Four MtIe Run ..iUbe held. y 1&#13;
ponsored by the \\&#13;
Wlutewate&lt; Arm_ ROTC Detachment.&#13;
the races wiD begin at 1&#13;
a.m. at the lnl&lt;nectino of Prlllrie&#13;
Street and !arin Road no the t; •&#13;
Wlutev. ate&lt; campw&#13;
Plaques. medals and T&#13;
will be awarded&#13;
For the AAU certified 13.1 mile&#13;
Half - Marathon. plaques go to&#13;
the male and leawe&#13;
Medals ..iU be awarded tothe flrlt&#13;
three finisher in oach of the&#13;
follo1iing claus. MaIe - IIand&#13;
under. t9 to 24. 25 to 35 to.&#13;
to 49. 50 and 0\-ee, Ll/l .UlIenls&#13;
UWW faculty; Female - "'" •&#13;
male excepl lhat last • cIau&#13;
40 and over. All who complete the&#13;
race will reeeiee T-Ibirts.&#13;
COMING EVE TS&#13;
~ ...."&#13;
_~.'J" T- .-s w be av. .t .....&#13;
OPEIIt....·-U'~ byPert30Clt~ ............ ,1l&#13;
fret .,.. ~ to "... PUblIC&#13;
MOVIE l'itdl.,..,I=."..,.- Rlw bit,......"JD ... '" ~&#13;
PA8&#13;
--_......_..-&#13;
....&#13;
-.. ROUNDT ...BLE Pred a F F&#13;
~--. v., a'1' 15..,," .,~.... .",.,...&#13;
WORKSHOP ~ .. , II. ~ UIUOn&#13;
......&#13;
CONCERT ~turong ""'..... oM'&#13;
ftt4l pvOl&gt;c a1flO 0..","&#13;
...&#13;
-&#13;
.......,.., ......u&#13;
L~~-UcRe. bY Prof J lI:VI.lII" tl. ¥Ol. '" ....... ... .......&#13;
MOYIE .~..... (RI ......... ll;.Jep 1ft&#13;
PA8&#13;
PLAV ·"Ttl.WQrIO.,no(littliw _.., ... In ...,.... ..::.:=::::~~ COl'"rnUftoca'oon ATf1. n..~ ~,.ra... a1. ""CIA F.,. ~ DovoS Of" u-&#13;
•&#13;
1&#13;
Thursday, April 21, 1983 RANGER&#13;
I&#13;
Women's Softball&#13;
11le Wom... ·• Softball team WCl1&#13;
lht CoIJoCe 01 St FraDds Touraa&#13;
...... 1 tbi eeltend .... imillll all&#13;
1_ pmea lhey played. They&#13;
_I'&#13;
Aucuouna CoUece (10-6)&#13;
I Ft .... iI(2~)&#13;
UI-Chicaao (4-1)&#13;
Ftn'iI tale &lt;3-21&#13;
"Col Ieee 01 51 Ft.nci was&#13;
rated second In lht DOli... and ...e&#13;
I lhtm Tho team is jellillll&#13;
laIOtber vory well," comm... led&#13;
Coedl Linda Orafl&#13;
Juncr Laur. LaumtZi 1.3'/$&#13;
MltlJc .nd 5Si ... Mae) and&#13;
rr-hmao Jackie RJltmer (314&#13;
Mlli .nd 42$ ... Mae) won lht&#13;
l"Il tiltera .nd MIChelle MartinO&#13;
voted oel V.luable Pi_&#13;
01 lht tournam ... 1 Tho" recerd&#13;
lJIlproved to 14-3.wtiel&gt; illht beat&#13;
lhty.... ~or had .1 thI. poull 01&#13;
lht_&#13;
Tho t m will be competiJll&#13;
nery day tbi in order to&#13;
1Dll1&lt;. up lhe r.uled out IImea.&#13;
Draft acknow lbal Ibis will&#13;
very hard lht team,&#13;
ially WIthlht wealhOJ' belllll&#13;
..-blycold&#13;
On onday. the .... m pI.yed&#13;
0Ihk0lh On1'uelday ,they pI')'ed&#13;
Wlut w.ler. Yeal.rd.y, lhey&#13;
played DePaul .nd today lhty&#13;
play Aurw' col •• t 3 p.m. in&#13;
Nrilyt .. Spri"lll Park.&#13;
11IIa weell:end lhty will be&#13;
.-,.loIlft lht Circle Toumam ... l.&#13;
Drafl feels lbal lht compeliliCl1&#13;
will be louIb. but DOl as lougb as&#13;
Iaol weell:end&#13;
Men's Baseball&#13;
.. I 01 lht m... •• baoebaU&#13;
.. ..,.. ha ... been called 011 ..... to&#13;
a.d weather G.meo have been _Jed since M.rdI IS. but&#13;
AprIl U w.. lht first .. me the&#13;
• IMm has played since spriJll&#13;
br'eM:. The first p me was against&#13;
Cartlla .. Colleae, P.r1lside losing&#13;
~. In the """"nd .. me.lhouah, of&#13;
lht double heacler the teem woo 3-&#13;
I ~I Hartnell was lht ...imillll&#13;
pildler, stri1li"ll out 5 pI.yen,&#13;
_~ four, aivillll up 3 runs and&#13;
aIowed 4 tilll. Tho hitters f...&#13;
PuloIide ........ JCliInHyatt, Scott&#13;
Getlartt and Chris RaW!.&#13;
Tho IMm played MSOE lasl&#13;
saturday w1ic:b ..... called aile&lt;&#13;
lht bottom hall ollht stath imillll&#13;
bora ol the 10 - nm rule. Tho "m I~. MarkScbmitz w..&#13;
lht WUlIlI" PIlcher. He strudr; oul&#13;
11 wa ed 2 .nd allowed 2 hits.&#13;
",. Iaeli.. tillen ...ere Tom&#13;
Weiport '21 ... 31and Joe Krisilt (2&#13;
kIr 41 RIc:b SallIbury lit • arand&#13;
slam home nm f... 4 runs.&#13;
Tho second aam. of the&#13;
_acler w.. called alt ... r.-&#13;
1/2llIIll", due to a "blizzard,"&#13;
"O..e ol the llUYS hil • beautiful&#13;
... bullht ou!fieldon couldn'l&#13;
_ il bec.use ol the suo... "&#13;
__ ed Coach Ob..-~.&#13;
Tho IMm pI.yed ...... 7-1&#13;
".. _end lht leam trave4&#13;
to UI· ClicalO, wlich Oberbruner&#13;
I could be • loll up.&#13;
Vets Run Results&#13;
Tho rat Annual Vet'. Club fi...&#13;
mlle run .... place m April 16&#13;
Oftr 110 rumen .... part 1ft the&#13;
fun run. Tho wlmer ol lht ~I&#13;
Donald Ow.... lth. lime of&#13;
• mlDJt .nd 38 -.xxIa. Tho&#13;
l"Il tlr ~ flJlllben wore&#13;
Do M.yrand III second place .1&#13;
• ~ John .yor In llurd with a&#13;
lime ol 29:57,.nd III fourth place&#13;
Gary Ladooaa WIth 32: 10.&#13;
In the women' divilim. Trudy&#13;
Ritacc:a t k fiflt wIth ... 1nnillll&#13;
lime ol 31:08. Tho next tlree&#13;
........ e'Ton lurray, second&#13;
place .1 34 411. Edna M..... n .t&#13;
41, and P.t Short.1 38:44 Tho&#13;
ambularre fi.-shed the race in the&#13;
_ ~d lim. ol 3t23 Tho&#13;
want lJme 01 the ... tln! field .. as&#13;
IIlllit Tho ant runner of the&#13;
lIeId ald. "Hey .1 Ieut I b....&#13;
_ bour" ".. race ..... abortor&#13;
1IIu ~. bul U Rich&#13;
W__ .. Ill al 1M .........&#13;
presrenta tion a!I"eIDooY. "This is&#13;
our first lime in the race business,&#13;
neal year ...e will be bigger .nd&#13;
bett...... Welboo is s\artiql to&#13;
organize nex t yea f'S event&#13;
presently.&#13;
WelbCIl woold publidy Ult. to&#13;
lbanll lht followi"ll volunt.... s:&#13;
Mid&lt; and John G_ood. JCliIn&#13;
Butterwcrlh, P.m Pelersoo, Bob&#13;
OI1l, Pea Burlti, id&lt; '!bom.,&#13;
~ Friend. Tom Bey, Sue&#13;
JlOrdJne .nd lbt bad Jassmin.&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
Desple lht cold and ,.,ullI, the&#13;
Men'. Trac team turned in some&#13;
...ry aood ..... and lim.. at the&#13;
'orlh Centr.1 Collea. meet.&#13;
Mmly McPheron .nd AI CorTea&#13;
fini.hed second and fifth&#13;
r""pectively 1ft the 400 met ... run.&#13;
McPher ... •• lJme was 53.2 and&#13;
Ccrn!a'. 55.3.&#13;
Although the two 1'UIlDfI" in the&#13;
lIOO met ... run did DOl place Coach&#13;
Lucian Rooa was VOJ'Y happy with&#13;
the" performances. Glen Schultz&#13;
ran 2:00 .nd JlIO Brewer ran&#13;
2:00.3&#13;
Inlht 5000 met ... run Jim Miller&#13;
p1.ced fourth in 15:23.5.Tho mile&#13;
relay composed of McPheron.&#13;
Schultz, Ccrn!a and Rich Miller&#13;
came in third in 3:32.&#13;
Brian DilllliJlS, a forward for&#13;
thi. year'. basketball teem, in his&#13;
6rat lime ..... jumping, jumped&#13;
IH."He had to borrow someol1l!S&#13;
api1l .. because he couIdo't find&#13;
li •. Ithiolt he will do very well in&#13;
the. future," commented Rosa.&#13;
This Saturday, the team will be&#13;
competiJll in the CarlbaIe InSPORT&#13;
NEWS&#13;
vitalional, .1.... with U other&#13;
leams. Rosa feels the team faces&#13;
louIb competition and bopes for&#13;
the best. He cites MUwauitee and&#13;
Osbkoob to tum in some good&#13;
performances. The meet starts at&#13;
11 a.m.&#13;
Men' s Tennis&#13;
by C.rr. cariello&#13;
On April 1\, \be Rana ers took on&#13;
Beloil coUeae. The Ranaers came&#13;
out vicl... iously with a fmal score&#13;
Ii 5 - 4.&#13;
The winners of the single&#13;
matches were Cal Sinaletm over&#13;
Chris Bmner (6·4) (6 - 4). Tony&#13;
ielsen defeated Greg Manson (6-&#13;
0) (6·3). Art Shannon over Mark&#13;
Giamelto (6 - 0) (6 - IlIn&#13;
the double matches SioaJet ...&#13;
_ Jim WYJlSlra defeated Cbris&#13;
BonDer and Gr.. Mason (3 - 6) (6-&#13;
l) (6 • 4). Nielsen - Milte Brinen&#13;
defeated Ward Krull- Gianelio (3 -&#13;
6) (7 - 5) (6 - 3).&#13;
April 13, the Ranaers took on&#13;
carlbaae Coil.... The Ranaers&#13;
won ooce more with a score of 7 •&#13;
2. In the sillllie matches, SioaJetoo&#13;
defeated Tom Bovle (6 - 4) (4 • 6)&#13;
(6 - 4l- Nielsen defeated Kirt&#13;
Jacobson (7 - 5) (6 - 3). Shannon&#13;
defeated Kevin Suchsland (6 - 4)&#13;
(6 - 3). Wynstra defeated Kevin&#13;
Parker (6 - 3) (6 - 2). Double&#13;
matches Mejia - Shannon defeated&#13;
~tTyI ... -Tomp ....... (6-2) (7-&#13;
6). SioaJelon - Wynstra defeated&#13;
Jacobson - Suchsland (6 - 2) (6 - 2).&#13;
Nielsen - Brinen defeated Bovle -&#13;
Rid&lt; Goschey (6 - 2) (6 - 4).&#13;
On Thursday, April 14, the&#13;
Ranaers took m Northeastern.&#13;
-&#13;
11&gt;0 Rallllers were defeated with a&#13;
score of 2 - 7. Tony Nelsen&#13;
defeated Kevin Ulbert (6 - 2) (3 -&#13;
si. Art Shannon defeated Marly&#13;
LaSusa (6 - 2) (6 - 4). Both in single&#13;
matches.&#13;
Friday, April IS, the Rangers&#13;
were supposed to take on Lake&#13;
County College, but due to&#13;
weather conditions the game has&#13;
been postponed until Wednesday.&#13;
May 4.&#13;
April 16, \be Rallll.... tooIt&#13;
Concordia con ege. The fIna1 ..&#13;
was 9 - o. All the sinal. 0Ild ::!!:&#13;
meets were won. -.....&#13;
Saturday, April 23 lht Ra,...&#13;
will take on M":.loe V&#13;
con ege in an away lOme ~&#13;
Rangers won last lim. (APtii'-&#13;
they took on M.V.C. w1tballeGre'lfl&#13;
7 - 2.&#13;
HOPE FULL Y next week Tony Nielsen and hrs teammates "'''&#13;
get some nice weather and get to play their matches outdoors,&#13;
,. t'ry and western.&#13;
, un A d so does coun</text>
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              <text>W University of . Parkside&#13;
Physical plant workers&#13;
face potential shift change&#13;
PROTESTERS and movie viewers seen&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Union Bazaar&#13;
by Jeanne Buenker - Phillips&#13;
and Bob Kiesling&#13;
Building Maintenance personnel&#13;
are protesting an announcement&#13;
recently made by&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Gary Goetz&#13;
to change the working hours of&#13;
some of the maintenance personnel,&#13;
known as BMH's, for&#13;
"Building Maintenance Helpers "&#13;
from first shift to third shift. '&#13;
Third shift BMH personnel were&#13;
originally transferred to first shift&#13;
almost three years ago to help&#13;
relieve supervisory shortages.&#13;
With a reclassification of the third&#13;
shift supervisor from state civil&#13;
service to classified academic&#13;
staff, the shortage will be filled.&#13;
Physical Plant administration&#13;
anticipates that the change will go&#13;
into effect shortly, when a new&#13;
third shift supervisor can be&#13;
found.&#13;
Physical Plant head Jack&#13;
Dudley originally supported the&#13;
change to first shift "on a trial&#13;
basis," but said that some of the&#13;
personnel needed to be transferred&#13;
back to third shift because&#13;
too many personnel were working&#13;
on the first shift. "We do not feel&#13;
it's the most efficient utilization of&#13;
manpower," he said of the present&#13;
system.&#13;
BMH personnel charge that&#13;
they are paying for mistakes&#13;
made by management. In a&#13;
printed statement they said, "If&#13;
the management has problems&#13;
with supervision, why not correct&#13;
the problem? Why take it out on&#13;
the employees?" They also stated&#13;
that the first shift had received&#13;
many letters of praise for their&#13;
performance. The BMH personnel&#13;
also charged that an additional&#13;
$10,400 would be required for&#13;
extra heat and light costs for the&#13;
third shift.&#13;
Goetz stated that the change of&#13;
BMH hours to first shift was in&#13;
fact an experiment, and the&#13;
change would be made as soon as&#13;
a revised maintenance supervisory&#13;
structure was completed.&#13;
An academic staff member will&#13;
be added to supervise the BMH&#13;
personnel of both the first and&#13;
third shifts and aid in planning,&#13;
but, "not get involved in the&#13;
operational nitty - gritty." Goetz&#13;
also said that the estimated cost&#13;
increase of a split shift would be&#13;
about $4,000, which would be offset&#13;
by the increased operating efficiency.&#13;
&#13;
BMH personnel would not&#13;
comment further because the shift&#13;
change is not official yet. "We&#13;
have not received anything in&#13;
writing," they said.&#13;
Goetz and Dudley both emphasized&#13;
that the shift change has&#13;
Prolonged incompletes&#13;
lead to "failures"&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Many students at Parkside are&#13;
unaware of the incomplete policy&#13;
and are finding F's on their&#13;
transcripts. The policy has been in&#13;
affect since the fall of 1979, and&#13;
says that.&#13;
Students who receive incompletes&#13;
in their courses must&#13;
remove them before the end of th e&#13;
following semester or summer&#13;
session. If the incomplete is not&#13;
removed within the required&#13;
period of time, the grade will&#13;
lapse to an "F".&#13;
Last semester there were 749&#13;
incompletes filed in the Student&#13;
Records office. To date, only 130 of&#13;
those incompletes have been&#13;
changed to passing grades,&#13;
therefore, 619 may be lapsed to&#13;
"F's".&#13;
"It's the students responsibility&#13;
to make sure their incompletes&#13;
are taken care of," said Gail&#13;
Starks, Student Data Analyst.&#13;
There are many reasons why&#13;
students receive incompletes. If a&#13;
student is unable to take the final&#13;
exam or complete the required&#13;
assignments the instructor may&#13;
grant an incomplete. If an instructor&#13;
fails to turn in grades&#13;
then all of the students in that&#13;
course will be given incompletes&#13;
until their grades are changed.&#13;
their grade changed.&#13;
"I wish more students would&#13;
look at their transcripts to make&#13;
sure everything is in line. We just&#13;
carry out the policies, the&#13;
decisions are not made in our&#13;
office. We can only assume in&#13;
good faith that students are aware&#13;
of the policies," said Starks.&#13;
If the time allotted to fulfill&#13;
course requirements is insufficient,&#13;
then students can apply&#13;
for an incomplete extension.&#13;
Students must make a request for&#13;
the instructor to take executive&#13;
action and grant them an extension.&#13;
&#13;
Don Gunderson, Associate&#13;
Registrar, feels that the incomplete&#13;
policy is lenient at&#13;
Parkside compared to that of&#13;
other universities. One change he&#13;
would like to see in the policy is to&#13;
extend incompletes to full&#13;
semesters and delete the summer&#13;
session requirement. "I would&#13;
prefer students have until the next&#13;
full semester to make up incompletes&#13;
because many instructors&#13;
are unavailable in the&#13;
summer and their courses are not&#13;
offered," said Gunderson.&#13;
Students may not graduate with&#13;
an incomplete on their transcripts&#13;
if failure in an incompleted course&#13;
itil their grades are changed. would would mmakake e them them inel ineligib igible le to&#13;
Students receiving incompletes graduate. Therefore, students are&#13;
ar"c e sent sent a a fform orm rpminH remindincf ing th#» them m tn to nrffed to take care of their incontact&#13;
their instructor and have&#13;
urged to take care __&#13;
completes as soon as possible.&#13;
been under consideration for some&#13;
time. Goetz stated that the move&#13;
of al l BMH employees to a single&#13;
shift had never been a permanent&#13;
move, and that the administration&#13;
has found that maintenance work&#13;
is completed more efficiently&#13;
when "they're not competing with&#13;
an operating institution." He said&#13;
that self - evaluation by the staff&#13;
would be facilitated, both in the&#13;
areas of personnel and product&#13;
performance.&#13;
"It's the result of ma ny hours of&#13;
deliberations," Dudley said,&#13;
adding that while the single shift&#13;
was a good idea at the time it was&#13;
implemented, a changed supervisory&#13;
structure would allow the&#13;
split shift employees to plan&#13;
major maintenance, such as&#13;
painting and floor sealing, without&#13;
interfering with the operations of&#13;
the university.&#13;
Movie produces&#13;
many views on issue&#13;
by Masood Shafiq&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
A large crowd showed up at the&#13;
Union Bazaar on Apr. 7 for the&#13;
3:30 p. m. showing of the film&#13;
Emmanuelle. The crowd included&#13;
a small group of protestors consisting&#13;
of stu dents and faculty, as&#13;
well as movie goers.&#13;
The protestors chose to ignore&#13;
the group of students who put up&#13;
an act of dragging a female&#13;
student, tied up in chains, forcing&#13;
her to watch the film.&#13;
Of the 75 people who saw the&#13;
film that day, I saw a brother and&#13;
sister, a married female honors&#13;
program student, and a female&#13;
president of a student club line up&#13;
to see the film. Were these people&#13;
lining up to see the film because&#13;
they approved of the subject&#13;
matter or were they making a&#13;
statement that they had the right&#13;
to choose for themselves or were&#13;
they simply curious about the film&#13;
that had caused so much controversy?&#13;
In all, 365 peo ple saw&#13;
the film during its entire showing.&#13;
For all the films shown during&#13;
the entire semester only Raiders&#13;
of the Lost Ark outsold Emmanuelle.&#13;
The number of v iewers&#13;
for the others films are as follows:&#13;
Poltergeist - 255, Star Trek II - 268,&#13;
The Enforcer -115, Raiders of the&#13;
Lost Ark - 397, Richard Pryor Live&#13;
on Sunset Strip - 238, M*A*S*H -&#13;
271, The China Syndrome - 69&#13;
Rocky III - 181 an d Reds - 44.&#13;
"A Delicate Balance" at UW-P&#13;
Edward Albee's Pulitzer Prize&#13;
winning "A Delicate Balance," a&#13;
play at once funny and sad, sober&#13;
and silly, is the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline's spring&#13;
production, on stage for two&#13;
weekends in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Performances are at 8 p. m. on&#13;
Apr. 22,23,29 and 30 and at 2 p. m.&#13;
on Apr. 24. Advance tickets,&#13;
available by calling 553-2345 a nd&#13;
553-2042, are $2.50 for UW - P&#13;
students, staff and for senior&#13;
citizens and $3.50 for others.&#13;
Tickets at the door are $3 for UW -&#13;
P students and staff and senior&#13;
citizens and $4 for others.&#13;
The play's plot is simple. A man&#13;
and a woman whose suburban -&#13;
based marriage is crumbling try&#13;
to shelter the woman's alcoholic&#13;
sister from the pain of a bitter&#13;
world. During the course of an&#13;
evening the couple are visited by&#13;
their unhappy daughter and&#13;
another couple freshly&#13;
traumatized by a shocking experience.&#13;
The central characters&#13;
are thrown into an emotional state&#13;
"delicately balanced" between&#13;
sanity and madness.&#13;
Members of the cast are Andrew&#13;
Brhel, of Cudahy, and Lee&#13;
Lawler, of Kenosha as the couple&#13;
whose marriage is disintegrating;&#13;
Patricia Casciaro, of K enosha, as&#13;
the alcoholic sibling; Rebecca&#13;
Julich, of Racine, as the&#13;
daughter; and Scott&#13;
Reichelsdorf, of K enosha, and Liz&#13;
Schoenoff, of Minneapolis, as the&#13;
traumatized couple.&#13;
Albee, whose plays have won&#13;
two Pulitzers, is considered one of&#13;
the most important playwrights of&#13;
the contemporary American&#13;
theatre. He has also won the New&#13;
York Press Association's Best&#13;
Plays Award, the Lola D'Annunzio&#13;
Award and the Obie&#13;
Award.&#13;
"A Delicate Balance" is considered&#13;
by many critics to be&#13;
Albee's best work. Harold Clurman,&#13;
writing for "The Nation,"&#13;
called the play "brilliant... it is a&#13;
further step in the author's&#13;
progress and is superior to his&#13;
more sensational 'Who's Afraid of&#13;
Virginia Woolf?' "&#13;
Eliot Norton, writing in the&#13;
"Boston Record American" said&#13;
of "A Delicate Balance": "The&#13;
play is as simple as a child's fable,&#13;
as complex as life itself and&#13;
although the story it tells is&#13;
profoundly serious, it is often&#13;
gustily funny."&#13;
The UW - Parkside production is&#13;
being directed by Leon Van Dyke,&#13;
associate professor of dramatic&#13;
arts.&#13;
Special ticket prices are&#13;
available with a coupon in the&#13;
Ranger. For $4 persons can buy&#13;
both a ticket to "A Delicate&#13;
Balance" and a ticket to the&#13;
Milwaukee Paradox Studio&#13;
Theatre's production of Luis O.&#13;
Arata's "The World and Other&#13;
Inventions," to be performed at 8&#13;
p. m. on Wednesday, April 27 in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
dis^^^he^pr^^em^o^parl^ing^urf^^^^saVfor^a "sce^ne' fr^'A^e^ka^e^Balance ^&#13;
CommunVcat' to"heato"'* SPr&#13;
'&#13;
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'" ^ Pr&#13;
°&#13;
dUCt,0n A"&#13;
ril 22 " 24 ^ 2&#13;
' - 3 ° in &#13;
Thursday, April 14,1983&#13;
Editorial&#13;
What's Earl up to?&#13;
People have begun to question the good intentions of one Governor&#13;
Anthony Earl after a set of w hat many Wisconsites see as failures and&#13;
errors. The straw that seems to have broken the people's back was the&#13;
headline last Thursday showing that the state overpaid for a land&#13;
development site. Were the land actually going to be developed into&#13;
something the people wanted, few would have blinked an eye, however&#13;
the land was acquired under rather curious conditions.&#13;
Appraisals on the warehouse site ranged from $950,000 to $1.1 million&#13;
Earl's administration agreed to pay $1.2 million to Loop Distributors for&#13;
the warehouse in order to convert it to a 200 - inmate penitentiary. This&#13;
all took place despite the protests of homeowners and Henry Maier&#13;
Milwaukee's mayor. The claims say that so much was paid for the&#13;
building site because, "we didn't want to gouge the owner."&#13;
Certainly enough, the efforts to add a prison to the Wisconsin area are&#13;
frustrated and unsuccessful. The state went ahead with the purchase of&#13;
the property although there was a court order blocking the sale of the&#13;
property. The court order was sought by Maier and other concerned&#13;
citizens, protesting the prison location.&#13;
The shine people saw on Earl when he was in his first days as&#13;
governor has worn off. When he entered office, Earl was witness to a&#13;
budget deficit ever increasing, and an unemployment fund owing the&#13;
federal government some $880 million. Earl's first step was tax After&#13;
gaining way with the five cent tax on a dollar, Earl urged increases and&#13;
surgages on income tax. (That is for those lucky enough to have jobs).&#13;
Many politicians foresee that these increases will not take place as it is&#13;
only seventeen months until most of these politicians are up for primarv&#13;
and re - election. J&#13;
The other thing people feel uncomfortable about are the appointees&#13;
Earl has stumbled upon. Most feel that Harold Fuller is unqualified for&#13;
the personnel position Earl has given him. Earl was good - hearted&#13;
enough to give the office of Transportation Secretary to Lowell Jackson&#13;
a gubernatorial candidate in 1982, Republican. While Earl, working the&#13;
Department of Natural Resources, DNR, appeared to be an environmentalist,&#13;
at this point, he is backing Jackson's new highway&#13;
package even though the environmentalists are very opposed to it.&#13;
People have begun to question the roads Earl is traveling himself,&#13;
through the state capital, wondering if he really is a governor in office&#13;
for the good of the people.&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Pornography degrading&#13;
- level mentality when confronted&#13;
with a valid issue. Therefore, I&#13;
will not go into depth on those&#13;
points.&#13;
Pornography does, in fact, put&#13;
rape into an acceptable context.&#13;
The industry is based on lies about&#13;
women's sexuality:&#13;
"The pornography industry&#13;
misrepresents and abuses&#13;
women's sexuality. It presents&#13;
women as willing, compliant toys&#13;
and as masochists who seek out&#13;
pain. The message is clear: Any&#13;
female body is available for&#13;
comment, to be grabbed, undressed,&#13;
possessed, beaten,&#13;
mutilated, raped or murdered for&#13;
the 'erotic' pleasure of men.&#13;
Equal numbers of nude men and&#13;
women are rarely found in pornography.&#13;
Rather, nude women&#13;
are usually viewed by clothed or&#13;
unseen men. This one - sided&#13;
exposure in itself is a humiliating&#13;
act toward all women. (Note how&#13;
one - sided nudity is used by males&#13;
to dominate and humiliate other&#13;
males in prisons and military&#13;
training)." (Women Against&#13;
Pornography, NY, NY)&#13;
During the last decade, a new&#13;
body of research has proven a&#13;
definite link between aggressive&#13;
pornography and aggression&#13;
against women. The following&#13;
quote is from a pre - print written&#13;
by Dr. Edward Donnerstein, who&#13;
was kind enough to send 2 different&#13;
pre - prints on this subject&#13;
to me. It is to appear in R. Geen&#13;
and E. Donnerstein (Eds).&#13;
Aggression: theoretical and&#13;
empirical reviews. Vol. 2: Empirical&#13;
reviews. New York:&#13;
Academic Press, 1983.&#13;
"One question that might come&#13;
to mind is whether or not there is,&#13;
in fact, an increase in aggressive&#13;
erotic images. Research and&#13;
reviews (e.g., Eysenck &amp; Nia's,&#13;
1978; Malmuth &amp; Check, 1981;&#13;
Malamuth &amp; Spinner, 1980) tend to&#13;
suggest that such images have&#13;
been on the increase in recent&#13;
years. More important are the&#13;
findings that have shown that&#13;
exposure to aggressive erotica&#13;
can, in male subjects, result in (a)&#13;
self - generated rape fantasies&#13;
(Malamuth, in press); (b) an&#13;
increase in sexual arousal&#13;
(Malamuth, Heim &amp; Feshback,&#13;
1980; (c) a lessened sensitivity&#13;
to rape (Malamuth &amp; Check, in&#13;
press); and (d) an increased acceptance&#13;
of r ape myths and interTo&#13;
the Editor,&#13;
"Asserting that those who have&#13;
no power are practicing censorship&#13;
is ludicrous." This, as&#13;
stated in the March 23 Ranger's&#13;
guest editorial, is true. We are a&#13;
grass - roots level protest, exercising&#13;
our own freedom of speech&#13;
to sensitize others to a very valid&#13;
issue.&#13;
Unfortunately, many people do&#13;
not wish to be enlightened to&#13;
pornography's degrading&#13;
treatment of women; to its increasingly&#13;
violent content; and to&#13;
the fact that aggressive pornography&#13;
has been proven to&#13;
increase aggression against&#13;
women. In fact, by the&#13;
exaggerations and blatant lies&#13;
told about our protest, the same&#13;
people who have accused us of&#13;
censorship have literally censored&#13;
the real issue (and people's&#13;
thoughts regarding that issue),&#13;
thus far.&#13;
1. No group in power has been&#13;
asked to stop the movie. We have&#13;
approached these people only to&#13;
make this issue known. They were&#13;
asked to remember that, as individuals&#13;
(and groups of individuals),&#13;
they have every right&#13;
to speak out on this issue. Fear of&#13;
a slap on the wrist by a defensive&#13;
or threatened student group is no&#13;
reason to forfeit one's own&#13;
freedom of speech.&#13;
2. Our petition did not&#13;
"demand" that the showing of t he&#13;
movie be halted. THIS ONE&#13;
MOVIE IS NOT, AND NEVER&#13;
HAS BEEN, THE ISSUE. No&#13;
movie is specified. The petition&#13;
states only what we feel the issue&#13;
is. It ends with the statement:&#13;
"While in agreement with the&#13;
above points, we ask that PAB not&#13;
show pornographic movies in&#13;
what is meant to be our&#13;
educational environment."&#13;
As far as social responsibilities&#13;
are concerned, we have a very&#13;
basic right to a non - degrading,&#13;
non - threatening educational&#13;
environment. Just as we expect&#13;
the KKK and Neo - Nazis not be&#13;
supported and promoted here, so&#13;
do we expect the porn industry not&#13;
be supported and promoted. As&#13;
you can see, social responsibilities&#13;
carry more weight than many&#13;
would wish to admit.&#13;
The other exaggerations and&#13;
lies are imbecilic. We take this as&#13;
evidence that these people are&#13;
incapable of anything past surface&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
A few days ago, last Wednesday,&#13;
I was walking down the&#13;
hall over by the bookstore. I was&#13;
looking into the bookstore window&#13;
when I heard a number of books&#13;
falling onto the concourse floor.&#13;
Without stopping to see what had&#13;
happened, I turned around and&#13;
saw out of the corner of my eye&#13;
that a woman who could have&#13;
been about 25 or so, had fallen&#13;
down, and her books flew into&#13;
every corner of the hall. Not&#13;
thinking that the woman could&#13;
have probably used a little help, I&#13;
just kept walking until I got to the&#13;
first alcove, past the bookstore.&#13;
Then I realized what an idiotic&#13;
thing I had done by not at least&#13;
stopping to see if the woman was&#13;
hurt. So I turned around.&#13;
I didn't go back though. Instead&#13;
I stood down by the corner of t he&#13;
alcove and watched this woman&#13;
slowly get up, gather her books&#13;
and continue. A few people&#13;
chuckled as they went by, perhaps&#13;
giving the woman a feeling of&#13;
being rather embarrassed. None&#13;
of them stopped to help, most&#13;
people either ignored that anyone&#13;
was even on the floor, or they&#13;
personal violence against women&#13;
and (d) an increased acceptance&#13;
of rape myths and interpersonal&#13;
violence against women&#13;
(Malamuth &amp; Check, 1981) as well&#13;
as self - reported possibility of&#13;
raping (Malamuth, Haber, &amp;&#13;
Feshbach, 1980). It is of further&#13;
interest to note that these increases&#13;
in arousal and changes in&#13;
rape attitudes are also highly&#13;
correlated with actual aggression&#13;
against women (e.g., Donnerstein&#13;
&amp; Malamuth, forthcoming;&#13;
Malamuth &amp; Donnerstein, forthcoming).&#13;
These attitudinal&#13;
effects and their correlations with&#13;
aggression were the basis for a&#13;
series of studies that have&#13;
examined the direct relationship&#13;
between aggressive erotica and&#13;
subsequent aggressive behavior."&#13;
While absorbing this research,&#13;
people of conscience will realize&#13;
that pornography is no longer&#13;
what it used to be. It has evolved&#13;
into an extreme.&#13;
What must be understood is that&#13;
by showing pornographic&#13;
materials on campus, we are&#13;
supporting and promoting an&#13;
industry which literally&#13;
legitimizes a culture of violence&#13;
against women.&#13;
NOTE: Anyone interested in&#13;
reading any of our material is&#13;
more than welcome to do so&#13;
Believe me, we have a lot of it&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Donna L. Sahakian&#13;
The insensitivity of it all&#13;
stared in a rather critical way,&#13;
like the woman had something&#13;
wrong with her. Feeling rather&#13;
guilty about just standing there&#13;
staring at her myself, I approached&#13;
the woman and&#13;
questioned if she was alright. She&#13;
glared at me, and reported, "Yes,&#13;
I'm fine, just never mind."&#13;
This of course made me feel&#13;
even better. In the midst of feeling&#13;
good, I realized that the only&#13;
reason the woman had responded&#13;
to me in the way she did was&#13;
because she had indeed felt a little&#13;
embarrassed by what had taken&#13;
place, and maybe she was a bit&#13;
angry that no one had the&#13;
courtesy to even help her pick up&#13;
her books. I guess I would have&#13;
felt much the same way. I certainly&#13;
would have responded&#13;
similarly.&#13;
Thursday was another day, and&#13;
insensitivity still ran rampid&#13;
through the halls of Parkside. This&#13;
time though, the insensitivity took&#13;
place down in the Union Bazarr&#13;
area, right before the X-rated film&#13;
was shown. There were opposers&#13;
to the film, who all stood in a&#13;
single area, just making their&#13;
stand known, they weren't loud or&#13;
obnoxious, or insensitive to the&#13;
people m the line who were drawn&#13;
m to see the film. They just&#13;
wanted to do all they could to let&#13;
people know where they stand&#13;
Then there were the people&#13;
standing in the line. Some talking&#13;
amongst themselves, others&#13;
looking rather embarrassed about&#13;
Theirnprnh&#13;
Gy ^ StGpped into&#13;
-&#13;
ineir embarrassment was not&#13;
enough to keep them from seeing&#13;
the movie however.&#13;
The third group was a rather&#13;
dispassionate looking group&#13;
stirring in and amongst the crowd&#13;
perhaps looking for a wa™&#13;
demonstrate a good bit of insensitivity.&#13;
They did an outstanding&#13;
job. A n umber of people&#13;
took one girl and made it look as if&#13;
they had chained and bound her&#13;
into captivity and dragged her off&#13;
to wherever. To be honest, I was&#13;
rather embarrassed by the insensitive&#13;
display the group had&#13;
put on. It showed how curiously&#13;
unintelligent a group can be. The&#13;
display really only caused bad&#13;
feelings for the student / faculty&#13;
opposition demonstration, and the&#13;
people waiting in line to see the&#13;
movie.&#13;
While I'm sure certain people&#13;
found the demonstration quite&#13;
humorous, others felt the impact&#13;
in the vulnerability they experience&#13;
every day. It's one thing&#13;
to take a stand and recognize with&#13;
others that stand, and demonstrate&#13;
that stand in a well -&#13;
thought, intelligent manner. It&#13;
becomes a different kind of experience&#13;
when people lose the&#13;
perspective of sensitivity that&#13;
they otherwise might hold. It's a&#13;
shame that has to happen in an&#13;
institution of higher education,&#13;
then again, maybe the insensitivity&#13;
of it all has to be seen&#13;
as part of t he learning experience&#13;
for all involved.&#13;
Correction&#13;
Pat Mulligan, a Parkside&#13;
Senior is not graduating with&#13;
honors in Economics. She is&#13;
graduating with Distinction in&#13;
the Honors program. Her story&#13;
was the second in a series on&#13;
students involved in the Honors&#13;
program and graduating with&#13;
Distinction.&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
Herbert Kubly&#13;
anger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
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responsiblefoM tsTdItor i&#13;
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Published every Thur^,. J "f"&#13;
6* and&#13;
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Written permission is Sired'm Coopera,ive Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All co&#13;
rrespondence shm?iH ^5iHrf&#13;
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'ionof RANGER.&#13;
Parkside, Box No 2000 yP„nt?&#13;
dr&#13;
"?.&#13;
ed ,0: Pa&#13;
rkside Ranger, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Letters to the Edi'toVw'ilhoI ' ^&#13;
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- 53141.&#13;
Paper with one inch marnin.A ?^&#13;
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eluded for verification letters must be signed and a telephone number inDeadtfne"f&#13;
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Va&#13;
''&#13;
reasor&#13;
«&#13;
reserves all editorial ilrkmjJX • p m for Publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content pr,vtleBes ,n refusing to print letters which contain false or &#13;
Bu&#13;
t&#13;
s&#13;
i&#13;
ness Club seeks to form Frat&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, April 14,1983&#13;
Clube&#13;
isPDir&#13;
a&#13;
knnde ^&#13;
0men Bu&#13;
siness UUD is planning to petition for a 2KJ- 1116 Phi Gamma NS&#13;
Phi rnm °&#13;
n ?T&#13;
ampus next fall. Phi Gamma Nu is a national&#13;
ODen^ohTh fraternity in business ?&#13;
p&#13;
.&#13;
n to both men and women. The&#13;
fha/h*&#13;
y&#13;
.&#13;
Consists of chapters that have been instituted at fully&#13;
accredited universities, colleges&#13;
and departments of business&#13;
a&#13;
t—ahon, offering courses&#13;
leading to recognized business&#13;
degrees. Persons who have&#13;
completed six credits of&#13;
business subjects,&#13;
eco nom ics&#13;
pre -&#13;
including&#13;
r e t a ili n g ,&#13;
management, political science,&#13;
data processing, food&#13;
management and other courses&#13;
are eligible for membership.&#13;
Phi Gamma Nu has a student&#13;
loan fund from which any undergraduate&#13;
may receive aid in&#13;
order to complete their education.&#13;
The fraternity also supports four&#13;
different scholarships to encourage&#13;
academically minded&#13;
students to increase their GPA's,&#13;
as well as the average GPA of the&#13;
chapter as a whole.&#13;
summer and early fall and would&#13;
like to hear from any interested&#13;
students. There will be a table&#13;
with information and signup&#13;
sheets in the Molinaro concourse&#13;
this Wednesday, Apr. 19, at 6:30 p.&#13;
m. There will also be a signup&#13;
sheet on the bulletin board next to&#13;
Irene Herreman's office, Moln&#13;
326H.&#13;
3 students awarded&#13;
BRI fellowships&#13;
Women in Business is currently&#13;
organizing activities for this&#13;
More information about what&#13;
Phi Gamma Nu has to offer will be&#13;
presented at the next Women in&#13;
Business meeting, Apr. 21 at 1 p.&#13;
m. Interested students are&#13;
^ ° — welcome.&#13;
Small business workshop scheduled&#13;
"HHow ow to Read and Ttifn * to Read and Interpret&#13;
Financial Statements" will be the&#13;
topic of a three - part seminar for&#13;
owners, managers and key emP'oyees&#13;
of small businesses to be&#13;
held from 9 a.m. to noon on three&#13;
successive Wednesdays — Apr. 13&#13;
20 and 27 — in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Union.&#13;
The seminar will be taught by&#13;
Robert R. Davidson, a financial&#13;
management specialist, who holds&#13;
a master's degree in business&#13;
administration and is an associate&#13;
professor of business and an area&#13;
business agent for University&#13;
Extension. Davidson instructs and&#13;
counsels small businessmen in&#13;
Milwaukee, Racine and Kenosha&#13;
and has six years of small -&#13;
business management experience&#13;
in Milwaukee and Chicago.&#13;
Persons interested in&#13;
establishing a small business, as&#13;
well as spouses of persons who&#13;
own or operate small businesses,&#13;
also are encouraged to enroll in&#13;
Letters&#13;
NACA: Thanks&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is an open letter to all those&#13;
Parkside students who gave of&#13;
their time and energy this past&#13;
weekend during the NACA&#13;
(National Association for Campus&#13;
Activities) Regional Conference.&#13;
It was because of your support&#13;
that we received so many compliments&#13;
about Parkside and this&#13;
being "one of the best regional&#13;
conferences" — which made us&#13;
Is Parkside Lucky?&#13;
proud to work with such a great&#13;
bunch of students.&#13;
We hope that you were able to&#13;
view Parkside in a different light&#13;
this past weekend, and were able&#13;
to allow your pride in Parkside to&#13;
show through. Your support was&#13;
greatly appreciated!&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
"Co-op Couvion"&#13;
and&#13;
"Marilyn Parkside"&#13;
the seminar, which will be of&#13;
interest to operators of retail,&#13;
service, manufacturing and&#13;
wholesale enterprises.&#13;
The first session, titled "Und&#13;
e rs t a n d i n g F i n a n c i al&#13;
Statements," will focus on&#13;
balance sheets and income&#13;
statements, accrual versus cash&#13;
methods of accounting and four&#13;
types of accounts. How to make&#13;
debits and credits easier to understand&#13;
also will be discussed.&#13;
The second session, "Interpreting&#13;
and Analyzing&#13;
Financial Results," will explore&#13;
using operating ratios as a&#13;
barometer of business health and&#13;
how to use ratios to compare one&#13;
business to another.&#13;
The third session, "Financial&#13;
Planning and Budgeting," will&#13;
examine the methods of projecting&#13;
income and expenses,&#13;
planning cash flow and budgeting&#13;
for cost - control.&#13;
The $15 enrollment fee includes&#13;
all three sessions, handout&#13;
materials and refreshments.&#13;
Complete registration material&#13;
can be obtained by calling&#13;
Parkside's Office of Business&#13;
Outreach at 553-2047 or 553-2189.&#13;
Advance payment is required.&#13;
P a r k s i d e 's Biom edic al&#13;
Research Institute has announced&#13;
selection of three 1983 undergraduate&#13;
summer research&#13;
fellows who will spend 10 weeks&#13;
working with UW-Parkside&#13;
faculty members associated with&#13;
the Institute.&#13;
Recipients of the fellowships,&#13;
which carry a $1,200 stipend, are:&#13;
Mark De Rosch, 7834-42nd Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha, who will work with Prof.&#13;
Edward Wallen, life science,&#13;
studying the relationship between&#13;
the peneal gland, the hormone&#13;
melatonin and photoperiodism as&#13;
they affect reproduction. The&#13;
experiments involve varying the&#13;
light / dark cycle and determining&#13;
what affect this has on hormone&#13;
production.&#13;
Sharon Rudnick, 9009 River&#13;
Road, Kenosha, who will work&#13;
withProf. Keith Ward chemistry&#13;
on a project attempting to obtain&#13;
crystals of the anti - tumor drug&#13;
bleomycin and to .:haractemeits&#13;
crystalline structure b&#13;
y X-ray&#13;
diffraction techniques. An und&#13;
e r st a n d i n g o f the c r y s a1&#13;
' ^&#13;
struc ture cou ld faci lita te&#13;
development of even more el&#13;
fective drug analogs.&#13;
Judith Rudnick, 3339 N. Charles&#13;
St Baltimore, Md., who will work&#13;
Bruce Branchini,&#13;
in attempting to&#13;
the enwith&#13;
Prof,&#13;
chemistry,&#13;
synthesize inhibitors of&#13;
zyme acetylcholinesterase, which&#13;
, is involved in neurotransmission.&#13;
The development of specific&#13;
inhibitors of this enzyme has&#13;
important clinical implications in&#13;
cardiology.&#13;
The fellowships are supported&#13;
by BRI funds and a grant from the&#13;
Johnson Wax Fund of Racine.&#13;
Students, teachers get together&#13;
for physics conference&#13;
The 38th annual meeting of the&#13;
Wisconsin section of American&#13;
Association of Physics Teachers&#13;
will be held at Parkside on Friday&#13;
and Saturday, Apr. 22-23. The&#13;
meeting will be held jointly with&#13;
Zone 8 (Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana,&#13;
and the upper peninsula of&#13;
Michigan) of the Society of&#13;
Physics Students. The conference&#13;
will feature talks and demonstrations&#13;
by Wisconsin physics&#13;
teachers as well as talks on&#13;
research projects carried out by&#13;
students from schools in&#13;
Wisconsin and Michigan. Special&#13;
highlights of the meeting will be a&#13;
demonstration presented by Joe&#13;
Meyer, Vice President of&#13;
American Association of Physics&#13;
Teachers, titled "The Physics of&#13;
Plagiarism, or Demonstrations I&#13;
Have Stolen"; and a talk by&#13;
Edwin Goldwasser of the&#13;
University of Illinois titled&#13;
"Changing Attitudes Toward&#13;
Research and Risk in our&#13;
Society."&#13;
The demonstration show will be&#13;
given at 4 p .m. in Grq. 103, and&#13;
Prof. Goldwassertalk will be&#13;
given after the annual banquet on&#13;
Friday evening. Another special&#13;
feature of this year's meeting is&#13;
the participation of a large group&#13;
of high school teachers, which has&#13;
been made possible through&#13;
grants from the Johnson Foundation,&#13;
Twin Disc, Inc, Unico Inc,&#13;
and UW-Parkside.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As of this past weekend&#13;
Parkside students were offered&#13;
the opportunity to see Emmanudle.&#13;
&#13;
Should we feel lucky to have a&#13;
pornographic movie such as this&#13;
on campus?&#13;
PAB has to justify its showing of&#13;
the film. We can understand&#13;
people's constitutional rights and&#13;
that type of argument. Also as&#13;
they say, it will make a lot of&#13;
money. Is money the only goal of&#13;
PAB in showing films on campus?&#13;
Since this film has been shown&#13;
you've accomplished both purposes&#13;
. My question is this: What is&#13;
Will this type of movie now be&#13;
shown on a regular basis and&#13;
always for the above mentioned&#13;
reasons?&#13;
, Why? Why?&#13;
There are movie houses with a&#13;
reputation for this type of film. Do&#13;
we need to use our fine university&#13;
for this purpose? Everyone has&#13;
heard the old cliche, "money is&#13;
the root of all evil." Let's not&#13;
encourage the pornography industry&#13;
with our patronage.&#13;
Let's not degrade our school and&#13;
ruin our growing fine reputation&#13;
by showing films that are objectionable.&#13;
&#13;
Sincerely&#13;
Extension offers summer workshop&#13;
in the creative arts&#13;
Anyone interested in the&#13;
creative arts can combine leisure&#13;
and learning at the twentieth&#13;
annual session of the Rhinelander&#13;
School of Arts, July 25-29. Sponsored&#13;
by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Extension Arts&#13;
Development Unit, the school held&#13;
at Rhinelander offers workshops&#13;
in writing, the Visual arts,&#13;
photography and dance.&#13;
Harry Mark Petrakis, noted&#13;
novelist and short story writer will&#13;
the next step? E.Spalla be be in in resiideer nce, as will the inv.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.......-.................&#13;
ternationally known watercolor&#13;
painter, Valfred Thelin.&#13;
include: article, fiction, non -&#13;
fiction, juvenile, poetry,&#13;
playwrighting, humor, radio,&#13;
colu mn, reg ion al and&#13;
reminiscence writing. A writing&#13;
course in "Inperpreting Nature,"&#13;
coupled with environmental field&#13;
trips will also be offered, plus&#13;
courses in marketing, journal&#13;
writing and storytelling.&#13;
In the visual arts, workshops in&#13;
oil and watercolor painting,&#13;
drawing and illustrating, woodcarving,&#13;
and Raku pottery will be&#13;
given. Beginning and advanced&#13;
photography will also be offered&#13;
and DANCECIRCUS will give&#13;
dance workshops for children and&#13;
adults.&#13;
For a brochure with complete&#13;
information about the school&#13;
write to: Gen Lewis, UWEX 610&#13;
Langdon, Rm. 722) Madison' WI&#13;
53706; or Cedric Vig, Rhinelander&#13;
School of Arts, P.O Box&#13;
Rhinelander, WI 54501. 695,&#13;
Veteran's Club Run Saturday Creative writing courses will&#13;
The Parkside Veteran's Club is&#13;
sponsoring a five - mile race this&#13;
Saturday, Apr. 16 at 9 a.m.&#13;
The race will begin under the&#13;
Union Bridge on the Inner Loop&#13;
Road. Course maps will be&#13;
available at 8:30 a.m. on race day.&#13;
Entry fee is $6 and will include&#13;
admission to a post - race dance on&#13;
the Union Patio. The dance is also&#13;
open to the general public, for a $3&#13;
fee. The music of the band&#13;
"Jazmin" will be featured.&#13;
The admission price includes a&#13;
T-shirt, which will be available to&#13;
early registrants at race time. All&#13;
other registrants will get their&#13;
shirts the week after the race. Tshirts&#13;
will also be available to non&#13;
- entrants, for an additional $3 fee.&#13;
Write&#13;
Ranger&#13;
a l etter&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
NEED HELP F IGHTING BACK?&#13;
LEARN WHATTHE UNIVERSITY&#13;
WON'T TEACH YOU&#13;
Regarding resolving conflicts with school, governmental&#13;
agencies, businesses, landlords, etc.&#13;
Advice on "Games You Were Never Taught'&#13;
and 2 Letters to Your Adversary.&#13;
654-1903 Rets Hanson, M.A.&#13;
REASONABLE RATES&#13;
Not A Legal or Psychological Service&#13;
IS&#13;
linger&#13;
now accepting applications for&#13;
Editor&#13;
for the 1983-84 academic&#13;
Applicants must be registe]&#13;
Parkside students plannin,&#13;
least 6 credits each seme&#13;
K a d l i n e f °&#13;
r aPpUcatU&#13;
Iy&#13;
°°n, April 22, 1*&#13;
Send application RANGEF&#13;
Resume to:&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
ATT: Ch &#13;
Thursday, April 14, 1983 RANGER&#13;
by Patrick Luchack&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside will be visited by a man&#13;
Apr. 19, wh o is better known for&#13;
dropping in on the Yanomamo in&#13;
southern Venezuela than on a&#13;
group of students in southern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
He is Dr. Napolean A. Chagnon&#13;
and his anthropological work&#13;
among the Yanomamo is probably&#13;
some of the best known anthropological&#13;
literature around&#13;
Chagnon's book "The Fierce&#13;
People" is one of the first required&#13;
readings for any student entering&#13;
the field of anthropology.&#13;
Chagnon, who is presently at&#13;
Northwestern University in&#13;
Illinois, has written dozens of&#13;
articles, as well as producing over&#13;
Anthro Antics&#13;
twenty documentary films, on&#13;
these people of the South&#13;
American rain forest; taken from&#13;
ten field studies lead by himself to&#13;
this still unwesternized land.&#13;
Chagnon is coming to Parkside&#13;
not to talk on the Yanomamo, but&#13;
on a subject that is currently&#13;
interesting even to the general&#13;
public and will hold a special&#13;
interest for anthropology&#13;
students, life science students,&#13;
psychology students and any other&#13;
student or faculty member who is&#13;
interested in why humans act the&#13;
way they do; the topic is the&#13;
controversial subject of&#13;
Sociobiology.&#13;
The heart of Chagnon's talk will&#13;
be based on how this school of&#13;
thought, concerned with human&#13;
CLUB EVENTS&#13;
behavior, affects contemporary&#13;
anthropological endeavors. We&#13;
would like to stress at this point&#13;
that because human behavior is&#13;
the bottom line concern of this&#13;
topic and we are all humans; this&#13;
talk by Dr. Chagnon should be of&#13;
interest to a lot of people even&#13;
presently not involved with any&#13;
facet of the Behavior or Physical&#13;
sciences.&#13;
Everyone at the university is&#13;
encouraged to listen to this&#13;
fascinating man. I can almost&#13;
guarantee you that you will not be&#13;
disappointed. For additional information&#13;
stop up at the anthro&#13;
lab m Moln. 321 and ask any&#13;
smiling faced anthro student up&#13;
there. The lecture is scheduled for&#13;
1 P- m . in Moln. 324.&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
FALL SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seekino a&#13;
degree a UW-Parkside) should consult their academic adviser&#13;
prior to registration for Fall Semester. A Certification of Ad&#13;
vising form, signed by the adviser, is required for registration.&#13;
lorinT^hfl KC0Ur&#13;
!f Schedules wi&#13;
" be available on April n.&#13;
April 11-25 has been designated as an academic advising period&#13;
and advisers will make every effort to meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean of&#13;
acuity, 348 Wylhe Library - Learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non - matriculant students (students not seekinc a&#13;
degree at UW-Parkside) are exempt from this requirement.&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
ALL STUDENTS! I&#13;
1. YOUR REGISTRATION PACKET FOR FALL 1983 will ha&#13;
availab'e beginning Monday, April n, 1983 in Lower Main&#13;
2. COURSE SCHEDULES FOR FALL 1983 will also be available.&#13;
OFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL&#13;
ANALYSIS AND REGISTRATION&#13;
Accounting&#13;
Tickets for the Spring Banquet&#13;
are now being sold in Molinaro&#13;
Hall. The price is $15 for the&#13;
dinner and dance. If you just want&#13;
to go to the dance, tickets are $8&#13;
The banquet will be held at the&#13;
Racine Sheraton. The music of&#13;
"Carolina County" will be&#13;
featured.&#13;
For all Accounting Principles&#13;
students the learning Lab is open&#13;
Monday through Thursday from 9&#13;
a.m. to 12 p.m.&#13;
Geology&#13;
"Paleomagnetic Characteristics&#13;
of the Ordovician -&#13;
Silurian Boundary in Wisconsin"&#13;
will be the next Geology&#13;
Colloquium, to be held on Friday,&#13;
Apr. 15 at 3 p.m. in Grq. 113'&#13;
Sponsored by the Geology Club."&#13;
ISO&#13;
The International Students&#13;
Organization will have a meeting&#13;
on Friday, Apr. 15 a t 1 p.m. in&#13;
Union 106. A membership drive&#13;
and preparation for the ISO&#13;
elections will be the main activities.&#13;
&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
If you are interested in&#13;
becoming a 1983 - '84 Parkside '&#13;
cheerleader you can pick up&#13;
applications at the Union Information&#13;
Center. There will be&#13;
workshops on Tuesday, Apr 19&#13;
and Wednesday, Apr. 20 from 2 to&#13;
8 p. m. in the Phy Ed building.&#13;
Try outs are on Monday Apr 25&#13;
at 6 p. m.&#13;
PSE&#13;
The third annual Loop 500 ro ad&#13;
race will be held on Wednesday,&#13;
Apr. 27 a t 1. p. m. on the Inner&#13;
Loop Road. Entrance fee is $10 per&#13;
team, which includes a T - shirt&#13;
for each team member and one&#13;
pitcher of beer per team. The&#13;
teams must consist of two men&#13;
and two women. Prizes for the&#13;
winning teams will be announced&#13;
during signup week.&#13;
Signup will begin on Wed., Apr.&#13;
20 in the Molinaro Concourse. The&#13;
race is sponsored by PSE and the&#13;
Marketing Club.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
The Art Addicts and the Fine&#13;
Arts Division would like to announce&#13;
the opening of the 1983&#13;
Student Art Show on Monday, Apr..&#13;
18 at 7 p. m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Gallery. Jane Brite, this year's&#13;
judge, will give a presentation&#13;
about this year's show. All are&#13;
welcome to attend.&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
Trike Race Two has been moved&#13;
to Apr. 22nd, in order to appease&#13;
the Flagpersons Union. The Union&#13;
Steward said "the UWPDT&#13;
negotiation team knew they, didn't&#13;
stand a chance. We have always&#13;
thought them to be a bit slow. You&#13;
know what I mean, like dense&#13;
even. The Brewers home opener is&#13;
a state holiday. There is no way in&#13;
hell we would even consider&#13;
working that day."&#13;
The UWPDT Negotiation team,&#13;
after hearing the flagpersons&#13;
comments, stated, "I wonder&#13;
what that guy meant by dense?"&#13;
The UWPDT would like any&#13;
student organizations interested&#13;
in participating in a large fund&#13;
raising party to drop off a note in&#13;
the UWPDT mail box in the SOC&#13;
office, with the name and phone&#13;
number of your club's fund raising&#13;
representative. The UWPDT&#13;
would like to have an event big&#13;
enough to profit all organizations&#13;
involved.&#13;
To those who helped on the&#13;
Peter J. Simon percussion recital,&#13;
thank you very much.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
TOSENTS PARADOX STUDIO THEATRE®&#13;
THE WORLD&#13;
"AND OTHER INVFNTIOM?&#13;
A NEW PLAY BY LUIS O. ARATA "&#13;
WEDNESDA Y, APRIL 27,1983 8:00p m&#13;
COMMUNICATION ARTS THEATRE&#13;
Advance Tickets $3.50 General Admission&#13;
$2.50 Students/Staff/Seniors&#13;
at the door $4.00 &lt;&amp; $3.00&#13;
_ _&#13;
r&#13;
f _&#13;
c&#13;
fT' 553-2581&#13;
SPECIAL OFFER WITH THIS COUPON: One •&#13;
show P L US one t i c k e t fo r 'A Del n&#13;
C k e t f o r t h&#13;
' s&#13;
22-21.,29-301 for SA in advan ce 0"'&#13;
e&#13;
J&#13;
8l&#13;
«ce' (Apri,&#13;
Center o r Fin e Ar t s D i v is O f f i J . °&#13;
n , n f o&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESS &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 14,1983&#13;
A personal account of Parkside's trip to the U S S&#13;
„ Feature Editor's Note: Alan G. _ I « • V Vi «&#13;
Zond is PflrlrClHp cfll^onf nn/4 Krin^nrr /&gt;« 4A *_ L _r. t « ..&#13;
Feature Editor's Note: Alan G.&#13;
Zond is a Parkside student, and&#13;
w spring break he travelled to&#13;
the Soviet Union. The following is&#13;
a personal account of his travels,&#13;
by Alan G. Zond&#13;
Saturday, March 5&#13;
We met at Howard Johnson's for&#13;
a farewell brunch this morning. In&#13;
all, there are 11 people in our&#13;
group: Ken Hoover, group leader;&#13;
Judy Hoover, the head of the&#13;
district office for Congressman&#13;
Les Aspin; Marvin Nice, a&#13;
Kenosha physician; Theresa&#13;
Wintis, a beautician from Racine;&#13;
Robert Gertenbach, a retired&#13;
banker, also from Racine; Wesley&#13;
Brooks, a Parkside Business&#13;
Graduate student; Vince&#13;
Tomkiewicz, a UW-Madison&#13;
graduate; Eugene Dunk, Eric&#13;
Simonsen, Diane Evans,&#13;
Georgette Kellam and myself'&#13;
who are all UW-Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
After checking to make sure all&#13;
our papers were in order, we&#13;
boarded a bus to take us down to&#13;
O'Hare Airport for our flight to&#13;
New York. The flight was of the&#13;
cramped commuter variety, but&#13;
the time passed quickly as we&#13;
engaged ourselves in conversation&#13;
with members of our own and&#13;
other groups.&#13;
Once at John F. Kennedy International,&#13;
we received our final&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 am - 4:00 p m&#13;
• Jube Jells&#13;
• Licorice Bully&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Milk Carmels&#13;
• Orange Slices&#13;
Peanut Butter Chip&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
Peppermint Kisses&#13;
Rootbeer Barrels&#13;
• Sour Balls&#13;
• Spearment Leaves&#13;
• Starlite Mints&#13;
• Carmel Targets&#13;
• Cinnamon Discs&#13;
• Candy Pops&#13;
• Corn Nuts&#13;
• Assorted Perky&#13;
• Assorted Royal&#13;
• Assorted Toffee&#13;
Bridge Mix&#13;
Burndt Peanuts&#13;
Butterscotch Discs&#13;
• Candy Coffee Discs&#13;
• Carmel Bully&#13;
• Chocolate Drops&#13;
• Chocolate Jots&#13;
• Chocolate Peanuts&#13;
• Chocolate Raisins&#13;
• Chocolate Stars&#13;
• Jelly Beans&#13;
• California Mix&#13;
• Caribbean Delicacy&#13;
• Carob Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Carob Raisins&#13;
• Carob Peanuts&#13;
Natural Pistachio&#13;
_ Red Pistachio&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Sunflower Seeds&#13;
• Student Food Mix&#13;
• Yogurt Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Yogurt Peanuts&#13;
• Yogurt Raisins&#13;
~ Yogurt Sesame Brittle&#13;
Smoked Almonds whole&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF APR. 17&#13;
CHOCOLATE&#13;
COVERED PEAHUTS&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
briefing on the trip before boarding&#13;
our Finair flight to Helsinki.&#13;
Although the flight was an hour&#13;
late in taking off, the service and&#13;
attentiveness of the flight crew&#13;
made the wait well worth it.&#13;
Soviet* Uniom ***"&#13;
pr6Sent war memorials seen throughout the&#13;
Sunday, March 6&#13;
After nearly seven hours in the&#13;
air, we arrived, rather tired, in&#13;
Helsinki. After clearing Passport&#13;
Control, we boarded a bus for a&#13;
sightseeing tour of the city.&#13;
During the tour we had a chance&#13;
to see the many architectural&#13;
wonders, both ancient and&#13;
modern, which abound in this city.&#13;
Among the structures was a&#13;
church which is built into a rock in&#13;
the center of town. Unfortunately,&#13;
since it was Sunday, we were only&#13;
able to see the exteriors of the&#13;
buildings, but found this fi&#13;
our day before we headed&#13;
the airport for our fligl&#13;
Moscow.&#13;
Upon our return to the &lt;&#13;
we boarded an early e&#13;
flight which brought u&#13;
Moscow at 9:15 p.m. Once&#13;
the very modern termii&#13;
headed down an escala&#13;
Customs and Passport (&#13;
where we filled out a decl;&#13;
of the valuables and U.S. cu&#13;
we were bringing into the&#13;
Union. We learned that we&#13;
keep this declaration with u&#13;
times during our trip sir&#13;
would need it whenever •&#13;
changed currency.&#13;
After filling out the decla&#13;
I picked up my luggage an&#13;
Continued On Page S&#13;
CflM€UOT WMUSK&#13;
IS MUSIC AND&#13;
Prices Good&#13;
Thru&#13;
Sunday&#13;
112 WAR VANGELIS&#13;
CHARIOTS OF FIRE&#13;
(Jrigmal SounJtnxk Album&#13;
BRYAN ADAMS&#13;
Cuts Like A Kijife&#13;
Albums&#13;
•andB&#13;
cassettes&#13;
Give the gift&#13;
of mus tie.&#13;
U2 WAR • STYX • MICHAEL JACKSON&#13;
PINK FLOYD • KENNY ROGERS&#13;
ALABAMA • DEXYS MIDNIGHT RUNNERS&#13;
PINK FLOYD&#13;
THE FINAL CUT&#13;
including;&#13;
^Sy~&#13;
l&#13;
*.P"&#13;
U/Th&#13;
* Gunner. Dm.m&#13;
The Fletcher Memorial Home&#13;
Not Now John/The Final Cut&#13;
MICHAEL&#13;
JACKSON&#13;
THRILLER&#13;
Thrilr/^2* 2!".&#13;
h *&#13;
,ul McCartney)&#13;
Mlne/Blllle Jean&#13;
Wanna Be Startln Somethln&#13;
is MUSIC AND "&#13;
VQ,&#13;
loble At Vour Nearby&#13;
MOR€! CflM€LOT MUSIC Store &#13;
Milwaukee group to perform | Soviet trip Continued&#13;
MMililwwaauukkeeee's ParaHnv 's Paradox Studio&#13;
Theatre will bring its production&#13;
of L uis O. Arata's new play, "The&#13;
World and Other Inventions,"&#13;
which depicts the clash between&#13;
science and the arts, to Parkside&#13;
at8p. m. on Wednesday, Apr. 27 in&#13;
the Comm. Arts Theatre.&#13;
The Parkside performance is&#13;
being supported by a $1,000 grant&#13;
from the Wisconsin Humanities&#13;
Committee and will feature&#13;
Paradox performers who&#13;
premiered the play on April 8 in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The play is directed by David&#13;
Rommel, who has studied and&#13;
acted in New York, London and&#13;
Minneapolis and is a member of&#13;
Milwaukee's professional experimental&#13;
theatre company&#13;
Theatre X.&#13;
Advance tickets are $2.50 for all&#13;
students, staff and senior citizens&#13;
and $3.50 for others. Tickets at the&#13;
door are $3 for students, UW - P&#13;
staff and senior citizens and $4 for&#13;
others. Reservations can be made&#13;
by calling 553-2581 or 553-2345 and&#13;
tickets can be purchased at the&#13;
Campus Information Desk or at&#13;
the Fine Arts Division office.&#13;
In "The World and Other In&#13;
ventions," Arata, a native of&#13;
Argentina who holds an undergraduate&#13;
degree in physics&#13;
and a PhD in literature and&#13;
theater from Cornell University,&#13;
creates two friends — former&#13;
college roommates — who&#13;
represent opposite ends of the&#13;
intellectual spectrum. One&#13;
character is a physicist, the other&#13;
a playwright and in the course of&#13;
the play the two confront each&#13;
other's ideological positions. The&#13;
playwright condemns science for&#13;
inventions like nuclear weapons&#13;
and the scientist criticizes&#13;
humanity for using morally&#13;
neutral scientific discoveries for&#13;
destructive purposes.&#13;
Special ticket prices are&#13;
available with a coupon appearing&#13;
in the Ranger. For $4, one can buy&#13;
both a ticket to "The World and&#13;
Other Inventions" plus a ticket to&#13;
Parkside Dramatic Arts&#13;
Discipline's spring production of&#13;
Edward Albee's "A Delicate&#13;
Balance," which will be performed&#13;
at 8 p. m. on April 22, 23 , 29&#13;
and 30 and at 2 p. m. on April 24 in&#13;
the Comm. Arts Theater.&#13;
'Mozart on Fifth' to play here&#13;
"Three bums redeemed by&#13;
music."&#13;
That's the self - description erf&#13;
Mozart on Fifth, a trio of versatile&#13;
musicians which will bring its&#13;
ecclectic music to Parkside in a&#13;
dessert theater concert on&#13;
Thursday, Apr. 21 at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Campus Union Dining Room. The&#13;
program is sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Advance tickets are available at&#13;
the Union Information Center.&#13;
Admission is $2 for UW-P&#13;
students; $4 f or others.&#13;
The three classically - trained&#13;
"bums" are Richard Goldfarb,&#13;
clarinet-, Daniel Kelly, clarinet,&#13;
and Ron Grun, bassoon, and their&#13;
music ranges from Mozart,&#13;
performed in 18th Century&#13;
costume on New York's Fifth&#13;
Avenue and subsequently around&#13;
the country, to Scott Joplin, their&#13;
nominee as the "Bach of pop."&#13;
Their current success, including&#13;
gigs at Lincoln Center, the&#13;
Whitney Concert Series, the New&#13;
York Historical Society and the&#13;
Museum of Natural History in&#13;
New York, the New Orleans Mardi&#13;
Gras and festivals around the&#13;
nation, is a "rags to Restoration&#13;
riches" story.&#13;
Six years ago, Goldfarb, the&#13;
leader of the group, was a&#13;
struggling young clarinetist who&#13;
ushered at Carnegie Hall and&#13;
moonlighted as a street musician&#13;
playing for his supper.&#13;
But Goldfarb had a street act&#13;
with class. He performed Mozart&#13;
on one of toniest corners in&#13;
Manhattan: Fifth Avenue at 56th&#13;
St., along with Kelly and Grun.&#13;
Shortly after their debut, they&#13;
added 18th Century period dress to&#13;
their ensemble and Joplin as well&#13;
as show tunes to their repertoire.&#13;
It got them off the streets — and&#13;
into some of New York's most&#13;
respected concert halls. That led&#13;
to dates outside Manhattan and a&#13;
growing reputation for both&#13;
showmanship, representative of a&#13;
new kind of chamber group&#13;
playing everything from Bach to&#13;
the Beatles, often in non -&#13;
traditional settings.&#13;
In the process, they have&#13;
diversified their original two&#13;
clarinets and bassoon instrumentation&#13;
to include&#13;
saxaphone, flute, bass clarinet,&#13;
guitar and banjo, and their&#13;
program to include a number of&#13;
jazz styles.&#13;
According to critics, they&#13;
manage to put it all together&#13;
whether they're performing on the&#13;
sidewalks of New York or out in&#13;
the "provinces."&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
ARCHAEOLOGY/TRAVEL Excavate a&#13;
biblical site, 6 credits, 1983summer session.&#13;
Call (608 ) 262-9785 for information&#13;
BREWERS OPENING DAY: Parkside's&#13;
buses leave at 11:30 a.m. from Union&#13;
Bazaar.&#13;
ARE YOU NOW LOOKING FOR A JOB? Do&#13;
you know what employers expect? If you&#13;
would like to find out, you are welcome to&#13;
attend an Organizational Communications&#13;
Workshop in Moln D101 April 14th at 7 00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
SHARE 2 bedroom at Woodcreek beginning&#13;
June 1st. Call 552-9528 before 8:30 a.m or&#13;
nighttime by end of April.&#13;
PIANO PLAYER WANTED: For rock/blues&#13;
band. Call 654 4456 or 654-3624.&#13;
LOST: Maxwell UDXL-90min. tape on second&#13;
floor in library. If found, call Jose at 634-&#13;
1919, room 326; $5.00 reward.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
RJP: Happy 20th Birthday!!! From your&#13;
little girl,&#13;
SCOOTIE: Meet you in Baraboo in 35 days!&#13;
Fondly, the Racoons&#13;
MR. G: Are we legal in Peoria? Mrs. G.&#13;
I WAS RIGHT! Everything I knew was&#13;
wrong! Cox&#13;
INNOCENT OR OTHERWISE: Never trust a&#13;
prankster.&#13;
DEBBIE LEE: Mon amie et I'amie d'Henri,&#13;
Dont (comme M Rousseau) Les feuilles&#13;
sont belles trop, Done en deuil, n'en sois pas&#13;
quand je dis: "ie n'aime pas Une coquille "&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, tut tut Giovanni R&#13;
Mutt.&#13;
ALLEZ, ALLEZ! 3 wins In Debuque!&#13;
WHAT WELL KNOWN EDITOR LOST HER&#13;
CAR LAST FRIDAY?&#13;
CHRIS H.: I'll always love you, even if you&#13;
don't like tuna fishing.&#13;
WHAT WELL KNOWN EDITOR was recently&#13;
seen being happy about her permanently&#13;
missing brother?&#13;
MOLLY: What will we do during next year's&#13;
Brew - Crew opener?&#13;
PAT: I'm glad we didn't eliminate a week&#13;
BLANCHE - DAHLING: See at the gayla&#13;
party in May at youknowwho's house Then&#13;
I'll be off to Florida.&#13;
MOLLY: Be patient w/me, and have a good&#13;
weekend, I mean an excellent weekend!&#13;
RICK: Leave me alone. Gen&#13;
RICK: You irritMe me! Gen&#13;
GEN: Leave me alone. Rick&#13;
GEN: You irritate me! Rick&#13;
RICK &amp; GEN: You always fight. Rudy&#13;
RICK &amp; GEN: Embarrassed?&#13;
RICK: I'm sorry. Gen&#13;
GEN: I'm sorry. Rick&#13;
RICK &amp; GEN: Good. Rudy&#13;
RICK &amp; GEN: April Fool's. Fool&#13;
BRUCE P.: Is green your color or was it the&#13;
store clerk? You rascal you!&#13;
NEVER TRUST a barking duck. Well, almost&#13;
never.&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
over to baggage inspection where&#13;
my declaration was stamped and&#13;
my luggage X-rayed. In all, it took&#13;
the entire group about an hour and&#13;
a half to clear customs, so that we&#13;
did not leave for the hotel until&#13;
11:30 p.m. The bus ride and check&#13;
in at the hotel Cosmos occupied&#13;
another hour. Thus, by the time I&#13;
got up to my floor and obtained&#13;
my key from the key lady it was&#13;
nearly 12:30 a.m. Being&#13;
thoroughly exhausted, I unpacked&#13;
only the bare essentials and&#13;
headed straight to bed.&#13;
I feel an explanation of t he term&#13;
"key lady" is warranted here,&#13;
since the concept is totally foreign&#13;
to anyone traveling in the U.S. A&#13;
key lady is an elderly woman who&#13;
is in charge of the dispensing of&#13;
keys on the individual floors. Each&#13;
time you check into a Soviet Hotel,&#13;
you are given a card with your&#13;
room number on it, this card must&#13;
be presented to gain admittance ,&#13;
into the hotel and to obtain your&#13;
key from the key lady each time&#13;
you want to get into your room. It&#13;
is strictly forbidden for you to&#13;
leave the hotel premises with your&#13;
key.&#13;
Monday, March 7&#13;
Today we spent the morning&#13;
touring the city, complete with a&#13;
visit to Red Square. In addition,&#13;
we saw the famed Bolshoi&#13;
Theatre, as well as a panoramic&#13;
view of the massive Kremlin&#13;
complex from across the Moskva&#13;
River. The afternoon was spent&#13;
touring the USSR Economic&#13;
Achievements Exhibition across&#13;
the street from out hotel. The&#13;
exhibition runs throughout the&#13;
year, and shows the various&#13;
agricultural and industrial&#13;
achievements of the Soviet&#13;
Republics. The complex consists&#13;
of 300 buildings, most of which&#13;
were closed, and would take&#13;
almost two days to tour completely.&#13;
After dinner, it was on to&#13;
Tsaichovsky Concert Hall for an&#13;
excellent folk dance performance,&#13;
consisting primarily of the high&#13;
energy dances we most associate&#13;
with Soviet culture.&#13;
Tuesday, March 8&#13;
This morning's tour promised to&#13;
be cne of the high points of the&#13;
trip, a tour of the Kremlin.&#13;
However, once inside the gate, we&#13;
were limited to only a small part&#13;
of t he complex and saw the inside&#13;
of only one building, the Archangel&#13;
Cathedral which dated&#13;
back to the sixteenth century. It is&#13;
noteworthy that armed guards&#13;
were everpresent to ensure that&#13;
tourists did not walk outside of t he&#13;
boundaries to which they were&#13;
confined.&#13;
Since our afternoon was free, a&#13;
group of us, Marvin, Eugene,&#13;
Wesley and myself decided to try&#13;
our luck on Moscow's massive&#13;
subway system called Metro. With&#13;
a little bit of patience and some&#13;
luck, we were able to figure out&#13;
RACINE MOTOR INN&#13;
DINNER THEATER&#13;
COMING ATTRACTION&#13;
U IllllUi) IJJJ1MTTTT&#13;
WISCONSIN ACTORS' ENSEMBLE&#13;
presents&#13;
FOUR&#13;
POSTER&#13;
by Jan de Hartog&#13;
Starring Barbara Berlnskl and Michael Skewes Directed by Jm loqulnta&#13;
A Tony Award Winner&#13;
"The pteasantest comedy ot the season" N Y Timet&#13;
Dinner Theater performances In the Vista Room:&#13;
Friday April 15 ana 22 Cocktails&#13;
Dinner&#13;
Performance&#13;
6-00 Sunday April 17 and 24 Cocktalh&#13;
7 OO Dinner&#13;
BOO Performance&#13;
5.JO&#13;
600&#13;
7-00&#13;
Dinner and theater S13 OO all Inclusive Ploy only $5 OO.&#13;
(-all For More Inform ation&#13;
RACINE ROTOR INN&#13;
535 Main St. • 633-3551&#13;
' 1 1 1 1 » * ' ' t t i . n i t n i m i i i i i i u i n i m u "&#13;
the subway map. Once we figured&#13;
out where we wanted to go, we&#13;
descended to the trains and found&#13;
ourselves in a rather ornate and&#13;
very clean subway station vastly&#13;
different from those found in&#13;
larger cities such as New York.&#13;
The subway system was easily&#13;
mastered, and each stop was&#13;
announced over a loudspeaker so&#13;
AN ONION DOME&#13;
CATHEDRAL-St. Andrews in&#13;
Kiev.&#13;
that we had no problem reaching&#13;
our hotel.&#13;
As our evening was also free,&#13;
the Parkside group visited&#13;
Professor Babkov, a science&#13;
historian who is a good friend of&#13;
Frank Edgerton. At his apartment,&#13;
we were treated to an excellent&#13;
meal and an informative&#13;
conversation. We learned from&#13;
Professor Babkov that the rent he&#13;
pays for a 30 foot by 30 foot&#13;
apartment is between 25 and 30&#13;
dollars per month, the cost of&#13;
utilities were oily a few pennies&#13;
per month,&#13;
and&#13;
. j°?&#13;
d journalists&#13;
scarce as western J j&#13;
would lead us to belief Hegaor&#13;
told us that any aPP . ma(je&#13;
utility repairs were usu T an(j&#13;
very quickly, at a l%P&#13;
shoU'id be&#13;
were of good quality. It „ince&#13;
, added, though, that since&#13;
Professor Babkov's wit ...&#13;
prominent maker of scl&#13;
u&#13;
en(T -iv&#13;
in the Soviet Union, his fanuy&#13;
may have better access t0&#13;
and services than the ave g&#13;
citizen.&#13;
All in all, the evening with&#13;
Professor Babkov was most e -&#13;
joyable. We found his hospitality&#13;
extended even further as ne&#13;
presented each of the women in&#13;
our group with a gift in honor ot&#13;
International Women's Day.&#13;
Wednesday, March 9&#13;
We began our morning with a&#13;
very brief (2 minutes) visit inside&#13;
of Lenin's Tomb, after waiting in&#13;
line for 45 minutes on a rather&#13;
brisk day. Before we actually&#13;
entered the tomb, we were told&#13;
that we might be subject to a&#13;
metal detector search and/or&#13;
body frisk. Once inside, we were&#13;
not permitted to talk, and men&#13;
were required to remove their hat&#13;
as they filed past the well&#13;
preserved body of one of the&#13;
founders of the U.S.S.R. Afterward,&#13;
we walked behind&#13;
Lenin's Tomb in order to see the&#13;
graves of the people buried along&#13;
the Kremlin Wall.&#13;
In the afternoon, we visited a&#13;
"Friendship - House" where we&#13;
engaged in a question and answer&#13;
session with a reporter from&#13;
Moscow News, and a professor&#13;
from the U.S.S.R. Institute for&#13;
U.S.A. and Canadian Studies.&#13;
Continued Next Week&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
FINE ARTS DIVISION&#13;
presents&#13;
• - $L&#13;
^^t^'e^ert, Condue&#13;
5&#13;
Sunday, April 17, 1983&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
Admission: General $2.00 Students/Sr. Cit $1.00&#13;
Proceeds to benelit UW-Parkside Music Scholarship Fund&#13;
i the Ywith a hearti&#13;
For Women Of All Ages&#13;
— NEW TERM STARTS APRIL 1 ] __&#13;
• Coed Aerobics for couples who want&#13;
together. Mondays, 7-8 p.m. Fee: $35 (onp Jexer&#13;
cise&#13;
must be a member) '&#13;
he couple&#13;
• Hatha Yoga. 16 sessions. Beqinner- r.&#13;
5:30 - 6:30 p m. Fee: $40 ' Tues&#13;
- &amp; T hurs.,&#13;
OR&#13;
Try our drop-in exercise classes^&#13;
over 55 hours per Week&#13;
•Aerobic 'X .Fjtness ,&#13;
•Fit-Aerobic 'X&#13;
740 College Avenue • Racine &#13;
Thursday, April 14,1983&#13;
&gt;Sv&#13;
•Sit&#13;
Parkside Students:&#13;
SUMMER ROOMS AVAILABLE&#13;
$300 June 1 - August 31&#13;
RACINE Y.M-C.A&#13;
Individual Room • Y.M.C.A. Membership&#13;
• Food Service In-House&#13;
• Laundry &amp; Cooking Facilities&#13;
Located on Lake Front in Downtown Racine&#13;
FIRST COME - FIRST SERVE BASIS&#13;
$300 Up Front And&#13;
Refundable $100 Security Bepesit.&#13;
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RUNNING TRACK&#13;
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RACINE YMCA 634-1994&#13;
W.V.W.VAV.'.-V.V.'.VA'.i" &#13;
Thursday, April 14, 1983&#13;
Men's Tennis victorious in early competition&#13;
THE INTRAMURAL SWIM MEET was a big splash despite a&#13;
low turnout of participants. Entrants received a free T-shirt.&#13;
by Carra Cariello&#13;
The Men's Tennis Team has a&#13;
very intelligent slogan this&#13;
season: "Practice hard and play&#13;
smart." So far they have carried&#13;
out their slogan with three&#13;
straight victories. Coach Dicky&#13;
Frecka feels that the victories&#13;
reflect on the fact that he has&#13;
seven very balanced players.&#13;
Frecka feels Frank Mejia, with&#13;
his high school experience, should&#13;
be the number one player for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Calvin Singleton is the number&#13;
two player. Singleton, a junior, is&#13;
competing for the Rangers for the&#13;
first time. According to Frecka he&#13;
is an experienced player though.&#13;
Iram Cruz is the number three&#13;
singles player. Tony Nielson is the&#13;
number four player and the team&#13;
captain. Art Shannon is the&#13;
number five player this year. Jim&#13;
Women's Softball&#13;
The Women's Softball Team&#13;
finally saw some game action last&#13;
week. April 5, the team soundly&#13;
defeated Platteville 16-2.&#13;
Freshman Lee Hammen hit for&#13;
a cycle (single, double, triple and&#13;
a homerun.) Sophomore Michele&#13;
Martino was the winning pitcher,&#13;
allowing only three hits. The&#13;
second game of the doubleheader&#13;
was called after four innings.&#13;
On April 7, the Rangers beat the&#13;
Whitewater Warhawks, 1-0. Kathy&#13;
Tobin scored the run on a RBI&#13;
single by Ann Althaus. The game&#13;
was a first of a doubleheader but&#13;
the Rangers dropped the second&#13;
game 7-1. Pitcher Martino improved&#13;
her record 5-1. The team's&#13;
overall record is 7 - 3.&#13;
This week the team plays in the&#13;
College of St. Francis Tournament&#13;
on Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
The men's track team traveled&#13;
all the way to Stevens Point, only&#13;
to turn around and come home&#13;
SPORT NEWS&#13;
last Saturday. Because of stormy&#13;
weather, the meet was cancelled.&#13;
This Friday, the team will&#13;
travel to North Central in&#13;
Naperville, IL. Coach Lucian&#13;
Rosa hopes that the distance&#13;
runners can perform to their&#13;
potential.&#13;
Rosa hopes that the weather will&#13;
cooperate this week so that pole&#13;
vaulter John Anderson can jump&#13;
and make the National Qualifying&#13;
height of 15' 6". "He can jump&#13;
higher, but he has been jumping&#13;
inside. If John can get out two or&#13;
three times this week, he'll do&#13;
good," commented Rosa.&#13;
Ted Miller, one of the marathon&#13;
runners for Parkside, will be&#13;
competing in the Boston Marathon&#13;
on Monday. Miller qualified for&#13;
Boston earlier this year in&#13;
Chicago's America Marathon. He&#13;
is hoping to qualify for the NAIA&#13;
Marathon by running under the&#13;
qualifying time in Boston. "About&#13;
four days ago, his achilles tendon&#13;
had a flare up, but with this week&#13;
(of training) being easy, he should&#13;
be alright," said Rosa.&#13;
Dart Team&#13;
The Parkside Dart Team has&#13;
challenged every other UWUniversity&#13;
to compete in the first&#13;
ever state - wide Collegiate Dart&#13;
Tournament. The Parkside&#13;
Challenge will take place on May 6&#13;
- 8. If you want to play for the&#13;
Parkside Dart Team, please enter&#13;
the qualifying tournament that&#13;
will be held the week before the&#13;
Parkside Challenge.&#13;
There is a Dart League forming&#13;
in Racine. If any students want to&#13;
play for Parkside in this ten week&#13;
league, come to the Dart Room in&#13;
the Rec Center and sign up.&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
Shooting Team Standings&#13;
National Guard&#13;
CMI&#13;
Parkside II&#13;
Bodven's&#13;
Alfredo's&#13;
Railroad Products&#13;
18-5 Marty's&#13;
16-4 Parkside I&#13;
14-9 Hole Crew&#13;
14-9 Colonial Liquors&#13;
12-3 Western Publishing&#13;
12-11 Southway Supply&#13;
12-11&#13;
11-12&#13;
10-13&#13;
10-13&#13;
10-13&#13;
9-14&#13;
The first Intramural swim meet&#13;
was held last Friday. Winners in&#13;
the events were as follows:&#13;
100 Medley Relay, 1.03.1, Mike&#13;
Daniels, Dona Driscoll, Steve&#13;
Upthagrove and Tammie Burdick&#13;
100 Freestyle, 1.008, Mark Flynn&#13;
25 Corkscrew, 15.2, Steve Upthagrove&#13;
&#13;
50 Breaststroke, 35. 7, Mike&#13;
Daniels&#13;
Sweatshirt Relay, 50.4, Steve&#13;
Wiese, Julie Heckl&#13;
Individual Medley, 1.11.3, Joe&#13;
Upthagrove&#13;
Kickboard Relay, 124.3, Steve&#13;
Upthagrove, Ed Wallen, Gail&#13;
Starks, Carol Kazarian&#13;
100 Freestyle Relay, 54.0, Dona&#13;
Driscoll, Ed Wallen, Steve UpKENOSHA&#13;
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AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
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414-694-1380&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
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8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
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Wynstra is the number six player.&#13;
"He is the strongest sixth man&#13;
that I've ever had," commented&#13;
Frecka. Mike Brinen is the&#13;
number seven player. He is&#13;
ranked number three in doubles&#13;
and plays only doubles. Frecka&#13;
feels Brinen possesses strong&#13;
leadership qualities.&#13;
Presently, the three top players&#13;
are Singleton, Cruz and Wynstra.&#13;
Frecka feels that they are playing&#13;
advanced tennis, (playing how a&#13;
player would be expected to play&#13;
around the middle to the end of the&#13;
season.)&#13;
Coach Frecka feels the team's&#13;
performance is very good for this&#13;
early in the season. "The team is&#13;
playing so well this soon," Frecka&#13;
commented. "This probably has&#13;
to do with the over - enthusiasm of&#13;
practices and the lack of injuries."&#13;
&#13;
Frecka's seasonal record last&#13;
year was 9-6, which he hopes to&#13;
improve this year and he is off to a&#13;
good start with a record of 3-0. The&#13;
Rangers won 7-2 over Carroll&#13;
College on April 4 in a home game.&#13;
In singles, Singleton defeated&#13;
Tom Heyrman, (6-0) (6-4). Cruz&#13;
defeated John Wirth, (6-2) (4-6)&#13;
(6-2). Tony Nielsen defeated Rich&#13;
Ross, (6-2) (6-2). Art Shannon&#13;
defeated Skip Crutchfield (6-2) (6-&#13;
1). Jim Wynstra defeated John&#13;
Anderson (6-2) (6-2).&#13;
In the doubles matches&#13;
Singleton and Wynstra defeated&#13;
Tom Heyrman and John Anderson&#13;
(6-4) (6-2). Nielsen and Brinen&#13;
thagrove&#13;
25 Backstroke, 17.1, Steve&#13;
Upthagrove&#13;
50 Butterfly, 31.7, Ed Wallen&#13;
50 Freestyle, 28.3, Mark Flynn&#13;
Congratulations to all participants&#13;
for creating a fun event.&#13;
THE&#13;
defeated Rich Ross and John&#13;
Schultz (6-3) (6-0). On April 6, The&#13;
Rangers won over Lake County&#13;
College, 8-1. In singles, Singleton&#13;
defeated Mike Mallory (6-3) (64).&#13;
Cruz defeated Mike Kierman (6-4)&#13;
(6-2). Nielsen defeated Mark&#13;
Mohr (6-3) (6-2). Shannon&#13;
defeated Alan Brothers (6-4) (6-1).&#13;
Wynstra defeated Doug Niemi (6-&#13;
0) (6-0).&#13;
The doubles teams of Mejia and&#13;
Shannon defeated Dan Razin and&#13;
Mike Kierman (6-4) (6-3).&#13;
Singleton and Wynstra defeated&#13;
Mark Mohr and Alan Brothers (6-&#13;
2) (6-1). Nielsen and Brinen&#13;
defeated Mike Mallory and Doug&#13;
Niemi (6-1) (6-3).&#13;
On April 9 the Rangers took on&#13;
Moraine Valley College and won,&#13;
7-2. In the Singles matches, Cruz&#13;
defeated Dave Urban (6-2) (7-5).&#13;
Singleton defeated John Anderson&#13;
(6-1) (6-4). Nielsen defeated Vince&#13;
Simos (6-0) (6-1). Shannon&#13;
defeated Seria Rao (6-1) (6-1).&#13;
In the doubles matches, Mejia&#13;
and Shannon defeated Jeff Nickel&#13;
and John Anderson (6-3) (6-2).&#13;
Singleton and Wynstra defeated&#13;
Gene Smyth and Vince Simos (6-3)&#13;
(6-0). Nielsen and Brinen defeated&#13;
Dave Urban and Seria Rao (6-1)&#13;
(4-6) (6-3).&#13;
The Rangers were very busy&#13;
this week. On April 11, they took&#13;
on Beloit College. April 13, they&#13;
played against Carthage College&#13;
Today, at 3 p.m., they will take on&#13;
Northeastern University at the&#13;
Parkside tennis courts. On Apr.&#13;
15, they will compete against Lake&#13;
County College in an away match.&#13;
Then on Saturday, they will go up&#13;
against Concordia College in a&#13;
home match which starts at 1 p.m.&#13;
:••••••••••••••&#13;
* An affordable evening&#13;
on the townI&#13;
LOUNGE&#13;
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Wednesday thru Sunday&#13;
Join us for an evening of "affordable&#13;
good times" at the Lounge! Featuring&#13;
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cozy corners and generous cocktails,&#13;
all at a truly affordable price!&#13;
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Top Shelf Co cktails Only 50C&#13;
Prem. Top Shelf Cocktails . .Only $1.00&#13;
Admission: $3.00&#13;
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We reserve the right to refuse service at anytime.&#13;
OP E N 6 PM ' TIL 1 AM WE D . - S U N .&#13;
A V A I L A BLE F O R P R I V A TE&#13;
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Phon* 552'7 569 </text>
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              <text>&#13;
^^55* &#13;
Committee &#13;
formed &#13;
to &#13;
help &#13;
NACA &#13;
holds &#13;
spring &#13;
conference &#13;
here &#13;
The &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
chapter &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
National &#13;
Association &#13;
for &#13;
Campus &#13;
Activities &#13;
(NACA) &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
holding &#13;
their &#13;
spring &#13;
conference &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside &#13;
this &#13;
weekend. &#13;
The &#13;
conference, &#13;
which &#13;
begins &#13;
Friday, &#13;
offers &#13;
a &#13;
chance &#13;
for &#13;
bands &#13;
to &#13;
show &#13;
off &#13;
their &#13;
talent &#13;
in &#13;
front &#13;
of &#13;
college &#13;
entertainment &#13;
programmers. &#13;
NACA &#13;
is &#13;
a &#13;
national &#13;
organization, &#13;
composed &#13;
of &#13;
en­&#13;
tertainment &#13;
programmers, &#13;
which &#13;
helps &#13;
expose &#13;
colleges &#13;
to &#13;
both &#13;
new &#13;
and &#13;
big &#13;
-name &#13;
talent. &#13;
The &#13;
colleges &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
chapter &#13;
are &#13;
then &#13;
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May &#13;
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internationally &#13;
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in &#13;
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Excellence &#13;
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begin &#13;
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Teresa &#13;
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on &#13;
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Pogreba, &#13;
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and &#13;
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law &#13;
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the &#13;
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showing &#13;
'Emmanuelle' &#13;
of &#13;
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she &#13;
said. &#13;
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of &#13;
PSGA, &#13;
said &#13;
that &#13;
PSGA &#13;
was &#13;
against &#13;
both &#13;
measures, &#13;
adding &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
PSGA &#13;
did &#13;
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The &#13;
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it &#13;
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by &#13;
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Controversy: &#13;
One &#13;
of &#13;
those &#13;
important &#13;
news &#13;
- &#13;
making &#13;
items; &#13;
one &#13;
that &#13;
is &#13;
probably &#13;
just &#13;
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popular &#13;
as &#13;
when &#13;
the &#13;
"man &#13;
bites &#13;
the &#13;
dog." &#13;
Not &#13;
since &#13;
G. &#13;
Gordon &#13;
Liddy &#13;
was &#13;
on &#13;
campus &#13;
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so &#13;
much &#13;
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surrounding &#13;
a &#13;
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The &#13;
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on &#13;
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is &#13;
the &#13;
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- &#13;
rated &#13;
film, &#13;
"Emmanuel: &#13;
The &#13;
Joys &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
Woman," &#13;
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being &#13;
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by &#13;
the &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Activities &#13;
Board &#13;
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PAB &#13;
President &#13;
Chris &#13;
Hammelev &#13;
was &#13;
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about &#13;
the &#13;
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involving &#13;
the &#13;
showing &#13;
of &#13;
this &#13;
film &#13;
she &#13;
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"I &#13;
don't &#13;
think &#13;
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are &#13;
hurting &#13;
students &#13;
by &#13;
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film &#13;
like &#13;
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by &#13;
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nuclear, &#13;
pro &#13;
- &#13;
abortion &#13;
/ &#13;
anti &#13;
-&#13;
abortion &#13;
film &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
sense &#13;
that &#13;
it's &#13;
controversial. &#13;
Parkside &#13;
doesn't &#13;
handle &#13;
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well." &#13;
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of &#13;
the &#13;
controversy &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
evident &#13;
in &#13;
letters &#13;
to &#13;
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editor &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
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It &#13;
also &#13;
was &#13;
found &#13;
in &#13;
petitions &#13;
being &#13;
cir­&#13;
culated, &#13;
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as &#13;
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mittee &#13;
and &#13;
in &#13;
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group &#13;
of &#13;
women &#13;
on &#13;
campus &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
voicing &#13;
their &#13;
negative &#13;
feelings &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
screening &#13;
of &#13;
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and &#13;
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and &#13;
the &#13;
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mittee, &#13;
brought &#13;
in &#13;
lecturer &#13;
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from &#13;
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school &#13;
of &#13;
education &#13;
at &#13;
UW &#13;
- &#13;
Milwaukee, &#13;
to &#13;
give &#13;
an &#13;
informal &#13;
lecture &#13;
and &#13;
slide &#13;
presentation &#13;
entitled &#13;
"Por­&#13;
nography &#13;
and &#13;
Violence &#13;
Against &#13;
Women." &#13;
Ms. &#13;
Matz &#13;
began &#13;
her &#13;
presen­&#13;
tation &#13;
by &#13;
emphasizing &#13;
that &#13;
sexuality &#13;
is &#13;
a &#13;
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and &#13;
inevitable &#13;
aspect &#13;
in &#13;
every &#13;
person's &#13;
life, &#13;
sexuality &#13;
is &#13;
positive." &#13;
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went &#13;
on &#13;
o &#13;
stress &#13;
that, &#13;
"Pornography &#13;
ehumanizes &#13;
and &#13;
degrades &#13;
the &#13;
Periences &#13;
of &#13;
sexuality." &#13;
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is &#13;
defined &#13;
by &#13;
Matz &#13;
as &#13;
"communication &#13;
between &#13;
two &#13;
people &#13;
and &#13;
not &#13;
domination &#13;
over &#13;
the &#13;
other." &#13;
Matz &#13;
belives &#13;
that &#13;
"pornography &#13;
insults &#13;
both &#13;
women &#13;
and &#13;
men. &#13;
Men &#13;
are &#13;
portrayed &#13;
as &#13;
through &#13;
they &#13;
can't &#13;
control &#13;
themselves. &#13;
Women &#13;
are &#13;
portrayed &#13;
as &#13;
being &#13;
naturally &#13;
masochistic. &#13;
Child &#13;
pornography &#13;
is &#13;
simply &#13;
abuse." &#13;
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"Emmanuel" &#13;
is &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
pornographic &#13;
nature, &#13;
it &#13;
is &#13;
a &#13;
"soft &#13;
-&#13;
porn" &#13;
film. &#13;
Hammelev &#13;
said, &#13;
"this &#13;
film &#13;
isn't &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
change &#13;
anybody. &#13;
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here &#13;
aren't &#13;
that &#13;
simple. &#13;
I'm &#13;
not &#13;
offended &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
film. &#13;
I've &#13;
been &#13;
told &#13;
that's &#13;
because &#13;
I'm &#13;
'uneducated &#13;
when &#13;
it &#13;
comes &#13;
to &#13;
women's &#13;
issues.' &#13;
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I &#13;
think &#13;
it's &#13;
because &#13;
I &#13;
don't &#13;
offend &#13;
easily. &#13;
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one &#13;
thing &#13;
that &#13;
does &#13;
offend &#13;
me &#13;
is &#13;
people &#13;
that &#13;
get &#13;
off &#13;
on &#13;
using &#13;
their &#13;
moral &#13;
standards &#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
rule &#13;
to &#13;
judge &#13;
for &#13;
everyone &#13;
else." &#13;
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assumption &#13;
that &#13;
amuses &#13;
Chris &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
belief &#13;
that &#13;
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will &#13;
be &#13;
overrun &#13;
by &#13;
perverts &#13;
and &#13;
other &#13;
deviants &#13;
during &#13;
the  week  the &#13;
film &#13;
is &#13;
run. &#13;
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explains &#13;
her &#13;
amusement &#13;
by &#13;
saying, &#13;
"first &#13;
of &#13;
all, &#13;
you &#13;
have &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
a &#13;
student &#13;
here &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
into &#13;
PAB &#13;
films &#13;
and &#13;
students &#13;
can &#13;
bring &#13;
their &#13;
families &#13;
and &#13;
/ &#13;
or &#13;
a &#13;
guest, &#13;
so &#13;
it's &#13;
not &#13;
like &#13;
we're &#13;
bringing &#13;
in &#13;
'per­&#13;
verts' &#13;
off &#13;
the &#13;
street &#13;
or &#13;
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people &#13;
attending &#13;
this &#13;
film &#13;
are &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
campus. &#13;
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'per­&#13;
verts' &#13;
that &#13;
are &#13;
already &#13;
here!" &#13;
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noted &#13;
that &#13;
she &#13;
uses &#13;
the &#13;
word &#13;
"pervert" &#13;
facetiously. &#13;
"That's &#13;
what &#13;
I've &#13;
been &#13;
referred &#13;
to &#13;
on &#13;
numerous &#13;
occasions &#13;
because &#13;
of &#13;
this &#13;
film." &#13;
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adds, &#13;
"what's &#13;
really &#13;
funny &#13;
is &#13;
that &#13;
this &#13;
so &#13;
called &#13;
'pervert' &#13;
(meaning &#13;
myself) &#13;
also &#13;
went &#13;
to &#13;
see &#13;
'Star &#13;
Wars.' &#13;
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knows, &#13;
I &#13;
could &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
sitting &#13;
next &#13;
to &#13;
your &#13;
kid." &#13;
PAB &#13;
is &#13;
allocated &#13;
a &#13;
portion &#13;
of &#13;
student &#13;
segregated &#13;
fees &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
used &#13;
in &#13;
part &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
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film &#13;
series. &#13;
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film &#13;
series &#13;
is &#13;
made &#13;
up &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
wide &#13;
variety &#13;
of &#13;
films &#13;
that &#13;
are &#13;
chosen &#13;
and &#13;
projected &#13;
by &#13;
PAB. &#13;
Hammelev &#13;
stated &#13;
that, &#13;
PAB &#13;
has &#13;
recently &#13;
been &#13;
referred &#13;
to &#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
minority &#13;
making &#13;
decisions &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
majority. &#13;
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a &#13;
pause, &#13;
perhaps &#13;
to &#13;
analyze &#13;
this, &#13;
she &#13;
added, &#13;
"but &#13;
I &#13;
suppose &#13;
we &#13;
are &#13;
the &#13;
minority &#13;
when &#13;
compared &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
number &#13;
of &#13;
students &#13;
at &#13;
this &#13;
university &#13;
that &#13;
sit &#13;
around &#13;
on &#13;
their &#13;
asses &#13;
and &#13;
just &#13;
complain &#13;
about &#13;
what &#13;
everyone &#13;
else &#13;
is &#13;
doing." &#13;
Stella &#13;
C. &#13;
Gray, &#13;
a &#13;
professor &#13;
of &#13;
English &#13;
on &#13;
campus, &#13;
stated &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
letter &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
Ranger &#13;
the &#13;
inap-&#13;
propriateness &#13;
of &#13;
showing &#13;
an &#13;
X &#13;
-&#13;
rated &#13;
film &#13;
on &#13;
campus. &#13;
In &#13;
this &#13;
letter &#13;
she &#13;
states, &#13;
"since &#13;
such &#13;
films &#13;
are &#13;
readily &#13;
available off &#13;
campus, &#13;
those &#13;
who &#13;
want &#13;
to &#13;
see &#13;
them &#13;
can &#13;
do &#13;
so &#13;
any &#13;
day &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
week. &#13;
Student &#13;
fees &#13;
do &#13;
not &#13;
need &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
spent &#13;
providing &#13;
what &#13;
is &#13;
immediately &#13;
available &#13;
elsewhere." &#13;
Gray &#13;
went &#13;
on &#13;
to &#13;
conclude &#13;
her &#13;
letter &#13;
by &#13;
stating, &#13;
"to &#13;
encourage &#13;
and &#13;
per &#13;
petuate &#13;
a &#13;
demeaning &#13;
portrait &#13;
women &#13;
is &#13;
inappropriate &#13;
to &#13;
an &#13;
intelligent &#13;
society &#13;
; &#13;
to &#13;
use &#13;
the &#13;
fees &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
student &#13;
body &#13;
to &#13;
.present &#13;
an &#13;
inaccurate &#13;
and &#13;
debasing &#13;
view &#13;
of &#13;
women &#13;
is, &#13;
in &#13;
my &#13;
opinion, &#13;
highly &#13;
inappropriate &#13;
to &#13;
a &#13;
college &#13;
society." &#13;
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is &#13;
responsible &#13;
for &#13;
serving &#13;
all &#13;
students &#13;
on &#13;
campus. &#13;
Ham­&#13;
melev &#13;
stated &#13;
that, &#13;
"I &#13;
get &#13;
a &#13;
real &#13;
Continued &#13;
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Page &#13;
Five &#13;
INSIDE &#13;
of &#13;
•SISiiiiiii &#13;
SCIENCE &#13;
FACILITIES &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
temporarily &#13;
moved &#13;
to &#13;
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i &#13;
1 &#13;
.. &#13;
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ventilation &#13;
renovations &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
com­&#13;
pleted. &#13;
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awards &#13;
two &#13;
scholarships &#13;
by &#13;
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Teunkieicz &#13;
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of &#13;
Peer &#13;
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$50 &#13;
scholarships &#13;
this &#13;
semester &#13;
are &#13;
Verma &#13;
Love &#13;
and &#13;
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Spalla. &#13;
Verma &#13;
Love, &#13;
36, &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
a &#13;
part &#13;
- &#13;
time &#13;
student &#13;
at &#13;
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since &#13;
1980. &#13;
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is &#13;
currently &#13;
taking &#13;
courses &#13;
in &#13;
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Justice &#13;
and &#13;
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major &#13;
is &#13;
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with &#13;
an &#13;
em­&#13;
phasis on &#13;
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- &#13;
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and &#13;
she &#13;
plans &#13;
to &#13;
continue &#13;
on &#13;
to &#13;
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school &#13;
after &#13;
graduation. &#13;
"I'm &#13;
interested &#13;
in &#13;
politics &#13;
in &#13;
my &#13;
community &#13;
and &#13;
my &#13;
ultimate &#13;
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is &#13;
to &#13;
work &#13;
in &#13;
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govern­&#13;
ment," &#13;
she &#13;
said. &#13;
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is &#13;
a &#13;
full &#13;
- &#13;
time &#13;
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ployee &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
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League &#13;
of &#13;
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is &#13;
a &#13;
case &#13;
manager &#13;
for &#13;
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and &#13;
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students &#13;
in &#13;
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work &#13;
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which &#13;
provides &#13;
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work &#13;
experience &#13;
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the &#13;
public &#13;
sector &#13;
based &#13;
on &#13;
their &#13;
academic &#13;
skills. &#13;
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job &#13;
also &#13;
involves &#13;
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and &#13;
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counseling. &#13;
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and &#13;
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to &#13;
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also &#13;
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a &#13;
family &#13;
of &#13;
four. &#13;
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I &#13;
have &#13;
a &#13;
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- &#13;
time &#13;
job &#13;
and &#13;
a &#13;
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have &#13;
to &#13;
set &#13;
aside &#13;
time &#13;
to &#13;
do &#13;
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homework. &#13;
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husband &#13;
is &#13;
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fills &#13;
in &#13;
for &#13;
me &#13;
at &#13;
home &#13;
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at &#13;
school," &#13;
she &#13;
said. &#13;
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stable &#13;
home &#13;
situation &#13;
and &#13;
determination &#13;
are &#13;
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qualities &#13;
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to &#13;
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cess &#13;
of &#13;
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feels &#13;
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and &#13;
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students &#13;
makes &#13;
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more &#13;
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Spalla, &#13;
49, &#13;
had &#13;
been &#13;
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of &#13;
school &#13;
for &#13;
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years &#13;
before &#13;
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to &#13;
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last &#13;
semester. &#13;
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attended &#13;
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- &#13;
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and &#13;
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her &#13;
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certificate &#13;
in &#13;
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family &#13;
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to &#13;
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of &#13;
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children &#13;
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from &#13;
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she &#13;
first &#13;
came &#13;
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to &#13;
school &#13;
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was &#13;
a &#13;
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apprehensive &#13;
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she &#13;
quickly &#13;
came &#13;
to &#13;
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enjoy &#13;
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to &#13;
school &#13;
each &#13;
day. &#13;
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a &#13;
challenge &#13;
and &#13;
one &#13;
that &#13;
I &#13;
need &#13;
in &#13;
my &#13;
life &#13;
right &#13;
now." &#13;
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feels &#13;
that &#13;
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desire &#13;
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is &#13;
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has &#13;
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like &#13;
to &#13;
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and &#13;
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try &#13;
to &#13;
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all &#13;
my &#13;
energy &#13;
into &#13;
each &#13;
project," &#13;
she &#13;
said. &#13;
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for &#13;
now &#13;
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is &#13;
making &#13;
school &#13;
her &#13;
number &#13;
one &#13;
priority. &#13;
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semester &#13;
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is &#13;
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and &#13;
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in &#13;
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tury &#13;
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is &#13;
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in &#13;
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and &#13;
will &#13;
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in &#13;
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offers &#13;
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scholarships &#13;
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criteria &#13;
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in &#13;
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referendum &#13;
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              <text>HP University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Academic policy changes come&#13;
under fire from student groups&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Two changes in Parkside's&#13;
academic policies, the addition of&#13;
a "W" designation on transcripts&#13;
and a change in the drop deadline,&#13;
are to come before the Faculty&#13;
Senate for a vote this week.&#13;
Student groups and some administrators&#13;
are protesting the&#13;
changes because of the possible&#13;
adverse effect on Parkside's&#13;
quality of education, saying it&#13;
discourages students from taking&#13;
classes they are not sure of&#13;
passing.&#13;
The changes will move the drop&#13;
deadline from the twelfth week to&#13;
the eighth week of the semester,&#13;
and a "W", showing that the&#13;
student dropped the class, will be&#13;
entered on a student's transcript if&#13;
the class is dropped after a two&#13;
week "grace period."&#13;
"Everybody in the UW System&#13;
seems to have a policy but us,"&#13;
said Donald Kummings, head of&#13;
the Faculty Senate's Academic&#13;
Policies Committee, speaking of&#13;
the addition of the "W"&#13;
designation. He said the change&#13;
was designed to discourage&#13;
students from "shopping around"&#13;
for classes, and taking seats away&#13;
from students who need the class&#13;
for a major requirement. Kummings&#13;
had favored a four week&#13;
grace period, similar to Madisons,&#13;
but said the two week deadline&#13;
"found no opposition from the&#13;
committee."&#13;
He said the change would&#13;
"identify and discourage" the&#13;
students who took extra classes&#13;
regularly.&#13;
Stuart Rubner, Director of&#13;
Community Student Services,&#13;
disagreed, saying, "It's going to&#13;
stop people from trying." Community&#13;
Student Services is&#13;
responsible for counseling non -&#13;
traditional students who plan to&#13;
attend Parkside.&#13;
Rubner said that the change&#13;
would discourage students from&#13;
taking a class if there was a&#13;
possibility of a change in outside&#13;
factors, such as home or work.&#13;
Many students get a transcript&#13;
full of " W's," without taking into&#13;
account the factors that caused&#13;
the drop.&#13;
"I think in a sense you penalize&#13;
people who want to take an extra&#13;
class or two," he added. "The&#13;
change is supposed to force people&#13;
to think about what they're&#13;
taking." But, Rubner said, it is&#13;
sometimes difficult to determine&#13;
beforehand whether a class fulfills&#13;
a specific need. "You try to make&#13;
an intelligent guess of what a class&#13;
is about by looking at a three or&#13;
four line description," he said.&#13;
Rubner did agree with the eight&#13;
week drop deadline, saying, "You&#13;
should know whether you're going&#13;
to make it in a class after eight&#13;
weeks."&#13;
David Schroeder, PSGA's&#13;
representative on the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee, said that&#13;
PSGA "is totally against both&#13;
propositions." Schroeder was the&#13;
only member of the Committee&#13;
who voted against an eight week&#13;
drop deadline because in many&#13;
classes, a student doesn't know&#13;
Progreba - Scoon win&#13;
PSGA elections&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Phil Pogreba, after a recount&#13;
call by second place candidate&#13;
John Monks, was elected&#13;
president of Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association.&#13;
Pogreba got 171 votes in the&#13;
election, held on Mar. 10 and 11,&#13;
over 100 votes less than he got last&#13;
Pogreba said that he and Scoon&#13;
won because they had more&#13;
combined experience in student&#13;
government than any of the other&#13;
candidates. "Both Mike and I out -&#13;
experienced the other opponents,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
He added that Monks had&#13;
worked hard during the campaign,&#13;
and that it had been&#13;
reflected in the vote totals.&#13;
Pogreba said that he didn't put as&#13;
much effort into the campaign this&#13;
year, compared to last year's&#13;
election, when he got 295 votes in&#13;
his campaign for president, but&#13;
still lost to President Jim Kreuser.&#13;
Total voting in the PSGA&#13;
elections was 705, or about 12&#13;
percent of t he student population.&#13;
Last year's total voting was&#13;
slightly higher, with 830 ballots&#13;
cast.&#13;
PHIL POGREBA&#13;
year, but still enough to beat&#13;
Monks by a margin of 17 v otes.&#13;
Pogreba's running mate, Mike&#13;
Scoon, defeated his closest&#13;
challenger, Marty Rheaume, 257&#13;
to 221, to become Vice President of&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
Pogreba and Scoon will assume&#13;
office at tomorrow's PSGA Senate&#13;
meeting.&#13;
how they're doing until after the&#13;
midterm, and by then the class&#13;
cannot be dropped.&#13;
'Two weeks is not enough to&#13;
decide whether you want to drop a&#13;
class," he said, speaking of the&#13;
grace period. Many classes meet&#13;
only once a week and a student&#13;
could not judge in that time&#13;
whether the class was worth&#13;
taking.&#13;
Schroeder said that the lack of&#13;
penalty for dropping a class encouraged&#13;
students to take courses&#13;
that might not otherwise be interested&#13;
in, and that such classes&#13;
could ultimately be beneficial for&#13;
the student. "You're penalizing&#13;
students for something that's not&#13;
necessarily bad," he said.&#13;
PSGA Election Results&#13;
President&#13;
Phil Pogreba • 171 pat Rarnsdell -130&#13;
John Monks • 154 Masood Shafiq • 60&#13;
Jeanne Buenker-Phillips - 134 Dave Schroeder - 38&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Mike Scoon - 257&#13;
Marty Rheaume - 221&#13;
Luis V alldejuli - 170&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
Pat Hensiak - 412&#13;
Senators&#13;
Chris Hammelev - 256 Scott Peterson - 209&#13;
John Kovalic - 249 &lt; Marie Marten - 172&#13;
Carol Kazarian - 231 Scott Goebel - 171&#13;
Andy Buchanan - 228 Bennet Schliesman -139&#13;
Terry Tunks - 105&#13;
PUAB&#13;
Joe Cucunato - 401&#13;
Parkside awarded computer&#13;
graphic system; PS 300&#13;
MIKE SCOON&#13;
A $150 ,000 state - of - the - art&#13;
computer graphics system used in&#13;
scientific research, industrial&#13;
design and education has been&#13;
awarded to UW - Parkside, one of&#13;
37 schools selected nationwide to&#13;
receive the award.&#13;
The computer graphics system,&#13;
called the PS 300, is being introduced&#13;
by Evans &amp; Sutherland,&#13;
a Utah - based computer firm that&#13;
selected UW-Parkside on the basis&#13;
of the school's strong biomedical&#13;
research and applied computer&#13;
science programs.&#13;
"The PS 300 system allows&#13;
scientists, product developers,&#13;
virtually anyone with a problem -&#13;
solving task to make color line -&#13;
drawings of objects that can be&#13;
instantly manipulated, rotated,&#13;
modified and explored in intimate&#13;
detail," said Associate Professor&#13;
of Chemistry Keith Ward. Ward,&#13;
along with Associate Professor of&#13;
Applied Computer Science&#13;
Timothy Fossum, applied for the&#13;
graphics system through the&#13;
firm's university grant program.&#13;
Ward, whose research into the&#13;
structure and function of protein&#13;
molecules has inspired grants&#13;
from national science&#13;
organizations, said the PS 300&#13;
system uses optical illusions to&#13;
achieve a three - dimensional&#13;
effect.&#13;
"Portions of the object closer to&#13;
the viewer are more brightly&#13;
displayed, while portions farther&#13;
away are progressively dimmer,&#13;
and this creates an illusion that&#13;
the object on the screen really is&#13;
three - dimensional," Ward said.&#13;
He said the computer graphics&#13;
system consists of tw o large video&#13;
display terminals (one color and&#13;
one black and white), a control&#13;
panel used to manipulate objects&#13;
on the screen and a graphics interpreter,&#13;
which is a highly&#13;
specialized computer that&#13;
provides the brains and power for&#13;
the manipulative function.&#13;
Ward said the Evans &amp;&#13;
Sutherland grant also includes a&#13;
device that allows the graphics&#13;
system to be hooked up with the&#13;
university's central IBM computer,&#13;
which will provide even&#13;
more power and versatility.&#13;
He said the PS 300 system is&#13;
unique to institutions and industries&#13;
in Wisconsin and the&#13;
greater Chicago area.&#13;
"We've got researchers in&#13;
education, government and industrial&#13;
laboratories all over this&#13;
area very excited about coming in&#13;
and trying the system out for&#13;
themselves," Ward said.&#13;
Ward said Dr. T.J. O'Donnell, a&#13;
chemist in computer systems&#13;
development at Abbott&#13;
Laboratories in North Chicago,&#13;
111., plans to tailor his original&#13;
computer graphics program to the&#13;
PS 300 system. The program,&#13;
called GRAMPS, is used by&#13;
research scientists around the&#13;
nation and permits them to&#13;
"converse with computers more&#13;
easily," Ward said. "It almost&#13;
allows for a conversation between&#13;
the human operator and the&#13;
computer."&#13;
Ward said that, besides being&#13;
used by students and researchers,&#13;
local industries will be invited to&#13;
get hands - on experience with the&#13;
computer graphics system and&#13;
use it as a tool to determine its&#13;
potential usefulness to their&#13;
operations. He said the PS 300&#13;
system at UW-Parkside could be&#13;
used as a resource for industry to&#13;
make decisions about purchases&#13;
of similar equipment.&#13;
Ward said he and his UWParkside&#13;
colleagues plan an&#13;
"open house" to introduce the&#13;
computer graphics system to&#13;
people in industry, research and&#13;
education as soon as the system is&#13;
fully installed.&#13;
"For my own purposes," said&#13;
Ward, "my students and I plan to&#13;
use the system to examine the&#13;
structure of sickle cell&#13;
hemoglobin, bioluminescent&#13;
proteins, and the toxic proteins in&#13;
snake venom, three areas of basic&#13;
research in which I'm involved.&#13;
"The advantages afforded&#13;
many research areas by an advanced&#13;
computer graphics system&#13;
like this are almost unbelievable.&#13;
Whereas it once took us days to&#13;
prepare new views of our&#13;
molecular models, now we can do&#13;
this with just the twist of a knob.&#13;
The system allows us immediately&#13;
to see and understand&#13;
how various structural changes&#13;
might affect the function of&#13;
molecules, or for that matter,&#13;
depending on what your research&#13;
involves, the function of&#13;
automobile bodies, computer&#13;
circuits, or just about anything&#13;
under the sun."&#13;
Measles alert ! ! !&#13;
There have been large - scale&#13;
outbreaks of measles on a number&#13;
of Midwestern campuses. This is a&#13;
cause of particular concern to&#13;
public health officials right now&#13;
because so many universities&#13;
have just completed spring break&#13;
and students from campuses&#13;
which have been measles - free&#13;
may have come in contact with&#13;
students from campuses where a&#13;
number of students are infected.&#13;
This applies not only to students&#13;
who traveled to Florida or other&#13;
locations during break, but also&#13;
those who remained in the area&#13;
and may have come in contact&#13;
with students from other campuses&#13;
home for the holidays.&#13;
As a precautionary measure to&#13;
prevent spread of m easles on this&#13;
campus, the Student Health&#13;
Center is asking students who&#13;
have either of two sets of symptoms&#13;
to call the Health Center at&#13;
553-2366.&#13;
Symptom set one: Students who&#13;
have a rash in conjunction with a&#13;
fever of 101 degrees or higher.&#13;
Symptom set two: Students with&#13;
a combination of fever, head cold,&#13;
and either a dry, hacking cough or&#13;
eye inflammation.&#13;
If you have these symptoms,&#13;
please call the Student Health&#13;
Center. Your cooperation can&#13;
prevent the spread of m easles on&#13;
this campus and in the community&#13;
as well as protect your own health.&#13;
Inside ...&#13;
* Guest editorial * Visiting scholar&#13;
* Review: Frances &#13;
Thursday, March 24, 1983&#13;
Guest Editorial&#13;
Responses to letters on movie&#13;
AS YOU KNOW, WE NEED&#13;
SOMEONE TO REPLACE&#13;
ANNE BURFORD AT E.R A.&#13;
XOULD YOU SPELL&#13;
"MANAGE" FOR US,&#13;
PLEASE?&#13;
G. Helgeson&#13;
Oyer the course of the past few&#13;
weeks, the planned showing of the&#13;
PAB sponsored film "Emmanuelle"&#13;
has created a near&#13;
controversy on this campus. To&#13;
find out what people think about&#13;
the showing of pornographic&#13;
movies on campus during time&#13;
that classes are scheduled, I've&#13;
talked informally with students&#13;
and faculty and formally with&#13;
administrative people.&#13;
Yes, I have a bias — I don't&#13;
think showing a film of this nature&#13;
1S a good idea. I agree&#13;
wholeheartedly with the views of&#13;
both Donna Sahakian and Carol&#13;
Frank as reflected in their letters&#13;
to the Ranger. I disagree with the&#13;
opinions expressed by Michael&#13;
Schwartz in his letter. I also&#13;
disagree with PAB, and because&#13;
PAB is an arm of Student Life&#13;
here at Parkside, I disagree with&#13;
Student Life and finally (dare I&#13;
say it?) with UW - Parkside.&#13;
A few years ago, I saw a couple&#13;
of X through triple X rated&#13;
movies. I did not feel comfortable&#13;
with the way in which the films&#13;
portrayed women and men. The&#13;
people in these movies did not&#13;
seem real in the sense that they&#13;
did not seem to see one another as&#13;
human.&#13;
Which brings me to my first&#13;
point of disagreement: many&#13;
people I h£ve talked with about&#13;
the film say that pornography&#13;
harms no one because it is a&#13;
matter of individual choice of&#13;
entertainment. It is as if these&#13;
people believe that entertainment&#13;
is personal and therefore affects&#13;
no one else. What they ignore is&#13;
the simple fact that all of our&#13;
choices affect others. If we choose&#13;
to attend a certain school, to vote&#13;
for a certain candidate, to work at&#13;
a certain job, or to buy certain&#13;
products, we are making choices&#13;
that affect not only our own well -&#13;
being but that of others. Because&#13;
we choose to be a part of the UW -&#13;
Parkside community in some&#13;
way, we have chosen to support&#13;
this university, for example, and&#13;
in a very concrete way we all&#13;
ensure the continued existence of&#13;
UW - Parkside and other&#13;
universities similar in nature.&#13;
This sense of personal&#13;
responsibility is hard to stomach&#13;
for some people. It involves the&#13;
realization that personal liberty&#13;
does not mean license to do as you&#13;
will.&#13;
The bottom line in this case is&#13;
that by choosing to spend money&#13;
and by appearing at a campus&#13;
showing of "Emmanuelle" we are&#13;
choosing to support not only the&#13;
PAB showing of the movie on this&#13;
campus, but the creation of&#13;
pornography and the way pornography&#13;
portrays people,&#13;
mainly women, as less than fully&#13;
human.&#13;
Another recurring point brought&#13;
up by those I talked with links this&#13;
"soft porn" film with portrayals&#13;
of women and men in various&#13;
other media, notably television.&#13;
"So what?" I've heard. "TV is&#13;
just as bad." While I am glad that&#13;
people can see the connection&#13;
between pornography and much&#13;
of television's presentation of&#13;
people as sexual objects without&#13;
hearts and minds, I fail to see the&#13;
prevalence of our society's&#13;
callousness as a reason to accept&#13;
Finally, to reply to Schwartz'&#13;
assertion that "to decide what is&#13;
best for the majority without input&#13;
from the majority is censorship,"&#13;
I assert in return that the number&#13;
of minority interests that have&#13;
been or are today disregarded as&#13;
trivial or not in the interest of the&#13;
majority create a majority. For&#13;
example, there are many in our&#13;
society who do not have access to&#13;
the "good life" a few people enjoy.&#13;
Yet it is the few who decide for the&#13;
many. Similarly, a few people on&#13;
this campus decided to show this&#13;
film without consulting the larger&#13;
body of students.&#13;
"Censorship" is just plain&#13;
misused in this context. Asserting&#13;
that those who have no power are&#13;
practicing censorship is&#13;
ludicrous. Censorship is possible&#13;
only when those in power, here&#13;
some person within the Parkside&#13;
administration, refuses to allow&#13;
access beca use it is not in their&#13;
interest to do so. A grass - roots&#13;
level protest is not censorship. It&#13;
is an appeal to individual conscience&#13;
; it is a demand for&#13;
collective action in the true best&#13;
interest of all.&#13;
NO, NO, NO. "MANAGE "&#13;
AS IN "PROPERLY MWAGF&#13;
THE ENVIRONMENT."&#13;
Think Piece&#13;
Dirty Laundry&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
When I left high school I left a&#13;
lot of things behind me. I can even&#13;
remember the day I packed my&#13;
yearbooks and memorabilia into a&#13;
large cardboard box and put it&#13;
above the rafters in our garage&#13;
(symbolic I suppose). Much to my&#13;
dismay one of the things I thought&#13;
I had left has come back (in full&#13;
force) to destroy and disrupt. I&#13;
guess it s something you never&#13;
escape.&#13;
What I'm referring to is dirty&#13;
laundry, juicy's, hot gossip,&#13;
rumors. Let me state right here&#13;
and now (before I get any more&#13;
accusatory letters from the east&#13;
coast) that it has never been my&#13;
purpose with this column to place&#13;
myself above the topic under&#13;
examination. One thing I hope I&#13;
never stop being is human. Yet, by&#13;
being human we all face certain&#13;
consequences, th e ultimate being&#13;
that no one is perfect; we all make&#13;
mistakes.&#13;
We all gossip (some more than&#13;
others) and we all at one time or&#13;
another fall prey to rumors&#13;
(either the creation or&#13;
manifestation thereof). I'm not&#13;
trying to change the course of&#13;
human existence with this&#13;
column, I just want to share a few&#13;
main points that many of us&#13;
overlook when participating in&#13;
gossip.&#13;
We can never share the "raw"&#13;
experience with someone else but&#13;
we can talk (or recreate) with&#13;
them about it. This is important to&#13;
remember because whenever yoi&#13;
talk about something you are noi&#13;
merely presenting that thing tc&#13;
another person you are recreating&#13;
it for them. Therefore, when yoi&#13;
gossip you are not talking aboul&#13;
the person in question, but rather&#13;
creating the person.&#13;
Example time! If I tell a frienc&#13;
that a girl we know spent the nighl&#13;
at a guy's house and we use the&#13;
words cheap or tramp to describe&#13;
her, then we have created a&#13;
person and a situation. Regardless&#13;
of what may have happened&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#13;
Letter to the Fditnr&#13;
Rebuttal to Schwartz&#13;
Editor's Notes&#13;
Activities of the busy break&#13;
II/kn«inl« &gt; 1 - by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
The vacation was nice, but it did&#13;
seem to be a bit of a bust for&#13;
several people. I almost feel guilty&#13;
for all of the poor students who&#13;
saved for weeks and weeks to&#13;
travel into Florida for 50 degre e&#13;
weather, and rain, and what a&#13;
good friend relayed to be some of&#13;
the worst weather of Florida's&#13;
season thus far. Living down there&#13;
would give one a better hold on&#13;
what it's been like, and this friend&#13;
hasn't been pleased at all this&#13;
year. Which of course means that&#13;
fruit prices could be up a bit this&#13;
year, but we'll see.&#13;
It is interesting to realize how&#13;
much a party mood does in deed&#13;
depend on the weather, and the&#13;
weather here wasn't exactly&#13;
pleasant. It was rather rainy and&#13;
wet, and a bit cold. Good things&#13;
did happen though, and they even&#13;
happened at Parkside. On&#13;
Tuesday, Parkside sponsored the&#13;
Very Special Arts Festival. For&#13;
those of you who have never experienced&#13;
this memorable occasion,&#13;
it is a festival put on here&#13;
at Parkside over every spring&#13;
break, designed to help young&#13;
children in the areas of fine arts.&#13;
The children were a riot. Some&#13;
are disabled, some are not, but&#13;
they are all fun, and the experiences&#13;
I had made me want to&#13;
do all of it over again on Wednesday.&#13;
I worked with children in&#13;
clay. I was an artists assistant,&#13;
and found it quite interesting that&#13;
um '&#13;
ma&#13;
^&#13;
na&#13;
^&#13;
ons&#13;
°f these young&#13;
children are somewhat fresher&#13;
than even my own. They sculpted&#13;
everything from E.T. characters&#13;
to Easter Baskets, from sets of&#13;
dice to make - a - believe chocolate&#13;
chip cookies. They were all artists&#13;
for a day. One little boy even&#13;
to make me a pencil&#13;
face&#13;
they&#13;
clay)&#13;
started&#13;
holder.&#13;
The fact that some of the&#13;
children were disabled didn't&#13;
make a difference at all when it&#13;
came to communicating. When I&#13;
walked across the hall to '&#13;
painting, (which is where&#13;
went after working with ^ay,&#13;
they all demanded that I sit down&#13;
and get something painted on my&#13;
face Of course I did. It was a&#13;
rainbow with a cloud and they all&#13;
clapped after the clown finished&#13;
the painting. Some of the&#13;
university students who saw me&#13;
strolling down the hall with this&#13;
design painted on my face looked&#13;
at me like I was crazy, others&#13;
knew that I had had just as much&#13;
fun as the children.&#13;
When I came home with this on&#13;
™y&#13;
face&#13;
' my mother asked me if I&#13;
had been drinking, my father&#13;
asked who I was with, and my&#13;
clever brother asked me, "What's&#13;
that glob on the side of your&#13;
face?? Then he asked where he&#13;
could have it done. I told him,&#13;
'anywhere you like."&#13;
Then on Wednesday came&#13;
Capsule Horses. I mean Capsule&#13;
College. One of the courses offered&#13;
was all about horses, and I found it&#13;
quite intriguing that there were so&#13;
many different classes that could&#13;
be taken. I should have attended&#13;
the Horse Course, but instead I&#13;
attended a capsule given by a&#13;
counselor and a student leader.&#13;
Connie Cummings, and Pat&#13;
Mulligan were the instructors for&#13;
Back to school, Is it For You&#13;
9?&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
w&#13;
^&#13;
tin&#13;
u&#13;
g m response to the&#13;
letter by Michael Schwartz which&#13;
appeared in the March loth issue&#13;
of the Ranger. I feel Mr. Schwartz&#13;
misses the point when he draws a&#13;
line between "hard core" and&#13;
sott core" pornography. p0r-&#13;
"°£&#13;
rap£y »s "w riting or imagery&#13;
hrninr 1GS' deSrades, and&#13;
sev fi1&#13;
l&#13;
ZeS a&#13;
r&#13;
PerS,&#13;
0n in the name of sexual stimulation or entertainment."&#13;
Pornography&#13;
spans the continuum of objectification&#13;
of women from the&#13;
use of women's bodies to sell&#13;
consumer goods through soft core&#13;
pornography to the core&#13;
mutilation and murder of women&#13;
male entertainment."&#13;
inri4- T~\&#13;
is u ror YOU?? lul male entertainment &gt;»&#13;
The first good thing that happened (Women Against Pornopranh&#13;
m this capsule was that everyone NY-,&#13;
N.Y.). At best soft '&#13;
was made to feel as at moo no movies cnnVi nn nn' " ^ core&#13;
• —«V vvvi y&#13;
was made to feel as at ease as&#13;
possible. (Nobody knew the edit' •&#13;
of the paper was there.) The groi&#13;
sat for a period and talked ab.&#13;
themselves, got to know each&#13;
other a little bit, and discussed&#13;
goals and experiences already&#13;
taken in school. (Mulligan who&#13;
will graduate in May, had many to&#13;
relate, which was definitely a&#13;
positive mark for the group)&#13;
They discussed other issues like&#13;
being a non - traditional student&#13;
and turning forty, and surviving in&#13;
a world where it is attractive for&#13;
youth to be older, and it is at&#13;
tractive for the older to be more&#13;
youthful. It proved to be a positive&#13;
experience for all who attended&#13;
fK^?&#13;
e&#13;
frT01^&#13;
an commented, "i think if I hadn't decided to come to&#13;
this session here, today, I would&#13;
have put off going back to school&#13;
for another few years, but now I'd&#13;
lomorr„„&#13;
e&#13;
"&#13;
ter «&#13;
timJ&#13;
5 ?&#13;
ice ta be back a§&#13;
am. to full&#13;
waUieS"&#13;
8, and inconsistant&#13;
TpHnp K m f Sn&#13;
°&#13;
Wf m the middla of&#13;
short hm hia h&#13;
3S fun t0 have those short but big days of learning too.&#13;
movies&#13;
miain such as "Emmanuael&#13;
objectionable in their&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
treatment of women. Mr. Scl&#13;
wartz raises the question of why:&#13;
is not considered degrading fo&#13;
men to appear in pornographi&#13;
movies. His letter states: "&#13;
personally have never had an&#13;
feelings of degradation o&#13;
dehumanization from these films&#13;
nor do I know anybody (male o:&#13;
female) who has." I have t&lt;&#13;
wonder just how many female;&#13;
Mr. Schwartz has questionec&#13;
regarding their feelings towarc&#13;
the treatment of women in por&#13;
nography. Also, if Mr. Schwartz is&#13;
familiar with "these movies", as&#13;
his letter implies that he is, ther&#13;
surely he is aware of the "power&#13;
imbalance of male domination /&#13;
female submission" which pervades&#13;
the "plot" of such films.&#13;
(Women Against Pornography,&#13;
N.Y., N.Y.). Why would men, Mr.&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
(ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
Buenker - ^MH'ips&#13;
ercar&#13;
By^&#13;
r&#13;
e,&#13;
.&#13;
Maureen Burke, Jeanne&#13;
Patricia Cumbie Dan rv!? k ,e&#13;
"&#13;
0/ Catherine Chaffee,&#13;
Kortendick, John Koval?^°^f&#13;
r/ Michael Kailas, Carol&#13;
Rayburn, Napolean SrirK u ' Robb Luehr&#13;
' Kathy&#13;
rancfb Scarbrough, Jennie Tunkiecz.&#13;
danger is w ritten anrf h**&#13;
rcy'K'Sss,," ™'&#13;
park!lae&#13;
""""" *""&#13;
v&#13;
Wr?terfpRermPrin,ed bV the u^onncSpae?a&#13;
d&#13;
,^ipuVb&#13;
e&#13;
r&#13;
rh&#13;
eXCePf dUring breakS and holidayS' All cnrr« I, n IS rePuired for reorint nt ub,ishm9 Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Park^wt n" Should be address^ ?°r,ion °' RANGER.&#13;
Letters "o £? Um'&#13;
VerSi,y&#13;
°' W'&#13;
SC°&#13;
nSin&#13;
eluded Wfnh 00 6 * inch&#13;
-&#13;
ar&#13;
gins&#13;
aAMP[enP:'&#13;
,&#13;
rrJ&#13;
,,en&#13;
' doublespaced on s tandard size SZ w „&#13;
V!&#13;
ri&#13;
'&#13;
ica,ion&#13;
-&#13;
mUSt be si9ned and a telephone number In -&#13;
befamaw" editoria&#13;
" Privileges" in reZ'Jnn ?&#13;
ublica,lon ™ Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
aetamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or &#13;
RANGER Thursday, March 24,1983 3&#13;
More&#13;
people,&#13;
than&#13;
most&#13;
1,200 handicapped&#13;
T. - of them children&#13;
RaoVn?&#13;
3^ ^ lu&#13;
e f&#13;
°&#13;
Urth annua&#13;
^ Racine - Kenosha Very SDecial&#13;
Arts Festival March 15 at&#13;
Parkside. The festival, one of a&#13;
number of similar festivals being&#13;
held around the country, had the&#13;
largestnumber of participants in&#13;
the nation.&#13;
The festival offered handicapped&#13;
persons hands - on&#13;
workshop experience, featuring&#13;
performances and exhibits involving&#13;
both the fine and performing&#13;
arts. About 80 artists,&#13;
performers and craftsmen from&#13;
nosha&#13;
' R&#13;
acine and&#13;
Milwaukee areas were involved. A&#13;
number of volunteers from&#13;
student and community&#13;
organizations assisted with the&#13;
program.&#13;
Festival participants came&#13;
from the Racine and Kenosha&#13;
Unified School Districts, Racine&#13;
County Schools and adult centers&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha Counties.&#13;
They included mentally handicapped,&#13;
hearing impaired,&#13;
visually impaired, orthopedically&#13;
handicapped, learning disabled,&#13;
behavioral disabled and those&#13;
with chronic diseases.&#13;
The festival was organized by&#13;
the Very Special Arts Festival&#13;
Committee, an organization of&#13;
area educators and other interested&#13;
community residents. It&#13;
is funded by businesses and&#13;
service organizations in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha, and by the National&#13;
Committee on Arts for the Handicapped,&#13;
an educational affiliate&#13;
of the John F. Kennedy Center for&#13;
the Performing Arts.&#13;
Co - directors of the festival&#13;
were Eadie Koch of the Racine&#13;
Unified School District, and&#13;
Buddy Couvion of Parkside. The&#13;
Festival ran on the concourse&#13;
level of Parkside's academic&#13;
complex.&#13;
In conjunction with the festival,&#13;
an art show of works by handicapped&#13;
people was also on&#13;
display in the Comm Arts Gallery&#13;
the day of the festival.&#13;
Letter&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
Sbbw^tz included, feel&#13;
degraded? Those in power are the&#13;
beneficiaries of such imbalance.&#13;
Pornography is made by men, for&#13;
men. 5.&#13;
Again, I feel the point was&#13;
missed jn regard to the self -&#13;
hatred women develop when they&#13;
compare themselves unfavorably&#13;
to women in pornographic films.&#13;
Mr. Schwartz indicates that men&#13;
too have these feelings of&#13;
inadequacy in regard to their&#13;
appearance. The difference lies, in&#13;
the fact that women are socialized&#13;
from birth to measure their worth&#13;
in terms of physical beauty. Men&#13;
do not have to "answer for" their&#13;
physical "imperfections" on a day&#13;
to day basis. Their identities are&#13;
not dependant upon their appearance&#13;
alone. Women on the&#13;
other hand, are judged continuously&#13;
for what they look like.&#13;
After years of socialization, this is&#13;
of primary concern to many&#13;
women and becomes an internalized&#13;
quest.&#13;
I am in agreement with Mr.&#13;
Schwartz that the movies shown in&#13;
the Union Cinema should be&#13;
representative of the majority.&#13;
We differ however, in the&#13;
definition of who the majority is.&#13;
Mr. Schwartz seems to believe&#13;
that P.A.B. is representing the&#13;
majority in this case. In actuality,&#13;
P.A.B. is the minority attempting&#13;
to make decisions for the&#13;
majority.&#13;
I am not advocating censorship,&#13;
nor is anyone else who opposes the&#13;
movie "Emmanuel." We are&#13;
challenging people to open their&#13;
minds, and as Mr. Schwartz says&#13;
in his letter, "look at all sides of an&#13;
issue." Carol A. Frank&#13;
Very Special Arts Festival livens&#13;
Parkside during Spring Break&#13;
andicaDnod&#13;
. ...&#13;
AN UNUSUAL SIGHT during an otherwise quiet break, elementary students and their teachers&#13;
from the Racine and Kenosha school districts crowded the halls last Tuesday (above). Below, one&#13;
of the many workshops held during the Festival, a story hour. Photos b y M asood s hatiq&#13;
Alumni's Phonathon nets '13,000&#13;
Over $16,000 in pledges and&#13;
matching contributions was&#13;
collected during the UW -&#13;
Parkside Alumni Association's&#13;
first annual fund - raising campaign,&#13;
which ended last week.&#13;
The money will go for a new&#13;
merit scholarship program at UW&#13;
- P and books and periodicals for&#13;
the university library.&#13;
More than 70 volunteers, including&#13;
UW - P arkside graduates&#13;
and current students, conducted a&#13;
phonathon to solicit contributions,&#13;
held nightly last week Sunday&#13;
t h r o u g h T h u r s d a y ( M a r . 6-10 ).&#13;
The phonathon garnered a total&#13;
of $13,817, including $11,982 in&#13;
pledges and $1,835 in matching&#13;
contributions from area firms&#13;
including American Motors Corp.&#13;
and S. C. Johnson &amp; Son, Inc.&#13;
Of 1,850 alumni contacted&#13;
during the phonathon, 614, or 34%,&#13;
pledged specific amounts and 206,&#13;
or 15%, said they would consider&#13;
contributing.&#13;
Thomas Krimmel, Director of&#13;
Development and Alumni Affaire&#13;
at UW - P, said research shows&#13;
that a 20 to 25% favorable&#13;
response rate is considered good&#13;
for phonathons in general.&#13;
A mail campaign launched in&#13;
January attracted $2,004 in&#13;
contributions, and $400 in matching&#13;
funds.&#13;
Schon to be&#13;
be Distinguished&#13;
Visiting Scholar&#13;
James Burke, television host&#13;
and documentary writer for the&#13;
British Broadcasting Corp. whose&#13;
series on the history of&#13;
technology, "Connections," drew&#13;
widespread praise when aired in&#13;
the U. S. in 1979, will be one of two&#13;
Honors Program Distinguished&#13;
Visiting Scholars at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside this&#13;
semester. Burke will visit UW -&#13;
P a r k s i d e A p r i l 4-5.&#13;
That brought the total amount&#13;
pledged, collected and expected in&#13;
matching contributions to $16,221.&#13;
Krimmel said the original goal&#13;
was $8,000.&#13;
"The enormously enthusiastic&#13;
response by UW - Parkside alumni&#13;
illustrates the high level of&#13;
commitment our graduates have&#13;
to their alma mater," he said.&#13;
"Even in difficult economic times&#13;
our graduates showed how deeply&#13;
they care for UW - Parkside."&#13;
Jan Oechler, a 1982 UW -&#13;
Parkside graduate, attracted the&#13;
most pledges during the&#13;
phonathon, raising $1,010. Susan&#13;
Wesley, a 1974 gr aduate, chaired&#13;
the fund - raising campaign.&#13;
DONALD SCHON&#13;
Donald A. Schon, Ford&#13;
Professor of Urban Affairs and&#13;
Education at the Massachusetts&#13;
Institute of Te chnology, who is an&#13;
authority on creativity and&#13;
technical innovation, will visit the&#13;
c a m p u s M ay 2-4.&#13;
The visits are being coordinated&#13;
by students in UW - Parkside's&#13;
Honors Program, which is&#13;
directed by Professor of Communications&#13;
Lee Thayer. Agendas&#13;
of the visiting scholars, both of&#13;
whom will meet with students as&#13;
well as the general public, will be&#13;
available soon.&#13;
Burke, who holds bachelor's and&#13;
master's degrees in English&#13;
literature from Oxford University&#13;
and believes each technological&#13;
breakthrough is the result of a&#13;
long series of seemingly unrelated&#13;
discoveries, has written and&#13;
hosted several TV documentaries,&#13;
two of which have been broadcast&#13;
nationally in the U. S., "Connections,"&#13;
by PBS and "The Inventing&#13;
of America," by NBC in&#13;
1979.&#13;
Schon is interested in the&#13;
process of stimulating technical&#13;
creativity and organizational&#13;
learning. He holds a bachelor's&#13;
degree from Yale University and&#13;
master's and PhD degrees from&#13;
Harvard. He has written more&#13;
than 50 articles for professional&#13;
and scholarly journals and is the&#13;
author of fiv e books, two of which&#13;
currently are available at UW -&#13;
P's Campus Store.&#13;
APRIL 8, 1983&#13;
7:00 p.m.&#13;
Eagles Club&#13;
Door Prizes&#13;
Enter and win&#13;
a vacation&#13;
to Florida!&#13;
(18 and ovar)&#13;
laitocclni&#13;
0g0 V&#13;
Cream of Kenosha's Manhood!&#13;
Ticket prices: $5:00 advance $6.00 door&#13;
Tickets available at Bidingers. Club Cagney,&#13;
That's Entertainment. The Halrport.&#13;
Make checks payable to Warn Bam Singing Telegram' To enler. call 553-9095&#13;
SPONSORED BY Warn Bam Singing Telegram Kenosha Milwaukee. Madison&#13;
Los Angeles Philharmonic&#13;
Metropolitan Opera&#13;
Chicago Symphony&#13;
St. Paul Chamber Orchestra&#13;
Berlin Philharmonic&#13;
international Festivals&#13;
Weeknights at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
and&#13;
throughout the weekend . &#13;
Thursday, March 24, 1983&#13;
• ••••&#13;
SNAP&#13;
Student Nurses At Parkside, St.&#13;
Luke's and GTI will be holding a&#13;
benefit dance on Mar. 24 featuring&#13;
"The Britins" at 8:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. All proceeds will go&#13;
to the Special Olympics. Advance&#13;
tickets are available at the Union&#13;
Information Desk, or from a&#13;
SNAP member.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Parkside's Student Government&#13;
Association will have a meeting on&#13;
Friday, Mar. 25at 3 p.m. in Comm&#13;
Arts 129.&#13;
Chemistry Club&#13;
The Chemistry Club will&#13;
sponsor a tour of the Waukegan&#13;
Commonwealth Edison Coal Fired&#13;
Power Plant. The trip is scheduled&#13;
for Friday, April 8. The van will&#13;
leave from the Union Bazaar at 1&#13;
p.m. A sign up sheet is posted&#13;
outside Greenquist 108.&#13;
PSE&#13;
This is your personal invitation&#13;
to increase your chances to land&#13;
that good job. Attend a talk given&#13;
by Mr. Jud Miner, President and&#13;
National Sales Director of&#13;
Anographics Corp., of Burr Ridge,&#13;
111. You will be able to sharpen&#13;
your skills as a professional.&#13;
Miner will speak on the topics of&#13;
integrity through personal&#13;
motivation and what it means to&#13;
have a competitive edge in the job&#13;
market.&#13;
Sailing Club&#13;
The UW - Parkside Sailing Club&#13;
has been reorganized. The old&#13;
club was disbanded about three&#13;
years ago, when its advisor was&#13;
transferred to Madision. The new&#13;
club is going about the business of&#13;
budgeting and needs interested&#13;
Club Events • ••••&#13;
people to attend a meeting to set&#13;
up an activity schedule. The&#13;
president, Scott Goebel, is&#13;
currently a PSGA senator and has&#13;
been active in the Racine Yacht&#13;
Club for years. He can be contacted&#13;
in the PSGA office after 10&#13;
a. m. any day but Thursday. "We&#13;
will organize a meeting for&#13;
sometime in the next few weeks,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
SWEA&#13;
A concern of m ajor importance&#13;
to all in the education field is the&#13;
topic of job contracts. Reg&#13;
Debroux, a teacher from Appleton&#13;
and an active member of WEAC,&#13;
will be speaking on bargaining&#13;
and what to look for in job contracts.&#13;
Debroux will be here on&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 30 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104-106. The meeting is open&#13;
to all interested persons.&#13;
Comm 220 class&#13;
The students of the Comm 220&#13;
Class will be holding a workshop&#13;
on research in employee attitudes&#13;
at 4 p.m. on Mar. 31 in MOLN D105.&#13;
&#13;
William Whyte, Director of&#13;
Personnel at Snap-On Tools Corp.&#13;
of Kenosha, will be talking about&#13;
methods of gathering and&#13;
analyzing information on employee&#13;
attitudes and the benefits&#13;
of this information to both the&#13;
employee and the employer.&#13;
The workshop is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Business Club&#13;
Today, at 4 p .m. in MOLN 163&#13;
there will be a workshop on effective&#13;
communication in&#13;
business. The workshop will focus&#13;
on writing in the public relations,&#13;
advertising and selling areas. The&#13;
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- With lis Ad Only -&#13;
A CRAZY ERNIE SPECIAL&#13;
'MINIMUM OF TWO TAPES PURCHASED&#13;
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i I I . t—I&#13;
J 1 1 V&#13;
fr * BRICK'S IN UPTOWN^&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 25&#13;
$1 COVER&#13;
.* MONDAY NIGHT SPECIAL *&#13;
Pitchers o f beer for just&#13;
$2 with Pa rkside ID&#13;
1518 WASHINGTON AVE.&#13;
IN RACINE'S UPTOWN&#13;
L_&#13;
Capsule College offers educ&#13;
While UW - Parkside students&#13;
were away during spring break,&#13;
their classroom seats were filled&#13;
by more than 1,400 people from&#13;
surrounding communities who&#13;
attended the 13th annual Capsule&#13;
College, held here Tuesday,&#13;
March 15 through Thursday,&#13;
March 17. Capsule College participants&#13;
chose from more than&#13;
130 courses on subjects as diverse&#13;
as relaxation therapy, theater&#13;
appreciation and sex without fear&#13;
The faculty for Capsule College&#13;
was drawn from the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System as well as&#13;
various community agencies,&#13;
institutions, businesses and&#13;
professions. After just a dozen&#13;
years, Capsule College, one of the&#13;
first short - term "community&#13;
colleges" in the nation, has more&#13;
than 11,000 alumni.&#13;
CAROLE JARR, of Kenosha, fashions a&#13;
miniature dol I during a class on making items for&#13;
doll houses.&#13;
Think P iece&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
(nothing or everything) between&#13;
the two people, by using the words&#13;
we have and by giving them&#13;
whatever emphasis we do, we are&#13;
creating an image and that's what&#13;
we talk about.&#13;
Here's where so many people&#13;
run into trouble. They take that&#13;
image as being the thing itself.&#13;
Through this process an innocent&#13;
evening between two friends can&#13;
become a passionate romp between&#13;
a sex kitten and a stud.&#13;
Whenever the image is taken as&#13;
being the thing itself, detrimental&#13;
consequences can arise for those&#13;
holding that belief. And unfortunately&#13;
these people are&#13;
usually among the majority.&#13;
I suppose some solace might be&#13;
found in a saying we in the&#13;
communication department have:&#13;
Whatever Natalie tells me about&#13;
John tells me more about Natalie&#13;
than it does about John. What this&#13;
is proposing is that the way we&#13;
describe something lends insight&#13;
as to what type of person we are.&#13;
Applying this to our theme, we&#13;
might say that whenever someone&#13;
is gossiping, the potential is there&#13;
for us to learn more about that&#13;
person than about the gossip.&#13;
It's a hell of a concept knowing&#13;
that we can create people,&#13;
situations, and even worlds with&#13;
words. It's important to&#13;
remember that this is the process&#13;
we are participating in when we&#13;
gossip; that we are not discussing&#13;
people or what they did but we are&#13;
creating people and their&#13;
situations.&#13;
University of Wisconsin—Parkside&#13;
Box No. 2000&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 i ¥&#13;
MEMORANDUM&#13;
TO:&#13;
FROM:&#13;
March 1 4, 1983&#13;
All UW-Parkside Employees and Students&#13;
Academic Staff Distinguished Service Award Committee&#13;
Carol J. Cashen, Chair&#13;
Carla Stoffle James Shea&#13;
Mary Power j. Tom Krimmel&#13;
Esther Letven Jim Kreuser&#13;
SUBJECT: Nominations for Academic Staff Distinguished Service Award&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin has announced that a distinguished service award of $500 will&#13;
again be awarded this year to an academic staff member for "Exemplary University&#13;
Service. The above named s election committee has been established by the ArJLi.&#13;
Staff Committee to establish criteria, invite nominations and recommend^ J&#13;
to the Chancellor. Should a member of the selection committee become a f&#13;
the award, he/she will resign from the committee. candidate for&#13;
ELIGIBILITY&#13;
Non-teaching members of the academic staff who ho ld appointments of 507 Mm* o r&#13;
may be nominated. Those with Joint instructional/non-instructional r&#13;
(specialists/adjuncts) will be eligible for their non-teaching activities a ! ! %&#13;
those eligible is attached to the nomination form. Questions ah. , !?&#13;
be directed to the chairperson. Any member of the UV-Parks?de I!™'?"&#13;
8&#13;
"&#13;
111**&#13;
or cne UW Pa rkside community may n ominate.&#13;
CRITERIA&#13;
Criteria will be especially distinguished service which demnn^r.K!, w r.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside or the campus community and'which bene&#13;
J&#13;
its&#13;
u&#13;
the&#13;
quired performance of his/her normal duties or Job responsibi 1\ u re~&#13;
i.e., "above and beyond the call of duty." e Unlv&#13;
ersity,&#13;
Further, it is expected that such distinguished servi™ . . , ,&#13;
professional training; could have been one significant a M 1 reJ&#13;
ated to his/her&#13;
tern of exemplary service over the yeari""7t UW-ParWc&lt;a ac ci*&#13;
lt;y or service or a pated&#13;
or accomplished on and/or off campus. ' 3 could have been performPROCEDURE&#13;
FOR NO MINATING&#13;
1. Nominations should be submitted on forms&#13;
Union and Main Place. All of the information 3t Informat&#13;
ion kiosks in the&#13;
supplied.&#13;
n re4uested on the form must be&#13;
2. Supporting documents, tangible evidence atn&#13;
3. Deadline for nominations is Friday, April 29*'iS? aPPropriate.&#13;
4. Persons who a re nominated will be nntifl /&#13;
additional relevant Information. a&#13;
"&#13;
d glVen an °PP&#13;
or&#13;
tunity to supply&#13;
5. The recipient will be announced'at the fall&#13;
n- cne tall convocation.&#13;
Questions may be directed to the rh=&lt;&#13;
the Chairperson, Carol J. ca.han, ext. 2608. &#13;
Jtional opportunities to many&#13;
HUNDREDSOF PEOPLE pack Molinaro Hall to register for Capsule College.&#13;
Oscar opinions offered&#13;
Cuzner and Dr. Who&#13;
hit the airwaves&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
I've got great news for Ron&#13;
Cuzner and Dr. Who fans. Sound&#13;
confusing? Let me explain.&#13;
Ron Cuzner, after a fairly long&#13;
absence on the Milwaukee airwaves,&#13;
is back on the air with 'the&#13;
dark side.' Cuzner was hired by&#13;
WLUM radio in Milwaukee, which&#13;
features a soul / funk format.&#13;
However, Cuzner has his old&#13;
midnight to six time slot back, and&#13;
his jazz format as well. WLUM is&#13;
located at 102 on the FM dial, so&#13;
jazz lovers tune in and rejoice!&#13;
More good news. Channel 10,&#13;
WMVS in Milwaukee, has purchased&#13;
the entire Tom Baker&#13;
package of 'Dr. Who' episodes.&#13;
The show will air Friday nights at&#13;
10:30, and then repeat Saturday&#13;
afternoons at 2 p. m. ^he best&#13;
news is that the show starts&#13;
tomorrow night! So you die - hard&#13;
Whoites (myself included) can&#13;
Opera Guild schedule&#13;
The Parkside Opera Guild, now&#13;
in its 14th year, announces the&#13;
schedule of the Lyric Opera of&#13;
Chicago's Saturday night D-l&#13;
series for which the Guild&#13;
arranges bus tours to Chicago.&#13;
The operas are October l, Aida&#13;
by Verdi (in Italian); October 15,&#13;
Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk by&#13;
Shostakovich (in English); October&#13;
29, La Cenerentola by&#13;
Rossini (in Italian); November 12,&#13;
Der Fliegende Hollander by&#13;
Wagner (in German); and&#13;
November 19, La Boheme by&#13;
Puccini (in Italian).&#13;
For further ticket and bus information&#13;
call Parkside Opera&#13;
Guild in care of Parkside, phone&#13;
(414) 553-2312. Enrollment is&#13;
limited, and immediate response&#13;
requested from those interested.&#13;
by Dave Schroeder&#13;
Soon the Academy of Motion&#13;
Picture Arts and Sciences will&#13;
announce their choices for the top&#13;
honors of the film industry.&#13;
Everyone has their opinion of&#13;
which picture or performer was&#13;
their favorite, and which picture&#13;
or performer the Academy will&#13;
pick. I will be giving you my&#13;
opinion in three sections: The Top&#13;
Acting Honors, The Top Overall&#13;
Picture Honors (Picture,&#13;
Director, Screenplay), and the&#13;
Forgotten Awards (Costume, Set,&#13;
Makeup, and Other Designs).&#13;
The Acting Honors are very&#13;
difficult to predict this year,&#13;
especially in the men's categories.&#13;
So I think I will start with the&#13;
Supporting category first, and&#13;
rate the actors in reverse order of&#13;
the strength of their performance.&#13;
Leslie Ann Warren (Victor,&#13;
Victoria) turned in a very fine&#13;
performance, but it is not up to&#13;
par with the rest of the women in&#13;
this category.&#13;
Teri Garr (Tootsie). I'm glad&#13;
that this actress is finally getting&#13;
the recognition she deserves. She&#13;
was hilarious as Hoffman's acting&#13;
student, friend, and sometimes&#13;
lover, but her part was not as&#13;
substantial as the rest in this&#13;
category, and I don't think she has&#13;
the political clout to get the award&#13;
this time around.&#13;
Glenn Close (The World According&#13;
to Garp) gave a very&#13;
compelling performance as&#13;
Garp's mother, and I was&#13;
pleasantly surprised to see her&#13;
nomination considering it was her&#13;
first screen role.&#13;
Jessica Lange (Tootsie). Boy,&#13;
has this girl come a long way. In&#13;
the short time since her acting&#13;
debut in King Kong (or disaster,&#13;
depending on how you look at it),&#13;
she has developed that certain&#13;
sense of presence that I always&#13;
thought some actors were just&#13;
born with. Wonderful in Tootsie,&#13;
and the top contender for the&#13;
award because of her double&#13;
nomination.&#13;
Kim Stanley (Frances) was&#13;
superb as Frances' obsessed&#13;
mother, turning out the finest&#13;
performance of the ladies in this&#13;
category.&#13;
My Pick — Ki m Stanley.&#13;
The Academy will probably pick&#13;
— Je ssica Lange&#13;
Best Supporting Actor&#13;
This was the hardest category to&#13;
pick from, but Charles Durning&#13;
(The Best Little Whorehouse in&#13;
Texas) is easy to weed out when&#13;
others more deserving of the&#13;
nomination were looked over.&#13;
John Lithgow (The World According&#13;
to Garp), as the&#13;
SOPHIES&#13;
CHOICE&#13;
watch this wonderful show Friday&#13;
nights on channel ten, Saturday&#13;
mornings at 9 a. m. on channel 11,&#13;
Saturday afternoons on ten, and&#13;
then Sunday nights at 11 p. m. on&#13;
channel 11.1 know what I'm going&#13;
to be doing on the weekends.&#13;
Philadelphia Eagle - turned -&#13;
woman, was perfect and is well&#13;
deserving of this nomination, but&#13;
was not good enough to win it.&#13;
Robert Preston (Victor, Victoria)&#13;
was hilarious as Julie&#13;
Andrews' homosexual friend. The&#13;
funniest man in drag of the year.&#13;
(Yes, even funnier than Dustin&#13;
Hoffman.)&#13;
Louis Gosset, Jr. (An Officer&#13;
and a Gentleman). One of the two&#13;
top seeds for this award. Superior&#13;
as the tough Drill Sergeant&#13;
shaping his rag - tag battalion,&#13;
Gosset's fine characterization&#13;
made it very difficult for me to&#13;
make my final choice.&#13;
James Mason (The Verdict).&#13;
What made me choose James&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
WE'LL PAY YOU TO GET INTO&#13;
SHAPE THIS SUMMER.&#13;
Bookcases&#13;
Now on Sale!&#13;
For *169&#13;
(Rogularly 3 tor S1B9I&#13;
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better—they re now on sale They re&#13;
bookcases ready lo take home and assemble&#13;
All finishes easily wipe clean Plus you can add doors&#13;
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Each bookcase 30 w x 12 d x 72 h (16 d are S20 unit extra) Door kits extra&#13;
Choice of finishes: White • Light butcher block • Dark butcher block • Teak&#13;
ends April 3,198J&#13;
Scandinavian Design WW&#13;
3127 Roosevelt Road&#13;
Daily 10 to 6&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Friday 10 to 9&#13;
Ph. 652-0034&#13;
Sunday 1 to 5&#13;
If you have at least&#13;
two years of college left,&#13;
you can spend six weeks at&#13;
our Army ROTC Basic&#13;
Camp this summer and earn&#13;
approximately $600.&#13;
And if you qualify, you&#13;
can enter the RCTC 2-&#13;
Year Program this fall and&#13;
receive up to $ 1,000 a year.&#13;
But the big payoff&#13;
happens on graduation day.&#13;
That's when you receive&#13;
an officer's commission.&#13;
So get your body in&#13;
shape (not to mention your&#13;
bank account).&#13;
Enroll in Army ROTC.&#13;
For more information,&#13;
contact your Professor of&#13;
Military Science.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALLYOUCANBE.&#13;
Contact address&#13;
ENROLLMENT OFFICER&#13;
MARQUETTE UNIV.&#13;
ARMY ROTC&#13;
CALL COLLECT&#13;
(414) 224-7195/7229 &#13;
6 Thursday, March 24, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Frances" is painful to watch, but Lange is well worth seeing&#13;
by Tony Rogers-Feature Editor&#13;
"Frances" is a story of one&#13;
woman's desperation and&#13;
frustration, hopelessness and&#13;
eventual destruction. The film is,&#13;
at times, agonizing to wateh, and&#13;
in the end truly depressing. But&#13;
Jessica Lange's shining performance&#13;
as depression - era&#13;
movie starlet Frances Farmer is&#13;
well worth seeing. The film is one&#13;
of the best I've seen for some&#13;
time.&#13;
This chronicle of Farmer's life&#13;
begins with a demonstration of&#13;
her intelligent and rebellious&#13;
personality. In her staid home&#13;
town, Farmer writes a high school&#13;
essay of the death of God. Of&#13;
course, this prompts a local&#13;
uproar, but Frances "stands by&#13;
her guns." Eventually she wins an&#13;
acting competition and travels,&#13;
against her mother's wishes, to&#13;
the Soviet Union on an acting tour.&#13;
Returning to the states, and to&#13;
Hollywood', F armer is swallowed&#13;
up on the repressive contract -&#13;
player system so prevalent in the&#13;
1930's, where stars were "owned"&#13;
by their studios and had no&#13;
creative control over what roles&#13;
they played, or how they would be&#13;
played.&#13;
Finding her parts stilted and&#13;
flat, Farmer moves to New York,&#13;
and Broadway. For a time she&#13;
finds a satisfying life in the&#13;
theater — sh e has a challenging&#13;
role in a successful play, and is in&#13;
love with the play's author. But&#13;
when the entourage moves to&#13;
London, Frances is dumped — by&#13;
the troupe and her lover.&#13;
Frances returns to Hollywood&#13;
only to become involved in some&#13;
sleazoid movie productions. She&#13;
grows increasingly frustrated,&#13;
and feels that she "can't escape."&#13;
Her behavior becomes somewhat&#13;
erratic and she begins drinking.&#13;
Finally, she is arrested after&#13;
assaulting a makeup assistant,&#13;
and as an alternative to prison is&#13;
placed in a home for the mentally&#13;
ill.&#13;
Eventually Frances is put in the&#13;
custody of her mother, leaving her&#13;
mother to decide whether she is&#13;
sane or not. The problem is that&#13;
Frances wants to give up her life&#13;
of sta rdom and live quietly, while&#13;
her mother wants to live&#13;
vicariously in Frances' fame. This&#13;
leads to the film's tragic end, one&#13;
of the most difficult and painful&#13;
film sequences I have ever watched.&#13;
&#13;
Jessica Lange is brilliant as.&#13;
Frances Farmer. She injects the&#13;
role with the same spirit and&#13;
sensitivity that we sense Farmer&#13;
actually had. To watch the slow&#13;
destruction of this woman was&#13;
heartbreaking, and more&#13;
emotionally disturbing than even&#13;
"Sophie's Choice." This could not&#13;
have been accomplished without&#13;
an extremely strong performance&#13;
from Lange.&#13;
Both Meryl Streep and Jessica&#13;
Lange have been nominated for&#13;
best actress, and although I think&#13;
Streep will probably take the&#13;
award, Lange is equally deserving&#13;
with this fine performance.&#13;
Technically, Streep's role may&#13;
have been slightly more difficult&#13;
(learning Polish, adopting an&#13;
accent) but Lange very effectively&#13;
conveys the terror of a&#13;
free spirit imprisoned and&#13;
crushed. This film is excellent and&#13;
the kind of material that Jessica&#13;
Lange deserves.&#13;
Oscars&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
Mason over Lou Gosset, Jr.?&#13;
Their performances were very&#13;
much at an equal level until one&#13;
part of T he Verdict, where Mason&#13;
revealed his genius. All at once in&#13;
the final court scenes, he riveted&#13;
the audience as he became rattled,&#13;
which was something that&#13;
the character which he portrayed&#13;
does not do often. This stroke of&#13;
genius is what earned him my&#13;
choice over any of the others.&#13;
My Pick — James Mason.&#13;
The Academy's pick — Lou&#13;
Gosset, Jr.&#13;
Best Actress&#13;
Julie Andrews (Victor, Victoria).&#13;
Sorry Julie, you were very&#13;
funny, but you didn't convince me&#13;
you were a man as much as your&#13;
Co - st ar convinced me he was a&#13;
woman.&#13;
Debra Winger (An Officer and a&#13;
Gentleman). She surprised me as&#13;
Richard Gere's love interest. A&#13;
very sensitive and warm portrayal,&#13;
but she won't get the&#13;
award.&#13;
Sissy Spacek (Missing).&#13;
Riveting in her portrayal of the&#13;
wife of a missing reporter in South&#13;
America. A fine performance, but&#13;
it was not as fine as the remaining&#13;
two in this category. Besides, she&#13;
just won hers a couple of years&#13;
ago.&#13;
Jessica Lange (Frances). A&#13;
stunning performance as the&#13;
tragic Frances Farmer. Through&#13;
her this movie lived, and this&#13;
performance is definite Oscar&#13;
quality, but because of the last&#13;
woman in this category's strong&#13;
performance, Lange will not get it&#13;
this time around. However, I do&#13;
believe she will win Best Supporting&#13;
Actress, not so much for&#13;
her Tootsie role, but as second&#13;
prize for her Frances portrayal.&#13;
Meryl Streep (Sophie's Choice).&#13;
WOW!! All I can say is that this is&#13;
the Actress of the Eighties. As&#13;
Sophie, Streep has turned in the&#13;
finest screen performance in any&#13;
movie of a ny actress that I have&#13;
ever seen. Strong words, huh?&#13;
And I mean them. This is the&#13;
runaway winner for this award for&#13;
this year.&#13;
My Pick, AND the Academy's&#13;
pick — Me ryl Streep.&#13;
Best Actor&#13;
Another very difficult category&#13;
to assess. But, much harder to&#13;
pick the Academy's choice than&#13;
my own.&#13;
Peter O'Toole (My Favorite&#13;
Year). I know that I will get a lot&#13;
of flack from certain friends of&#13;
mine on this one. Peter, I think&#13;
that your performance was&#13;
wonderful, but not nearly as fine&#13;
as the other four.&#13;
As far as I'm concerned, the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Platteville&#13;
:.isuje b :; r;&#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." Daw*jhoreau&#13;
Study in London for S2675 per semester. Includes air fare,&#13;
tuition, field trips, family stay with meals.&#13;
Programs also in&#13;
Aix-en-Provence, France&#13;
Copenhagen, Denmark&#13;
Dublin, Ireland&#13;
Florence, Italy&#13;
Heidelberg, Germany&#13;
Israel (various locations)&#13;
Lugano, Switzerland&#13;
Puebla, Mexico&#13;
Rome, Italy&#13;
Salzburg, Austria&#13;
Seville, Spain&#13;
For further information, write or call:&#13;
Institute for Study Abroad Programs&#13;
University of Wisconsin—Platteville&#13;
725 West Main Street&#13;
Platteville, Wisconsin 53818&#13;
608-342-1726&#13;
No foreign language proficiency&#13;
is r equired.&#13;
next three are tied for second&#13;
place, so the next three are in&#13;
alphabetical order.&#13;
Dustin Hoffman (Tootsie). Yes,&#13;
Robert Preston may have been&#13;
funnier, but Dustin Hoffman made&#13;
Dorothy come to life as a totally&#13;
different character from Michael.&#13;
This is, I feel, his best performance&#13;
to date.&#13;
Ben Kingsley (Gandhi). I am&#13;
certain that no one else other than&#13;
this man could have possibly&#13;
attempted to play this peaceful&#13;
warrior. And if anyone had, I&#13;
would not have enjoyed the movie&#13;
at all. „&#13;
Jack Lemmon (Missing). Jack&#13;
once again proves he can make us&#13;
really mad at the establishment&#13;
as he did in The China Syndrome.&#13;
A v ery powerful performance.&#13;
Paul Newman (The Verdict).&#13;
He has really earned this year's&#13;
award for his compelling and&#13;
understated performance as a&#13;
down and out, alcoholic lawyer.&#13;
His creation was just one notch&#13;
above the rest.&#13;
My Pick — Pa ul Newman.&#13;
The Academy's pick — either&#13;
Paul Newman or Ben Kingsley.&#13;
Here are some people that were&#13;
overlooked for their performances&#13;
in these categories:&#13;
Best Supporting Actress —&#13;
Charlotte Rampling (The Verdict),&#13;
Drew Barrymore (E.T.).&#13;
Best Supporting Actor — Robert&#13;
McNaughton (E.T.), Jack Warden&#13;
(The Verdict), Sydney Pollack&#13;
(Tootsie), Kevin Kline (Sophie's&#13;
Choice).&#13;
Best Actor — Craig Wasson&#13;
(Four Friends), Henry Thomas&#13;
(E.T.), Richard Gere (An Officer&#13;
and a Gentleman), Peter MacNichol&#13;
(Sophie's Choice), and&#13;
almost the entire cast of Diner.&#13;
I&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Regency Mall/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
wmm/Qti?.&#13;
Taste the difference Kraeusening makes.&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARt &#13;
Thursday, March 24, 1983&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
Preischel gains success in walking&#13;
Ktf Pi L2 _ n •&#13;
His motivation for racing is&#13;
having fun, and of course to be the&#13;
best in the country. He added,&#13;
nace walking is great, it's fun,&#13;
and the competition is at a high&#13;
level. I do it to see how well I can&#13;
do, I don't know, just to do well&#13;
and have fun."&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
Parkside is well - known for its&#13;
racewalking, as it has produced&#13;
many world class walkers such as&#13;
Jim Heiring, Ray Sharp and&#13;
Tommy Edwards. Senior Will&#13;
Preischel seems to be following&#13;
this tradition.&#13;
At Nationals recently, Will&#13;
placed 6th, although much of his&#13;
indoor season has been hampered&#13;
by a pulled hamstring. Preischel&#13;
is majoring in Electrical&#13;
Engineering Technology, and&#13;
may graduate this semester. Will&#13;
started his race walking career&#13;
when he was a senior in high&#13;
school in Buffalo, N.Y. "My high&#13;
school coach got me interested&#13;
and told me about Parkside and&#13;
the coaches here. Parkside has&#13;
the best race walkers in the&#13;
country, so I came here. Coach&#13;
DeWitt is an excellent coach," he&#13;
commented.&#13;
He races for the Chicago Track&#13;
Club when he is not racing for&#13;
Parkside, which is usually in the&#13;
summer. However, this summer&#13;
he may go to a training camp in&#13;
Colorado. If he doesn't go he will&#13;
stay here in Wisconsin and train&#13;
with DeWitt.&#13;
Last summer was rather ill -&#13;
fated in that he injured his ankle&#13;
last May. This January he pulled a&#13;
hamstring in his left knee and he&#13;
wasn't in peak form, even though,&#13;
he came in 6th in the USA W alk&#13;
Racing Nationals in New York on&#13;
March 4. "At Nationals this year I&#13;
wasn't even in good shape because&#13;
SPORT NEWS&#13;
SHOOTING TEAM RESULTS&#13;
National Guard&#13;
Parkside II&#13;
CMI&#13;
Bodven's&#13;
Railroad Products&#13;
Alfredo's&#13;
Marty's&#13;
Paradise Lanes&#13;
Western Publishing&#13;
Parkside I&#13;
Hole Crew&#13;
Southway Supply&#13;
Colonial Liquor&#13;
15-5&#13;
14-6&#13;
14-6&#13;
12-8&#13;
12-8&#13;
11-9&#13;
11-9&#13;
11-9&#13;
9-11&#13;
8-12&#13;
8-12&#13;
8-12&#13;
7-13&#13;
Sports Show&#13;
Jalensky's Sports Headquarters&#13;
will sponsor the second annual&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Spring&#13;
Sports Show to be held at Racine's&#13;
Westgate Mall. This year's show&#13;
will be March 24-27 from 9-9&#13;
Thursday - Saturday and 10-5 on&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Over 50 manufacturers of fine&#13;
fishing tackle and sporting goods,&#13;
along with several area sportsmen's&#13;
clubs and groups, will have&#13;
displays set up for the public.&#13;
Ten seminars on different topics&#13;
relating to fishing and boating will&#13;
be presented over the four day&#13;
show. Nationally known pro&#13;
fishermen and guides including&#13;
Tony Portincaso and pro muskie&#13;
guide Joe Bucher will be speaking&#13;
on topics of interest to all anglers.&#13;
Several demonstrations and&#13;
"Mini - Clinics" will be conducted&#13;
throughout the duration of the&#13;
show.&#13;
The show is free of charge and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Fencing Nationals&#13;
Sam Waller, of Kenosha, will be&#13;
Parkside's entry in the 39th NCAA&#13;
National Fencing Championship&#13;
to be held at UW - Parkside on&#13;
March 24-26.&#13;
Waller, fencing the sabre,&#13;
qualified March 5 at the Great&#13;
Lakes meet held at the University&#13;
of Detroit. This will be Sam's&#13;
second time at the Nationals.&#13;
There will be 36 fencers in each&#13;
of the three weapons — foil, sabre&#13;
and epee — representing approximately&#13;
50 teams from&#13;
throughout the nation.&#13;
Fencing each day starts at 9:30&#13;
a.m. and spectators are welcome.&#13;
This is Parkside's third time&#13;
hosting the NCAA Na tional meet.&#13;
Thursday's competition will&#13;
eliminate 12 men in each event,&#13;
setting up 24 - man round robin&#13;
matches Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Opening day competition could&#13;
continue until approximately 5:30&#13;
p.m. Friday and Saturday matches&#13;
should run until 2 or 3 p.m.&#13;
Both team and individual&#13;
championships will be contested,&#13;
with the top six fencers in each&#13;
weapon earning All - American&#13;
honors. The entire fieldhouse floor&#13;
will be the site of t he action which&#13;
takes place on twelve 54 - foot&#13;
strips. Epee, which includes the&#13;
entire body as a target, and foil,&#13;
which is confined to the torso, are&#13;
"thrusting" weapons and touches&#13;
(points) are recorded electronically.&#13;
Sabre is a thrusting or&#13;
cutting weapon whose target is the&#13;
upper body and relies on judges to&#13;
determine successful slashes or&#13;
thrusts.&#13;
Coach Loran Hein, who has&#13;
turned out two national champions&#13;
and a World University&#13;
team member in his 17 years at&#13;
Parkside and the two - year UW&#13;
Center in Kenosha which&#13;
preceded it, tabs Wayne State as&#13;
the team to beat.&#13;
I got hurt. Just think what I could&#13;
have done if I wasn't," Will said.&#13;
Like any athlete, his racing&#13;
career has had a few highs and&#13;
lows. Will said, "As for low points&#13;
I guess was last summer when I&#13;
got hurt in May. I hurt my left&#13;
ankle, I just wrecked it. The high&#13;
point was being ranked 11th in&#13;
"Track and Field" magazine. You&#13;
know you've made it when you're&#13;
in that magazine; it's THE runners&#13;
magazine."&#13;
Parkside being a commuter&#13;
school, most of the students are&#13;
from the Racine - Kenosha area,&#13;
and can't figure out why anyone in&#13;
their right mind would come from&#13;
Buffalo to Parkside. Will's reason&#13;
makes very good sense, though.&#13;
"The race walking program is the&#13;
best in the country. Everyone else&#13;
has heard of P arkside around the&#13;
country, except those people&#13;
around here."&#13;
Getting ready for an athletic&#13;
event is an important part of&#13;
competing. When asked how he&#13;
handled such large national meets&#13;
he replied, "I used to get nervous&#13;
at all those big meets. You have to&#13;
have confidence, and I just concentrate&#13;
of w hat I have to do. At&#13;
this last meet in New York there&#13;
were thousands of people. It&#13;
doesn't bother me anymore."&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Thursday, Mar. 24&#13;
~&#13;
,aken from 10:30 a&#13;
-&#13;
m-&#13;
,0 2 P- min&#13;
WLLC, Alcove 105. Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside r.a n Office.&#13;
LECTURE&#13;
The speaker&#13;
public.&#13;
MOVIE "R ,&#13;
door is $1 to.&#13;
nder Differences, Power Relations and Harassment" at 3:30 p. m. in CA 129.&#13;
1 ^ of. B. Gendron of UW - Milwaukee. The program is free and open to the&#13;
^G) will be shown at 3:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema. Admission at the&#13;
uunoircuno de studenf and *1 f&#13;
°&#13;
r fluest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
j '°'&#13;
r and ,he World of Investments" at 7 p. m. in MOLN 107. Call ext. 2047 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
C&#13;
?^&#13;
RAfJ,'.!.&#13;
nVc&#13;
S,in9 Those Hard Earned Dollars" starts at 7 p. m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312'&#13;
rm occic; sP°&#13;
n&#13;
s°red by UW - Extension.&#13;
UW Exten"«v^&#13;
ana&#13;
°&#13;
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Tallent Hall. Sponsored by&#13;
Mfeatsf hav?been&#13;
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ect of Desire&#13;
" wi&#13;
" be shown at 7:30 P- m-the Union Cinema. All&#13;
"&#13;
T.&#13;
he BI&#13;
l,ins&#13;
" at 8:30 p- m. in Union Square. Advance tickets are available at&#13;
union information Center; admission is $3.50 now or $4 a the door. Sponsored by SNAP.&#13;
.. no m Friday,Mar.25&#13;
MOVIE "Rorkl i&#13;
P&#13;
i'vwin^&#13;
nmn&#13;
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Squarefea1urin9&#13;
"&#13;
The Dancln&#13;
' Machine." Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
DINNER K J&#13;
P&#13;
Ji&#13;
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d ot7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tickets are ivuailaKif ? n&#13;
? Town House&#13;
- The speaker is Eleanor Hayes of Channel 12. Tickets are available at the Union Information Center.&#13;
waw.e ,,-r-u Saturday, Mar. 26&#13;
seats are sold Ure&#13;
°&#13;
b&#13;
'&#13;
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JaZZ' Modern a&#13;
"&#13;
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de S,UdentS&#13;
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MOVIE "Rocky 111" (PG) will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tuesday,Mar.29&#13;
MOVi E Reds (PG) will be shown at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
ceuiuad,,. Wednesday, Mar. 30&#13;
The Pvema&#13;
ice&#13;
f™^Ten in&#13;
.&#13;
F&#13;
iims of ,he For,ies&#13;
" bV Frances Kavenik at 12 noon in Union&#13;
movif"bT" ?,K0pen t0 ,he public&#13;
- Sponsored by the Women's Studies Program,&#13;
,&#13;
(PG&#13;
^" be reP&#13;
eat&#13;
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d a» 1 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Thlr,r7^r»l, er«&#13;
r&#13;
° B®lland and Nicolee Teegarden at 3:30 p. m. in the Com. Arts Gallery.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public. '&#13;
PAdIi«i^r&#13;
Ji«e&#13;
tee&#13;
inb!I&#13;
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l,&#13;
a&#13;
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? by Thea,re x of Milwaukee at 8 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
fnfnrmi?i™ Parkside students and $3.50 for others. Tickets are available at the Union&#13;
information Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
AIR FORCE EXPERIENCE&#13;
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8 Thursday, March 24,1983 RANGER&#13;
Soort Shots&#13;
Luehr looks back on the '83 basketball season&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
There's a new kid on the&#13;
professional sports block. It's the&#13;
new United States Football&#13;
League (USFL). Optimism is&#13;
running high among the league&#13;
officials, and with good reason.&#13;
They have some quality players&#13;
(most of them will play for&#13;
Chicago) and they have some&#13;
experienced coaches. But most of&#13;
all, they have financial backing, in&#13;
the form of TV contracts with ABC&#13;
and ESPN totaling $36 million.&#13;
Not too bad, eh?? Well....&#13;
The season begins on March 6&#13;
with 5 games being played. Don't&#13;
expect any one of t hese games to&#13;
be very well played; after all, the&#13;
teams have only been practicing&#13;
for a month. In fact, the USFL has&#13;
only been around officially for&#13;
about 10 months. It may take a&#13;
few weeks before we see some&#13;
cohesive team play.&#13;
Lets take a look at the teams in&#13;
the new league. Head coaches'&#13;
names in parenthesis: Atlantic&#13;
Division — Boston Breakers (Dick&#13;
Coury), New Jersey Generals&#13;
(Chuck Fairbanks), Philadelphia&#13;
Stars (Jim Mora), Washington&#13;
Federals (Ray Jauch). Central&#13;
Division — Birmingham Stallions&#13;
(Rollie Dotsch), Chicago Blitz&#13;
(George Allen), Michigan Panthers&#13;
(Jim Stanley), Tampa Bay&#13;
Bandits (Steve Spurrier). Pacific&#13;
Division — Arizona Wranglers&#13;
(Doug Shively); Denver Gold (Red&#13;
Miller); Los Angeles Express&#13;
(Hugh Campbell), Oakland Invaders&#13;
(John Ralston).&#13;
As you look at the list of&#13;
coaches, there are a few familiar&#13;
names, but what about the rest? A&#13;
couple are former Canadian&#13;
Football League head coaches, a&#13;
couple are former college&#13;
assistant coaches, and the rest are&#13;
former NFL assistants.&#13;
Now for the players. The people&#13;
who run this league have pulled&#13;
off something that they weren't&#13;
expected to. They were able to get&#13;
some name players to sign with&#13;
them. Among the notables are&#13;
Stan White, former linebacker&#13;
with, most recently, the Detroit&#13;
Lions; Virgil Livers, former&#13;
corner back with the Bears; and&#13;
Mike Rae, former back - up to&#13;
Kenny Stabler at Oakland with the&#13;
Raiders. The surprising turn was&#13;
the ability to sign many quality&#13;
college draft choices, such as Tim&#13;
Wrightman and Tim Spencer from&#13;
Ohio State, David Greenwood&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
ARCHAEOLOGY/TRAVEL: Excavate a&#13;
biblical site, 6 credits, 1983 Summer&#13;
Session. Call (608) 262-9785 for information.&#13;
TYPING, in my home. Professional, speedy&#13;
service, student rates. Call Debbie at 681-&#13;
3522.&#13;
BOOK SALE: "Presidents, Politics, and&#13;
Americana." A special collection at the Old&#13;
Book Corner, Martha Merrell's Bookstore,&#13;
312 - 6 th St., Racine. Used and hard to find&#13;
titles at paperback prices.&#13;
ROOMMATE - share 2 bedroom at Woodcreek&#13;
over summer. Phone 552-9528.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
ELLIOTT: Only 37 more days until May!&#13;
H.B.&#13;
STAR TR EK: Interested in chartering bus to&#13;
St. Louis convention: call 886 5994 or 658-&#13;
2885.&#13;
CHUCK: I've got to know —will the rain hurt&#13;
the rhubarb?!&#13;
P.D.: Preciousness is not something to be&#13;
ashamed of. K.M.&#13;
MASOOD SHAFIQ would like to thank all the&#13;
thinking students who voted for him.&#13;
TO ALL STUDENTS who helped with the&#13;
Very Special Arts Festival: It was great&#13;
fun! See you next year.&#13;
PAT: How do you spell Broo-HAHA??? Is it&#13;
anything like Pinochle???&#13;
MOLLY: You're a wild party thrower, and&#13;
the people who attended were fun. They're&#13;
even better than BLUE MONDAY PAR&#13;
TIES!!! So there. I.J.L., Inc.&#13;
ED: You made the party everything it was,&#13;
including fun!&#13;
BLANCHE: Darling, the weather you go out&#13;
in is absolutely insane!! See you in Spain&#13;
darling!!&#13;
JACK: Just because the people you wanted to&#13;
win the election did, doesn't mean they&#13;
were the best choice. Less than 200 votes&#13;
doesn't say much. Ben&#13;
PAT: The fun we'll have over the summer&#13;
makes up for the work time we have to have&#13;
now. Pat&#13;
JO: Pat and I di dn't fight this Tuesday. Pat&#13;
LOU: Glad you're back, and you're always&#13;
the winner in my heart. Ed&#13;
LOU: You and Molly and I w ill have to go to&#13;
lunch soon. What the hell, Ed.&#13;
RANGER STAFF: Be prepared for one of the&#13;
funnest issues of the years; April 1.&#13;
A PARKSIDE PLAYER&#13;
aims for two.&#13;
from Wisconsin, and Herschel&#13;
Walker.&#13;
It is my belief that, despite the&#13;
fact that practice time has been&#13;
short, and despite the fact that&#13;
most of the coaches are going to&#13;
have rough going during the&#13;
season, this league will survive&#13;
this year and will be around for at&#13;
least a few years to come.&#13;
The league's big advantage is&#13;
playing in the spring and early&#13;
summer, so there is no competition&#13;
from the NFL. Baseball&#13;
shouldn't affect them much&#13;
either, because USFL games are&#13;
only on weekends and Monday&#13;
nights. Besides, you have six&#13;
months to see baseball. So, based&#13;
on all factors, this thing called the&#13;
USFL should survive (for a&#13;
while).&#13;
I mentioned Herschel Walker&#13;
before.&#13;
You would have to have jus&#13;
come from a cave if you don't&#13;
know what has happened in&#13;
relation to Mr. Walker.&#13;
Herschel Walker has become an&#13;
instant millionaire. He has signed&#13;
a three year, $5 million contract&#13;
with the New Jersey Generals of&#13;
the USFL. He will get $1 million a&#13;
year for playing, and a $1.5 million&#13;
signing bonus.&#13;
All last week, Herschel denied&#13;
that he was even talking to the&#13;
Generals. The NCAA investigated&#13;
reports that he had signed already&#13;
and, according to his agent, he&#13;
signed the contract on Feb. 17, six&#13;
days before he admitted doing it.&#13;
However, the first version of the&#13;
contract had a 24 - hour escape&#13;
clause, so he could turn down the&#13;
offer. But in signing in the first&#13;
place, the University of Georgia&#13;
declared him ineligible to finish&#13;
his college career.&#13;
On Wednesday, he officially&#13;
signed the pact that will probably&#13;
seta new precedent for salaries in&#13;
pro football.&#13;
I was angered and disappointed&#13;
that Herschel Walker became a&#13;
professional. Because of this, he is&#13;
now unable to compete in the&#13;
Olympics. He probably will finish&#13;
his education at Georgia, but he&#13;
can't play football. I truly thought&#13;
Herschel had more sense than to&#13;
screw up his college football&#13;
career. He was only about 850&#13;
yards short of Tony Dorsett's&#13;
record for career rushing yards.&#13;
Besides that, he was a certain first&#13;
-round draft choice in the NFL.&#13;
He would have only had to wait for&#13;
one year to be rolling in the&#13;
money. But as Walker said in a&#13;
statement released by his agent,&#13;
In denying I signed a contract&#13;
(last week), I made a mistake. No&#13;
one realizes more than I that I am&#13;
a human being. I ask for your&#13;
forgiveness."&#13;
* * *&#13;
Sports Shots Shots: Billy Martin&#13;
is STILL with the Yankees . . .&#13;
Last week former #1 North&#13;
Carolina lost three straight&#13;
basketball games, and the&#13;
University of Nevada - Las Vegas&#13;
became the ffl team in the nation&#13;
for the first time in its history . . .&#13;
And finally, Marvelous is not just&#13;
a nickname for Marvin Hagler, it&#13;
is legally part of his name: his full&#13;
legal name is Marvelous Marvin&#13;
Hagler. Believe it, or don't.&#13;
topped]&#13;
• • • • . T^Hirt for men and&#13;
^Rk - Jam This red O&#13;
&amp; Sftb2ombed cotton rder now; ^^&#13;
ombed&#13;
Lubbock, Texas 79491&#13;
Name_&#13;
College&#13;
Address&#13;
Adult sizes only. Specify quantitv&#13;
T-shirt @ $4.95 ea., S M l </text>
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              <text>March 10, 1983&#13;
~   University of Wisconsin·  Parkside&#13;
Presidential candidates speak on issues&#13;
;:r;~t~e;:::y   ~~  ~esident  rewarding  experience  for her&#13;
.&#13;
problem   of   effectively&#13;
"sored  Presidential  a~:~:   becau",: she has, in many cases,&#13;
~ting&#13;
the students. "We&#13;
df:,:te's Forum The candidates  donpethis.&#13;
can trepresentanybody  unlll&#13;
they&#13;
ti   "d&#13;
.   ,   ogreba, who made an ue-&#13;
tell&#13;
us&#13;
the&#13;
issues. RightnowweRe!&#13;
JOP~n ng a&#13;
WI.&#13;
e. variety of successful bid for president last&#13;
very&#13;
IitUe input from the student&#13;
,.penence and OplDJOn,had an  year  has served&#13;
as&#13;
a PSGA&#13;
body&#13;
_'"&#13;
~untty  to present their views  sena&#13;
ior&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
last two years&#13;
Sd1&#13;
":eder  ~   .&#13;
tIy&#13;
III&#13;
the&#13;
student bod~.&#13;
Pogreba focused on student aC:&#13;
txtJ::&#13;
senab.r and ~:., :&#13;
of&#13;
Twoof the candIdates, Masood  tivism, and said that activism was&#13;
the Student Organizatioo&#13;
&lt;JouncI\,&#13;
9tafiq&#13;
and John ~onks, have not  the only way to make the student's&#13;
said that&#13;
SOC&#13;
as&#13;
a group&#13;
COIl.&#13;
beld&#13;
a PSGA offIce hefore, but  voices heard. "Student activism is&#13;
tained students collce,ned with&#13;
Mated&#13;
the proble~s as they saw  on the upsurge," he said. "No&#13;
the issues. He recommended&#13;
_.  The!r °PIDJOns showed a  longer do students take their&#13;
asking them if any&#13;
iaaueII&#13;
came&#13;
lDarke&lt;!&#13;
difference from those  concerns&#13;
to&#13;
the streets in the&#13;
up&#13;
"If&#13;
we were&#13;
to&#13;
poll&#13;
SOC&#13;
on all&#13;
candidates presently  active in  forms of protests and riots:' He&#13;
u.;&#13;
issues "&#13;
he said "we would&#13;
IlIJ!entgovernment..&#13;
added that students were now&#13;
get a bek&#13;
cross&#13;
"';"tiou&#13;
at&#13;
the&#13;
Mooks.who ran as a wnte . in  more&#13;
Willing&#13;
to work for their&#13;
issues."&#13;
codidafe last year, said that  rights within the system. "This is&#13;
The&#13;
two&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
ba1f&#13;
hour&#13;
1011II&#13;
...  be has not been working  the era of the professional student&#13;
deballl&#13;
attraded&#13;
bot&#13;
"WL&#13;
100&#13;
and&#13;
;lfl!GA, he has had a chance&#13;
to&#13;
activists," he added.&#13;
150&#13;
people&#13;
t!Ioallh&#13;
many&#13;
did&#13;
DOl&#13;
CIIIIletohis own conclusions about   Ramsdell, who has four month's&#13;
stay for&#13;
g,;,&#13;
entire debale.&#13;
SeveraJ&#13;
!be&#13;
problems facing Parkside  experience as a senator, said that&#13;
JEANNE BUENKER - PHILLIPS,&#13;
John Monks, Phil Pogreba,&#13;
of&#13;
the candidallB&#13;
ca1led&#13;
the&#13;
tum-&#13;
i&#13;
·&#13;
"I&#13;
haven't been set in  the biggest problem facing PSGA  Dave Schroeder  and Masood Shaflq listen carefull y as Pat  out "disappointing"&#13;
and&#13;
said it&#13;
.. me ideals as the other  was the lack&#13;
of&#13;
student  in-  "Red"  Ramsdell  answers  a question  from the Presidential&#13;
was&#13;
part&#13;
at&#13;
a&#13;
deeper&#13;
apathy on the&#13;
tes,' he said.&#13;
volvement. He talked about the  Public Forum heldon Monday In Mid _Main Place.&#13;
(Ilrt&#13;
of&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
q,&#13;
currently working as the&#13;
lIUller&#13;
Photo editor, has never&#13;
leI«e&#13;
run&#13;
for student office. He&#13;
AId&#13;
that because of his ex-&#13;
perienceinother countries, he has&#13;
I&#13;
better perspective  on the&#13;
JlW!emsfacing students here. He&#13;
iiIed&#13;
l'lat the level of political&#13;
ICIIviBmhere is lower than&#13;
bpillft&#13;
he had seen.&#13;
feelthot the student govern-&#13;
IIIDl&#13;
should become actively&#13;
iwalved.,&#13;
n&#13;
he&#13;
said.&#13;
FlIIr&#13;
of the six presidential&#13;
IIDdidates currently  hold a&#13;
adont&#13;
office. They are: Jeanne&#13;
tBker -&#13;
Phillips, Phil&#13;
Pogreba,&#13;
Pal&#13;
Ramsdell  and  Dave&#13;
lflIroeder.&#13;
PbIl1ips, who  served  as&#13;
IfIl11deDt pro tempore of the&#13;
Ie&#13;
ior (Ilrt of last semester&#13;
lIId&#13;
that PSGA is a learning&#13;
1lIpIrieucefor her, but added that&#13;
WIS&#13;
onlypossible if personality&#13;
nces&#13;
found in the student&#13;
ent are disregarded.&#13;
"It&#13;
always possible&#13;
to&#13;
get past&#13;
feelings,"&#13;
she said, but added&#13;
t PSGA was a personally&#13;
Vol. 11 •No. 22&#13;
Race, sex and U.W.-Parkside Faculty&#13;
salaries; study results not surprising&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Norman Cloutier, assistant&#13;
professor ofEconomics, discussed&#13;
his study of "Race, Sexand U.W.-&#13;
Parkside Faculty Salaries" at the&#13;
Social Science Roundtable  on&#13;
Mar.&#13;
7.&#13;
Cloutier and student&#13;
Patricia Mulligan, conducted a&#13;
controlled  study  of faculty&#13;
salaries  to determine  the&#13;
existence of discrimination on&#13;
race or sex.&#13;
The  study  began  as  a&#13;
pedigogical   exercise  while&#13;
Cloutier was teaching a course on&#13;
the  Economics  of  Human&#13;
Resources. "Pa t Mulligan wanted&#13;
to do honors work for the class.&#13;
1&#13;
thought that the availability of&#13;
faculty salaries, which is public&#13;
information, provided a unique&#13;
opportunity to show Pat and the&#13;
rest&#13;
of&#13;
the class, how one might go&#13;
about testing for racial and sexual&#13;
discrimination&#13;
ill&#13;
salaries,": said&#13;
Cloutier.&#13;
In the first half&#13;
of&#13;
the study,&#13;
Cloutier and Mulligan determined&#13;
the gross statistics that indicated&#13;
the average salaries of men,&#13;
women and minorities within a&#13;
nine month period. These raw&#13;
numbers indica&#13;
ted&#13;
that men are&#13;
paid more than women and&#13;
minorities are paid more than non&#13;
-minorities.&#13;
"OUf&#13;
question was,&#13;
is&#13;
that&#13;
evidence of discrimination,"&#13;
said Cloutier. "There are two&#13;
types&#13;
of&#13;
discrimination;  salary&#13;
discrimination  and occupational&#13;
segregation. Our study dealt with&#13;
salary discrimination,  which is&#13;
paying equals unequally.  For&#13;
example. someone&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Business&#13;
Division may not have the same&#13;
labor market characteristics as&#13;
someone inthe Fine&#13;
Arts&#13;
Division,&#13;
therefore,&#13;
we&#13;
had&#13;
to&#13;
control for all&#13;
these differences other than race&#13;
and sex, that might account for&#13;
salary differentials," he said.&#13;
In&#13;
the controlled study, salaries&#13;
are explained as a fWlCtion&#13;
of&#13;
rank, division, years of ex-&#13;
perience  and the important&#13;
Foreignstudent affair conference&#13;
features Dame R. Nita Barrows&#13;
The&#13;
President of the World&#13;
YWCA,&#13;
Dame R. Nita Barrow of&#13;
IIrbados, will he&#13;
the&#13;
keynote&#13;
lpeaker&#13;
at the spring conference&#13;
"the&#13;
Wisconsin chapter of the&#13;
IIItionaI&#13;
Association of Foreign&#13;
IIladentAffairs (NAFSAJ, which&#13;
lIill&#13;
convene Friday, March&#13;
18,&#13;
at&#13;
Pukside.&#13;
Barrow&#13;
a nurse / midwife and&#13;
c&#13;
h~lth&#13;
educator, is in&#13;
Villukee this spring as oc-&#13;
lIpant of the Gamaliel Chair, a&#13;
gram   established    by&#13;
politan Lutheran  Campus&#13;
try to explore the roles of&#13;
ents, educators,  church&#13;
"!lders and community members&#13;
"shaping a future of peace and&#13;
illation."&#13;
10&#13;
1980&#13;
Queen Elizabeth&#13;
II&#13;
!lade&#13;
Ba~ow a Dame of St.&#13;
6adrew&#13;
"for extraordinary  and&#13;
-Istanding  achievement  and&#13;
lin service&#13;
to&#13;
Barbados and&#13;
m1y at large." Earller. this&#13;
r, an Honorary Fellowship&#13;
of&#13;
Royal College&#13;
of&#13;
Nurses ~ the&#13;
ted&#13;
Kingdom was coaferr  on&#13;
"in recognition  of (her)&#13;
tribution&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
advancement&#13;
the&#13;
science and&#13;
art&#13;
of n1:i&#13;
rsmg&#13;
.  rt'cular&#13;
in&#13;
relation to&#13;
P~'::tia:.  and 'develop"ten~~&#13;
th&#13;
careandeducation:  "&#13;
es of developing coun es.&#13;
Her career has included work&#13;
with  the  World  Health&#13;
Organization,  the  Christian&#13;
Medical Commission and the&#13;
World Council&#13;
of&#13;
Churches.&#13;
Following the keynote speeeh at&#13;
10&#13;
a.m. inthe Comm Arts Theater,&#13;
conferees&#13;
will&#13;
attend sessions on a&#13;
numher  of topics relating&#13;
to&#13;
foreign students. They include&#13;
"re-entry" of foreign stndents&#13;
to&#13;
their  native  countries,  ex-&#13;
pectations by American faculty of&#13;
foreign students, eval~tion. of&#13;
credentials  from&#13;
foreign&#13;
in-&#13;
stitutions, community response to&#13;
foreign students, immigration&#13;
issues and development of study&#13;
abroad programs.&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
con·&#13;
ference. foreign students fro~&#13;
institutions around&#13;
the&#13;
state&#13;
will&#13;
attend conference sessions, hold a&#13;
Friday evening cultural program,&#13;
and  a  leadership  training&#13;
progra m Saturday, March&#13;
18.&#13;
Persons  wishing  to attend&#13;
conference    sessions&#13;
should con-&#13;
tact Esrold&#13;
Nurse,&#13;
who&#13;
is coor-&#13;
dinating local arrangements,  at&#13;
UW-Parkside  (Phone&#13;
553-2219).&#13;
Registration fee for non - mem-&#13;
bers&#13;
is&#13;
$13&#13;
for professionals and 19&#13;
for students  and community&#13;
volunteers and includes a West&#13;
Indian IWlCbeoo.&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
will&#13;
not&#13;
be&#13;
published&#13;
during&#13;
spring break.&#13;
The&#13;
neXt&#13;
issue&#13;
will appear&#13;
March 24.&#13;
variables&#13;
of&#13;
race and sex. Cloutier&#13;
and Mulligan then determined the&#13;
percentage changes in salary due&#13;
to each of the variables. For&#13;
example,&#13;
it&#13;
was found&#13;
that&#13;
a&#13;
person in the Business Division&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
1982 - '83&#13;
years received a&#13;
21.1&#13;
percent increase in salary while&#13;
the Fine Arts division showed an&#13;
8.7&#13;
percent decline in salary.&#13;
In 1981-'82minorities showed a&#13;
7.3&#13;
percent increase&#13;
in&#13;
salaries.&#13;
Accounting for everything else,&#13;
this result showed that there was&#13;
some evidence of purely racial&#13;
.disparaties in salary.&#13;
The&#13;
1982-'83&#13;
results show that this differential&#13;
declined to&#13;
4.7&#13;
percent, but was&#13;
statistically insignificant. The sex&#13;
differentials for&#13;
both&#13;
years were&#13;
negative,   but  wer~  also&#13;
statistically insignificant because&#13;
the differential was very small.&#13;
"I&#13;
interpret these results&#13;
as&#13;
showing&#13;
that, on average,&#13;
there&#13;
is&#13;
no&#13;
evidence&#13;
of&#13;
salary discrimination&#13;
based onsex. The race differential&#13;
was positive.  but was only&#13;
significant in me&#13;
1981-'82&#13;
budget&#13;
year."&#13;
he&#13;
said.&#13;
Cloutier said that&#13;
these&#13;
results&#13;
are consistent with&#13;
other&#13;
In-&#13;
vestigations  that have been&#13;
conducted on faculty salaries.&#13;
Therefore, he feels the&#13;
....ua&#13;
are&#13;
interesting,&#13;
althoucbt&#13;
not  ......&#13;
prising.&#13;
"Minorities are paid more&#13;
than&#13;
non - minorities because of&#13;
the&#13;
increased demand for minority&#13;
candidates   in  educational&#13;
positions. This differential has&#13;
been observed since the early&#13;
197&lt;ti, so&#13;
it&#13;
is not a&#13;
new&#13;
phenomenon," said Cloutier.&#13;
One&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
major lessons that&#13;
Cloutier taught&#13;
his&#13;
students&#13;
using&#13;
this study is that discrimination&#13;
can not he determined&#13;
by&#13;
looting&#13;
at gross statistics. "There are&#13;
many  reasons  other  than&#13;
discrimination why females get&#13;
paid  less  than  males  and&#13;
minorities get paId more thon&#13;
non&#13;
- minorities. The problem then&#13;
becomes, how can you&#13;
control&#13;
the&#13;
study for all&#13;
these&#13;
other things?&#13;
This study&#13;
shows&#13;
one&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
wa)'ll&#13;
you can&#13;
do&#13;
it," said Cloutier.&#13;
This&#13;
ia&#13;
Cloutier's __  year It&#13;
Parkside. He&#13;
received&#13;
his doc·&#13;
toral&#13;
degree&#13;
from&#13;
W..&#13;
t&#13;
VIrginia&#13;
Universlty in&#13;
1981.&#13;
Currently he is&#13;
researchlng   urban  housing&#13;
segregation and&#13;
serves as&#13;
the co •&#13;
chairman&#13;
of&#13;
the Social Science&#13;
Roundtable.&#13;
.)~(~~~~r(((!~~trtrtr~!~r~))~~~(t~~!~~~~~r~~t//!i~)~(\\r()~!~f:~~==::~:t:::itit:;g;i::i~:~==i:~:::}i:·:~&#13;
Veterans sponsor 5-mile race&#13;
The student Veterans Club at&#13;
Parkside is sponsoring a 5 - mile&#13;
race at9 a.m. on Saturday, April&#13;
16&#13;
as a cluh fund raiser.&#13;
Entry into&#13;
HRun&#13;
for a Vet"&#13;
is&#13;
$6&#13;
and includes a T-shirt&#13;
and&#13;
soft&#13;
drinks,  according  to  club&#13;
president Rich Welbon, organizer&#13;
of the event. Registration forms&#13;
can be picked up at the Veterans'&#13;
Services Office in Room DllSA of&#13;
the Wyllie Library - Learning&#13;
Center or at these business&#13;
locations: Super Sports - Foot-&#13;
wear, Etc.,&#13;
3316  -&#13;
BOth Street,&#13;
Kenosha;  Merritt's  Running&#13;
Center,&#13;
5200&#13;
Washington Avenue,&#13;
Racine; and The East Bay, 808&#13;
East Bay Road,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Early registration deadline is&#13;
April&#13;
12,but runners can register&#13;
up&#13;
to&#13;
race time. Late registrants&#13;
cannot be guaranteed a T-shirt,&#13;
Welbon said.&#13;
The&#13;
race&#13;
will&#13;
begin&#13;
under&#13;
the&#13;
"bridge" connecting Parllaide'.&#13;
Molinaro Hall with the Union&#13;
Building&#13;
on&#13;
the Inner&#13;
Loop&#13;
Road.&#13;
Welbon said course maps will&#13;
be&#13;
available at the&#13;
starting&#13;
line at&#13;
8:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Trophies will&#13;
be&#13;
awarded&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
male and female winners.&#13;
Parking&#13;
will&#13;
be available in the&#13;
Union Parking&#13;
Lot&#13;
on the north&#13;
side&#13;
of&#13;
the campus.&#13;
Welbon said live music&#13;
by&#13;
"Jazmin" will&#13;
be&#13;
available 1m.&#13;
mediately after&#13;
the&#13;
race ... the&#13;
Union Building (Iltio, adjacent to&#13;
the starting point.&#13;
For more informatioo on the&#13;
race, contact Welbon at 554-l866&#13;
after 5 p.m.&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I am  writing  this  letter  in&#13;
response to several letters which&#13;
have recently  appeared  in the&#13;
Ranger pertaining  to the movie&#13;
"Emmanuel:   The  Joys  Of A&#13;
Woman".&#13;
As&#13;
carol Frank stated&#13;
(Letters, Mar. 3), this is a "soft&#13;
core"&#13;
porn&#13;
movie.&#13;
Sc:it&#13;
core&#13;
in-&#13;
dicates  that  the  sexual  acts&#13;
depicted  in this movie are  not&#13;
overly explicit and are the same&#13;
acts&#13;
which millions in this country&#13;
perfonn regularly. The acts which&#13;
these movies portray are not acts&#13;
of violence or perversion directed&#13;
toward adults or children.&#13;
As&#13;
is&#13;
common  knowledge,  child&#13;
por-&#13;
nOllraphy is illegal.&#13;
As&#13;
far  as&#13;
degrading women is concerned,&#13;
if&#13;
performing  non - violent, non -&#13;
perverted    sexual   acts   is&#13;
degrading  and dehumanizing  to&#13;
wcmen why isn't it&#13;
also&#13;
the same&#13;
to the men who appear in these&#13;
movies? I personally have never&#13;
had any feelings&#13;
of&#13;
degradation or&#13;
Think Piece&#13;
Spring Break brings back memories&#13;
by Bruce&#13;
R.&#13;
Preston&#13;
was a good or bad one but it was a   old promises of: I will catch up on&#13;
It's back! After a&#13;
long&#13;
awaited   true experience. I was one&#13;
of&#13;
the   my school work; I will clean my&#13;
return&#13;
we&#13;
are  DOWpleased  to  many who sought to escape the   room; I will change the oil in my&#13;
announce the arrival&#13;
of&#13;
Spring   inhuman  cold  (remember  way   car; I will catch up on sleep; and&#13;
Break! Ah yes, lhatlovely  time of  back  to when it was  cold in  so on, and so on . . . By the time&#13;
year wben millions&#13;
of&#13;
sex -a1cobol  March?) via a mass pilgrimage to   I'm done making my list, Break is&#13;
- and . fun • in - the • sun starved   the  infamoos  Daytona  Beach.   half over.&#13;
So&#13;
I'll be a realist this&#13;
students  shun their  books and   Daytona (or DB to those&#13;
of&#13;
us who  year. I'm really going to catch up&#13;
term&#13;
projeets&#13;
to frolic&#13;
011&#13;
the   are in the "in crowd")is  a perfect   on the soaps, sleep, and get very,&#13;
beaches&#13;
of&#13;
Daytona,   L.A.,   example&#13;
of&#13;
the word MORE. They   very drunk.&#13;
Phoenix, and Winthrop Harbor.   have more&#13;
of&#13;
everything and you&#13;
I remember  back to my first   definitely pay more for it.&#13;
(naive) Spring Break.&#13;
"Why&#13;
do    It&#13;
took&#13;
me about two&#13;
full&#13;
weeks&#13;
we have to take a&#13;
week&#13;
oot?" I  to recover from DB (hah! No one&#13;
thooght to myself.&#13;
"Why&#13;
can't we  recovers from DB).&#13;
And&#13;
now I can&#13;
just get out a week earller?"  How  definitely say lhat I will never&#13;
foolish! Were it&#13;
not&#13;
for Spring   again step foot near DB during&#13;
Break we'd have a lot of zombie -  Break, nor willI ever, EVER ride&#13;
ized,  sleepless  wrecks  running   ona bus for more than three hours&#13;
aroond school. Instead,  we now  in a row. Don't get me wrong,&#13;
have   a lot&#13;
of&#13;
zombie . ized,  everyOlle should have the benefit&#13;
sleepless,  hung  - over  wrecks   of the DB experience. Once. I just&#13;
running around school.&#13;
can't understand  the masochists&#13;
My secOlld Break was a true   who return year after year.&#13;
experience. I'm not sure yet if it    This year's  Break brings the&#13;
2&#13;
Thursday.  March&#13;
10. 1983&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
What the question&#13;
soon becomes&#13;
Tbe Bill of Rights of the United States clearly describes  the. fun-&#13;
damental  liberties of the people&#13;
ci&#13;
this country.&#13;
The&#13;
Bill of Rights&#13;
guarantees to everyone the freedom of speech, the freedom of and from&#13;
religion freedom of the press and the right to peaceable assembly.&#13;
As&#13;
the writing&#13;
ci&#13;
our countrym;"  states, "right to life, liberty and the&#13;
pursuit&#13;
of&#13;
happiness."&#13;
.&#13;
'sed'&#13;
th&#13;
Currently on this campus, a powerful Issue has been rai   '.  e .&#13;
programming and purpose&#13;
of&#13;
the scheduled X : rated film. The ~arks,de&#13;
Activities Board  (PAB) , in conjunction  WIth the PAR Film sub-&#13;
committee,  programmed  a total of thirteen films for the Spnng 1983&#13;
semester.&#13;
One&#13;
of them isX - rated. PAR is a major organization, open to&#13;
any students who&#13;
wish&#13;
to&#13;
become members ofthe programming process&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
d   1&#13;
Segregated Fees (student monies) are used to finance and .eve op&#13;
various programs for this campus, and&#13;
10&#13;
this case t~e  momes are&#13;
being spent by a student committee. As the programming  body, PAR&#13;
has a certain right to schedule that which they feel will produce the best&#13;
student turnout. Thus, PAB is to program as they feel the students of&#13;
this campus would prefer them to.&#13;
The issue being raised by some stude.nts .questions ,:"hether or n~ a&#13;
fiim&#13;
ci&#13;
this sort should he shown in an mstitution of higher educali~.&#13;
Not because&#13;
ci&#13;
puritan ethics, but rather  because&#13;
of&#13;
the degra~g&#13;
nature  the film  has toward  women.  Some consider  the&#13;
fil~&#13;
s&#13;
ramming a poor judgement on the part of PAR. Others see nothing&#13;
::'~g  with a film&#13;
of&#13;
this sort. Still others will do what they can to see&#13;
that the film is never shown here. But if the film .isn't sho~  beca~se&#13;
~f&#13;
those efforts, that's censorship on PAB. Is that right? And,lf!be film IS&#13;
shown, it will degrade women and cut into a number&#13;
of&#13;
women s feehngs&#13;
about themselves.&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
.&#13;
Suddenly the community of this campus finds itself struggling to&#13;
make judgements about the effects of an X - rated film&#13;
011&#13;
Its viewers.&#13;
There are arguments pointing to tbe side that X - rated films have a&#13;
negative effect on people's perceptions about the sex roles th&lt;:y~ay.&#13;
There are other arguments stating that the effect of these films ISlittle,&#13;
and have little effect on already developed. perceptions. The question&#13;
that starts to develop is who can make the Judgement on the effects of&#13;
this film on the people&#13;
of&#13;
this campus????&#13;
,  .&#13;
The easy answer to this issue seems to he, Ifsomeone does'! t like the&#13;
showing of the film, then one should simply not attend the ftlm..In m-&#13;
smutions of higber learning, it is evident that&#13;
things&#13;
aren't that Simple,&#13;
and people have a need to learn what else can he done to m~e  others&#13;
see their point. People have to wonder just who, at Parkside, ISready to&#13;
make a judgement about this film??? The real question that starts&#13;
\0&#13;
develop is, when does one group's freedom end, and another group s&#13;
rights begin????&#13;
let movie run&#13;
dehumanization from these films,&#13;
nor do I know anybody (male or&#13;
female)  who has.  What about&#13;
measuring  up? How many men&#13;
have a physique like the men in&#13;
porn  films,  indeed  how  many&#13;
people  are  as  physically   at-&#13;
tractive  as any movie stars  (G,&#13;
PG, R, or X rated)?  A large&#13;
percentage  of  all  actors  are&#13;
selected in part or whole for their&#13;
physical attractiveness,  whether&#13;
talented or not.&#13;
Donna  L.  Sahakian   stated&#13;
(Letters,  Mar.  3) she felt the&#13;
shOWing of this film was ". . .&#13;
causing  harmful  effects on oor&#13;
abilities to study or work in our&#13;
academic setting." The only way I&#13;
could see this film disrupting your&#13;
study or work is&#13;
if&#13;
you decide to&#13;
take the time to see the film,&#13;
which you have the option&#13;
of&#13;
not&#13;
doing - yoo don't have to see this&#13;
movie.&#13;
~&#13;
H,&#13;
as PAR has said, this movie&#13;
is  a  money  maker  then  the&#13;
Editor's Notes&#13;
Spring weather brings dirty birds&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
The&#13;
runners  were in such grea t  the s~&#13;
of&#13;
the stack of&#13;
!"~&#13;
Editor&#13;
quantity  this  weekend,  that  I  takes&#13;
in,&#13;
she must not·pu:ll:f&amp;&#13;
The weather  has been rather   certainly thought there would he  after September 30th.&#13;
pleasant lately. Actually, what it's   more runner onented collisions. I    I counted  48 people w&#13;
been is unseasonal  and that's   am happy to report however, that   cars  this  weekend.  Includ&#13;
what's been nice. fustead of six   all the runners. I've seen have   myself.  Of course, you'd&#13;
feet&#13;
of&#13;
snow and  below  zero   been very cautious  about using   know my car got ~ashed&#13;
beca&#13;
temperatures,   we seem  to he   hand signals, unlike drivers, and  my broth~ drove It, and&#13;
there&#13;
experiencing   a  warm  front   only   swearing    at   overly   now .allkinds of food wra~&#13;
throughout   Wisconsin   that's    aggressive  drivers  when  they   the inside.&#13;
It&#13;
also looks like&#13;
produced  May - like goings on  really  feel as  if they've  ~n    dr.ove.it   through   Dustbow&#13;
over the past  weekend.&#13;
If&#13;
the   slighted. Maybe people relations   WlSConsm,&#13;
just&#13;
nOl'tl!&#13;
of&#13;
M&#13;
weather keeps up like this it will   are improving.&#13;
puddle; the whole oo!side is a&#13;
he a&#13;
bea&#13;
utiful week for a' break,&#13;
The  nice  thing  about  good  mess.&#13;
So&#13;
much for clean cam&#13;
and those of us who are waiting   weather, is that you know that It    There were a lot of bikers&#13;
until late spring to go to Florida   isn't Reagan ?rient~.  He ha~ n~  too. I doa't  think biking was&#13;
won't feel as had.&#13;
control over.,t.  I:m t that mce.   craze like it was a few years a&#13;
Both Racine and Kenosha over   Everything  m this country  h".s  it's definitely  runners  and ca&#13;
the weekend had an exceptional   something to do WIthReagan, IfIt  that are the crazes now but&#13;
it&#13;
number of runners out and about.   isn't the Queen malm.t~ h~r&#13;
~11&#13;
nice to see an occasima'1 bike.&#13;
Why even I took a short jaunt   appearance over, then It s )'Ickllt~  without a motor.&#13;
down by the lake in hetween "Ma   out new patterns  of china,  or&#13;
.'&#13;
.&#13;
and Pa Kettle on Old McDonald's   helping the unemployment rate go&#13;
The&#13;
funmest&#13;
thin!!&#13;
aboot&#13;
Fann"  and I Love Lucy repeats.    up, and&#13;
of&#13;
course  all of th"';~  weekend was the btrds: I&#13;
things show that&#13;
the&#13;
country..    have seen a thousand.~&#13;
ov&#13;
getting in shape. It seems the only  the weekend. The poSSIbility&#13;
thing Ron's getting in shape for is  stand that it could have&#13;
been&#13;
spending, and the only thing we're   same bird following me&#13;
getting in shape for is more fun in  town, but I doubt it. ~irds&#13;
the  local  breadline.  The  only  crazy little creatures.&#13;
wlilIl?&#13;
people who are really getting in  raking with my father, three bir&#13;
shape are those non collision - free  seemed to he having a bit&#13;
ci&#13;
runners.&#13;
argument  about which one w&#13;
At least  when it's warm  out  going to sit on whic~ l)r~&#13;
'at&#13;
people can sit outside, or they can&#13;
tree.&#13;
The&#13;
smallest bir\l'wii~&#13;
clean up their lawn, or wash their  highest branch,  but&#13;
tI!'!&#13;
blUes&#13;
cars  or something  besides  sit  bird wasn't going to SIt still f&#13;
inside, in front&#13;
of&#13;
the TV, watching   that, so the middle bird&#13;
just&#13;
those  old  Lucy  reruns.   On  its place in the center,&#13;
and .&#13;
Sa&#13;
turday  I even saw the little  little  and  big  bird  got&#13;
qw&#13;
neighbor lady next door co~e 0';lt  disturbed about it. ~o m~e a I&#13;
and see&#13;
if&#13;
she got any mall this  story short, those dirty birds ha&#13;
winter. For tbe entire winter this  more fun making a mess&#13;
ci&#13;
woman  is practically  invisible,   car than my broth&lt;7 dI~,&#13;
and&#13;
I d&#13;
and on the firstwann  day of every   helieve that three bIrds m.the&#13;
year, she peeks her head out&#13;
of&#13;
the   overhead&#13;
ci&#13;
a clean car ISw&#13;
door and checks her mail&#13;
box.&#13;
By   than a bird anywhere else.&#13;
\\00 YOU' MIND?&#13;
students obviously have a desire&#13;
to see it.&#13;
If&#13;
however the students&#13;
choose not to go, PAR will lose&#13;
more money than usual and won't&#13;
he as likely to show this type of&#13;
film in the near future. The Union&#13;
Cinema  is  there  for  the  en-&#13;
tertainment  of the students  and&#13;
should reflect their wishes.&#13;
When a group of people who are&#13;
not the majority  try to decide&#13;
what  is best  for the  majority&#13;
without input from the majority it&#13;
is censorship. People should try to&#13;
look at all sides of an issue before&#13;
making  decisions  -  especially&#13;
when they try to make decisions&#13;
for other people.&#13;
Michael Schwartz&#13;
Myonly consolation is staying in&#13;
this&#13;
area is that it's warm here&#13;
and  monsooning  in California!&#13;
Just think, while those&#13;
of&#13;
us who&#13;
are fortunate  to stay here and&#13;
volunteer  to work at the Very&#13;
Special Arts Festival are staying&#13;
relatively  comfortable,  our ad-&#13;
venturous counter points will be&#13;
tubing and swimming down Main&#13;
street in San Francisco!  Have a&#13;
great Break and don't think too&#13;
hard  (and  dOll't send  me any&#13;
. postcards)!&#13;
~&#13;
YOU GUYS ARE REALLY&#13;
MAKING&#13;
MY&#13;
JOB&#13;
QUITE. DIFFICULT!"&#13;
.'&#13;
.&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature  Editor&#13;
Sports  Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
Assistant  Business Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Sharon Aken.  Terry  Byrne.  Maureen   Burke.  Jeanne&#13;
Buenker  • Phillips,  carra   Cariello,  catherin!   Chaffee.&#13;
Patricia  Cumbie.  Dan Dowhower.  Michael  Kallas,  carol&#13;
Kortendick.  John Kovalic.  Rick I.uehr.  Robb Luehr.  Kathy&#13;
Rayburn.  Napolean  Scarbrough.   Jennie  Tunkiecz,&#13;
RANGER&#13;
is written&#13;
and edited  by students  of UW _ Parkside  and they are solely&#13;
responsible  for It.s editorial  polley  and content.&#13;
Published  ever-v Thursday  during  the-academic  year except during  breaks and hollda~.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
is printed&#13;
by the Union CooperatlVi!  PUblishing&#13;
Co .•&#13;
Kenosha,  Wisconsin.&#13;
Written  permission  Is required  for reprint&#13;
of&#13;
any portion&#13;
of&#13;
RANGER.&#13;
All correspondence   should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed  to:  Parkslde  Range..., University   of ;RlsconSI"&#13;
Parkside,  Box No. 2000. Kenosha,  Wisconsin,  531.41.&#13;
.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be ace:eptecfIf typewritten,  dovblespacecl on standard 51.ze&#13;
paper With one . inch margins. All letters must&#13;
be&#13;
signed and a telephone number in-&#13;
cluded for verification.&#13;
Names will&#13;
be&#13;
withheld&#13;
for'&#13;
valid reasons.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Monday at 3 p.m. tor pUblication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
reserves all eclitor_lalprivileges in refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
defamatory content.&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen  Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
</text>
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              <text>tor' University of Wisconsin - Parks ide&#13;
Vol. II . No. 21&#13;
er&#13;
FRANKLIN GILLIAM&#13;
people tend to associate with the&#13;
Black Panthers, S.N .I.C.K. and the&#13;
Muslims. These groups preached&#13;
a variety of things, from&#13;
seperatism, to guerrilla warfare,&#13;
and so on. This turn in the&#13;
movement reflected the growing&#13;
frustration that was occurring in&#13;
the black community. Indeed, this&#13;
.ustration was fostered by the&#13;
perception that things were going&#13;
to cbange, or become appreciably&#13;
better. Then it became very ap·&#13;
parent they weren't, at least not&#13;
as fast as people thought they&#13;
were going to.&#13;
"The movement was starting to&#13;
splinter at the time of King's&#13;
death. and has continued to do so&#13;
up to the Pliot where there are no&#13;
clear. systematic and broad -&#13;
based organizations that can he&#13;
considered as the vanguard of the&#13;
movement'" he stated.&#13;
uer scholarship&#13;
Bauer's parents. Rohert and&#13;
Stella Bauer, of 6109-35th Ave.•&#13;
Kenosha. said their son had been&#13;
an avid fisherman all his life.&#13;
"He was a consumate out~&#13;
doorsman." Bauer said. "He was&#13;
devoted to conserving nature and&#13;
wildlife."&#13;
To he eligible for the Rohert J.&#13;
Bauer Science Award, students&#13;
must be science majors involved&#13;
in research. preferably field -&#13;
oriented, Amin said. The award&#13;
will he based on past academic&#13;
achievement and potential for&#13;
future academic excellence, he&#13;
said.&#13;
Persons wishing to contribute to&#13;
the award fund can make checks&#13;
payahle to t~ UW-Foundation&#13;
(Parkside) Bauer Fund and mail&#13;
them to: Grant Administration,&#13;
WLLC Room 346, Box No. 2000.&#13;
UW-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
53141.&#13;
Amin said students wishing to&#13;
apply for the award may contact&#13;
~&#13;
the - secretary of the&#13;
acuity, Walter T. Feldt.&#13;
Tbe award will be presented&#13;
1 at the UW-Par"'ide's&#13;
p !lily ceremonies.&#13;
__ 1..... _&#13;
illiam speaks on civil rights&#13;
by Tony Rogers getting people registered to vote.&#13;
Fealure Edllor WIlereas the passive resistance&#13;
Franklin Gilliam is a political phase sought to end&#13;
IDee professor here at discrimination in the social arena&#13;
·de. Recently Dr. Gilliam the political action phase sought t~&#13;
to organize a lecture series end inequality in the political&#13;
blaCk history month which arena," he said.&#13;
such 'subjects as the Gilliam continued to descrihe&#13;
porary 1I'0biems of blacks, the states of black liberation&#13;
art and culture and a lecture outlining an eventual 'splintering'&#13;
Dr. Gilliam gave on the of the movement. "Many of the&#13;
rights ,,!ovem~t. In an in- groups. S.N.I.C.K. especially,&#13;
Dr. Gilltam discussed that were becoming increasingly&#13;
ent, and some common radical and disenchanted with&#13;
tions of it. what was happening.&#13;
"!lIe first thing people have to "They turned tomilitancy which&#13;
..... tand about the civil rights '&#13;
ent. or the black Iiheration&#13;
ent, is that it has been a&#13;
thing - it dido't start&#13;
Martin Luther King. The&#13;
ent started when this&#13;
started. There was a&#13;
of freed men wbo tried to&#13;
np'eoentation for blacks by&#13;
the constitutional coniD&#13;
Philadelphia.&#13;
was the abolitionist&#13;
ent over slavery. to&#13;
·Garvey. to A. Philip&#13;
aDd the desegregation&#13;
the armed services, to&#13;
ood Marshall and the&#13;
, and to King. The black&#13;
rights movement didn't&#13;
arise in the 1950's or&#13;
," ltated Gilliam ..&#13;
went 011 to discuss the&#13;
III the movement. ''The&#13;
tJ the movement are&#13;
by emphasis on&#13;
tactics, SO in the 195O'sit&#13;
IIIIplion. and the Brown&#13;
spearbeaded by the&#13;
and its legal defense fund.&#13;
IIIOVed to the non - violent&#13;
ion phase with King. and&#13;
mery bus boycott. the&#13;
-.I ...sit -ins, the freedom&#13;
What about the future of the&#13;
civil rights movement? Gilliam&#13;
stated that he believes a 'national,&#13;
groundswell movement on the&#13;
part of blac ... •would he necessary&#13;
to effect change in government.&#13;
"WIlen Gar A1perowitz was here&#13;
he said that the pain level has to&#13;
rise to the point where people&#13;
can't take it. and then they will&#13;
make their claims. What most&#13;
people don't understand is that the&#13;
threshold has hit among black&#13;
people," he stated.&#13;
Gilliam went on to stress the&#13;
importance of economic issues to&#13;
blacks. "There's no doubt that the&#13;
. issues are economic. You have a&#13;
40% unemployment rate among&#13;
black men aged 18 to 25. That's a&#13;
problem. This is a waste of a&#13;
generation, and I don't think the&#13;
black community is going to stand&#13;
for it. As the economic pie shrinks.&#13;
It affects blacks exponentially,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Gilliam also voiced his helief&#13;
that social reforms to end&#13;
discrimination have far to go. "IT&#13;
anybody tells you discrimination&#13;
has ended. they are wrong. It Is&#13;
nowhere close to ending. Blacks&#13;
can drink at drinking fountains. go&#13;
to movie theaters, ride buses, but&#13;
those things are so. so fundamental.&#13;
I think they are important&#13;
changes, but they aren't&#13;
the only kind of changes that have&#13;
10 be made 10 aomeiIIow mediate&#13;
discrimination. Racism and&#13;
discrimination persist, and it&#13;
chips away at a black person's&#13;
heart every time someone makes&#13;
a racial slur. As a black, racism&#13;
will either destroy you or make&#13;
you stronger," Gilliam stated.&#13;
What advice would Dr. Gilliam&#13;
give to students interested in&#13;
helping the cause of black&#13;
liheration? "The first thing&#13;
students should do is make sure&#13;
they understand the history of&#13;
what has happened. Understand&#13;
what has happened in this country&#13;
and how atrocious discrimination&#13;
has been. I think this understanding&#13;
will allow people to&#13;
more accurately perceive what's&#13;
going on now. A cultural&#13;
awareness, in other words.&#13;
"Secondly, be involved to&#13;
whatever point you can. I don't&#13;
expect a whole bunch of people to&#13;
go join the NAACP. But I do know&#13;
that they can do thinga like not&#13;
voting for people who have poor&#13;
civil rights records. Don't sanction&#13;
discrimination. And then look&#13;
at yourself and see how you feel&#13;
. about race issues," he said .&#13;
Gilliam also had a message for&#13;
black students specifically.&#13;
"Black students should take&#13;
advantage of gains already made.&#13;
and try to make new gains. Get&#13;
your degree. and do something to&#13;
help tbe cause. It is an uphill&#13;
struggle, but don·t quit. It's time&#13;
to make that extra push."&#13;
result III COI'1*1 traDIpIaDt to&#13;
u.e &lt;OIIIIItloaI Ia OW)' IOOd and&#13;
varlee lrom 10 to " Good&#13;
reou1Ia to receat ,... ......&#13;
maiDly from advancea I.&#13;
'...t.Mk1IY, 01 JDicI-.rIory. the _ 01 ~ ItnIl:ture ... .w,&#13;
and tile .... ' ...... 01--.1&#13;
...........&#13;
There baa beeD • pDp liar&#13;
mi. optiDD aIIout "ttiIIlII&#13;
ia actU::~ tr... plaDted. 'I'be&#13;
mllre n ..- be lnDsplaDted&#13;
becauae 01 lbe CIOIIl'&#13;
Iiexities of the __ to the eye.&#13;
Tbe m1y tiaauea thaI are lnDspIanted&#13;
from the eye with _-&#13;
cess at the pr_ time are the&#13;
cornea aDd the sclera. Tbe h1l1ll&#13;
success rate 01 corneal tr .....&#13;
splantation is mainly becauae the&#13;
cornea does not have blood veaeIa&#13;
as other organs of the body do.&#13;
Without blood vessels tbe&#13;
rejection process is less ~&#13;
and more easily controlled with&#13;
medicines if it does occur.&#13;
On Tuesday aDd Wedneoday,&#13;
March 8 and 9, lbe KeDorba Llono&#13;
Foundation will he ltatioaed from&#13;
10 a. m. to 3 p. m. at the&#13;
Greenquist Hallalcove,ckui .. tile&#13;
same time they will be in the&#13;
Union by the Cafeteria aDd from 5&#13;
to 8 p. m., they will be located on&#13;
the Molinaro Coocoune to eD1lat&#13;
potential donors. Anyone caD&#13;
donate their eyea by completinll a&#13;
Donor's Pledge Card and IlIinrl it&#13;
with the Lions Club at the time 01&#13;
enlistment. Give someone a&#13;
chance to see.&#13;
were all passive&#13;
measures which&#13;
from Ghandi. Then&#13;
Ibe era of political action,&#13;
.. lI'oliferation of civil&#13;
&amp;1'oups including the&#13;
NCIl - Violence CoorCommittee,&#13;
or&#13;
.c.K .•the Congress 00 Racial&#13;
•and hoth had significant&#13;
ill the south in terms of&#13;
IdleIarship award named for&#13;
J Bauer. 25. a 1980&#13;
graduate who drowned&#13;
• fishing Nov. 16 near&#13;
Wis., is being&#13;
for UW-P science&#13;
a fonner Kenoshan, was&#13;
IllIence major.&#13;
ate Professor of Life&#13;
Omar Amin, for whom&#13;
worked on research&#13;
from 1!176to 19l1l,said the&#13;
is being initiated by&#13;
's many friends at uw-&#13;
. was a good' person, a&#13;
.tted person. equally&#13;
..led to his friends. to nature&#13;
lit researm," Amin said.&#13;
's work for Amin cenlered&#13;
collection, dissection,&#13;
'Ilg and analy8ia of&#13;
specimeJlll found on flab&#13;
os and rivers. Amin'"&#13;
a number 01 scholarly&#13;
on fish parasites.&#13;
lbe time of his death, Bauer&#13;
~ in Hayward whel'e he&#13;
for the Wiseonmn&#13;
lDrtl ..... t of Natural __&#13;
a fish lIUIIl8Iement specialist.&#13;
lions ask support&#13;
for eye bank&#13;
~PaIH_"&#13;
Eaer&#13;
. AllowiDg sightJeoa people to _&#13;
IS uxleed classified 88 a mirade&#13;
by many. A lot 01 people in tbIa&#13;
comtry never get their c:ItaDoe 10&#13;
see, becaUBe most people with&#13;
vialon never iii... the _ ...,&#13;
permiasion 10 lalr:e their e,eo after&#13;
death. In WiscoaoID, 40,000 people&#13;
lie every year. OIIIy 1'" baft&#13;
gi .... permiaalon r... their e,eo 10&#13;
be removed f... 8DotIter'. uoe after&#13;
death. '!'bal's a pooaible 4lIOacta 01&#13;
eyes which can be made availahle&#13;
to 800 individuals f... potential&#13;
grafting or transplantati .... After&#13;
all this, there is still a waiting list&#13;
of 75 to 80 people for one eye.&#13;
There are actually about 100&#13;
corneal transplants done per year&#13;
in this state. Not all eye transplant&#13;
tissue that is donated can be ... ed&#13;
for corneal transplantation&#13;
because of the type of illness the&#13;
patient died from or was secondarily&#13;
associated with at death.&#13;
Not all tissue that is donated is&#13;
ideal and can he used for full&#13;
thickness corneal transplants.&#13;
The ideal tissue for full thickness&#13;
corneal transplants is in the age&#13;
groups between 10 and 55 .&#13;
Younger or older _ can be&#13;
used depending on the circumstances&#13;
and health of the&#13;
patient and the tissue.&#13;
The most common eye diseases&#13;
that comeal transplantations are&#13;
done for are Keratoconus. CerneaI&#13;
edema, scars from injury, and&#13;
scars from old infection. The&#13;
:;:::;:::::;:::;:::::;:;:::::::;:::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:.;.;.:.;.;;;;;.;.;;;:::::::;::::z:;;:;:;.::::::~::;::.»&#13;
Sabbaticals granted&#13;
Two Par ... ide 1I'00essors ltave&#13;
been granted one • semester&#13;
sabbatical leaves for research&#13;
during the 1983-84academic year.&#13;
They are Prof. Teresa Peck.&#13;
aducatiOD, attd Prot. Attdrew&#13;
1fcLean, Eng\iah.&#13;
Prof. Peck, who holds the PhD&#13;
degree from the University 01&#13;
Texas and has taught at Parkside&#13;
since 1972, plans to use her sabbatical&#13;
to stUdy the psychological&#13;
dimensions of female adult&#13;
developmmt and to iJIIICrate the&#13;
resulting torormaliaa iDIo _&#13;
counea in Jl8)'cIloIOU aDd&#13;
educati ... 88 well 88 a _ ...&#13;
teacbea ID wcmen '8 atudI •.&#13;
Prof. 1tI~ who 8U'II8d bia&#13;
PItD al the -IIIJ til /Ifai1It&#13;
Carolina and baa been at uw.p&#13;
since 1!170,will he integrating the&#13;
scholarly, theatrical and media&#13;
approacbea to Shakespeare for&#13;
use in his teachi .. 01 Shakespeare&#13;
with special emphasis on&#13;
"Hamlet,"&#13;
::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:::;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::;:::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::;:::;:;::::::::::::;::::::::;:::::::::::;::~:::::::&#13;
Peart exhibits art&#13;
Nationally - known Chicago&#13;
artist Jerry Peart will visit&#13;
Parkside on Thursday, March 10,&#13;
to speak about his career as a full •&#13;
time creative sculptor. He will&#13;
present a free public slide - lecture&#13;
00 the development of his work at&#13;
2 p. m. in GRQ 101. and later he&#13;
will meet with students for&#13;
critiques and discussion.&#13;
Peart specializes in large -&#13;
scale, multi - colored abstract&#13;
sculpture fabricated from&#13;
aluminum and designed for public&#13;
spaces like malls, ....... aDd office&#13;
buildings.&#13;
An Arizonian, he attended&#13;
Arizona State University and&#13;
Southern Illinois University.&#13;
receiving BFA and MFA degrees&#13;
in sculpture. He is affiliated&#13;
primarily with Coo - Struct, a&#13;
Chicago gallery that focuses on&#13;
the exhibition and marketing of&#13;
large - scale sculpture. He baa&#13;
also had a solo exhibitioo at Yares&#13;
Gallery in Scottsdale. Arizona.&#13;
He has received many comInside&#13;
*&#13;
Elections! Elections! *&#13;
letters to the Editor *&#13;
Coach Profile&#13;
• • •&#13;
I&#13;
missions from public and lI'ivate&#13;
organizations for purcbase 01 his&#13;
sculpture. incI~: the National&#13;
Endowment for the Alta in COIl'&#13;
junctioo with the IIlinoia Cultural&#13;
Foundation, Par" F.... t South,&#13;
1977; Daytoo - Hudsoll ProperIlea&#13;
of Minneapolis, lor three maJ...&#13;
wor .... 1!178;Dlinoia Departmellt&#13;
01 HouaUW, Quincy, 1978; City 01&#13;
Chicago for a wor" commemoratins&#13;
Riverview Par",&#13;
1979; Tbe State 01 UIinoia Percentale&#13;
for Art Protlram, I... wor'" in Springfield aDd Glen&#13;
Ellyn, 1979 - 82.&#13;
Peart baa aIao _b1bited in&#13;
many competitive and invitational&#13;
exhibits. includill&amp;&#13;
"Mayor Byrne's Mile 01 Sculpture"&#13;
show at Art Navy Pier in&#13;
Chicago last year. In 1m he&#13;
received the Chicago Art Award&#13;
for the best body 01 w..... _hibited&#13;
ckui.. the 1976-77art _.&#13;
Peart's appearance Ia orgaaised&#13;
by lbe Art Discipline aDd funded&#13;
by the Exx ... Corp.&#13;
2 Thursday, March 3, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Hail 4077 and Farewell&#13;
To those of us who came of age in the late 70·s. M"A"S"H was a part of&#13;
growing up. We passed through adolescence watching a group of doctors&#13;
and nurses serving in Korea. and their hopes and fears. and&#13;
laughing with them as they made the best of an intolerable situation.&#13;
The members of the 4077th were not unusually. or especially crazy.&#13;
They were simply a bunch of people thrown together. through no choice&#13;
of their own. into a situation in which they had absolutely no control over&#13;
the most basic aspects of life. They would have cried. if they could. But&#13;
crying accomplished nothing. so they laughed.&#13;
The series' central theme. put simply. was "war stinks." But it took&#13;
the M"A"S"H team eleven years to get their point across. with excrutiating&#13;
detail. of the human side of war. We were allowed to get to&#13;
know the characters. and to sympathize with them. By getting to know&#13;
the characters, we got to understand war in human terms.&#13;
We also got to like them. everyone. The people of the 4077th were a&#13;
group of human beings with purely human virtues and vices. Each one.&#13;
from the highest general to tbe lowest private. came across as a genuine&#13;
human being. There were no bad people there. and the only truly hateful&#13;
thing was the war itself. In M*A·S·H, there were no villians, only victims.&#13;
Put more succinctly. the show's theme was. "war stinks for human&#13;
beings."&#13;
Watching the credits roll after the final episode felt more like the loss&#13;
of an old friend than the end of a television series. That a show which&#13;
had been so much a part of our lives was finally coming to an end was&#13;
almost inconceivable. But television shows. like friends, do not last&#13;
forever. and it was gratifying to see the show end as it had begun. at the&#13;
peak of creative energy.&#13;
B. J. Hunnicutt had trouble saying goodbye to Hawkeye. and it will be&#13;
difficult for us to say goodbye to the show.&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
X-rated film opposed&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On April 7th. 8th. and loth, the&#13;
"soft· core" pornographic movie,&#13;
"Emmanuel. The Joys of a&#13;
Woman". is scheduled to be shown&#13;
in the Parllside theatre. Although&#13;
all forms of media (t.v .•&#13;
magazines. movies). contribute to&#13;
a false. dehumanized image of&#13;
women. I am outraged that an&#13;
educational institution is now&#13;
sanctioning this distorted&#13;
representation of women by&#13;
allowing this "entertainment" on&#13;
campus.&#13;
The ..... ytfUe. "Emmanuel. The&#13;
Joys of a Woman". belies the true&#13;
message of this movie and others&#13;
like it. It is not !be "joy" of any&#13;
woman I know to be degraded;&#13;
this movie is presenting a lie. a&#13;
false image of what women are.&#13;
What must be understood in&#13;
showing this movie at Parkslde, is&#13;
that pornography perpetuates&#13;
violence against women. and in&#13;
many cases. against children.&#13;
This is true not only of tbe overt&#13;
violence depicted in "hard - core"&#13;
pornography. but alao in the&#13;
sometimes subtle, sugar • coated&#13;
variety found in "soft . core"&#13;
movies like "Emmanuel". (see&#13;
research conducted by Ed Don·&#13;
nerstein. U.W. Madison). Anyone&#13;
requiring further "proof" of the&#13;
reality of this violence against&#13;
women need only pick up the&#13;
newspaper any night of the week&#13;
and read of !be murder. bealings,&#13;
assaults. and rapes against&#13;
women. Pornographic movies and&#13;
magazines contribute to the&#13;
image of women as "things",nonhumans.&#13;
unreal sex objects. In&#13;
reality. pornography is about&#13;
degradation, not sexuality.&#13;
Pornography puts rape into an&#13;
"acceptable" context. Equally&#13;
damaging as the view of women&#13;
.. u...... "t is die self • IIatr«l&#13;
women develop for themselves&#13;
when they don't "measure up" to&#13;
the model images of women in&#13;
pornographic movies and&#13;
magazines. Instead of directing&#13;
!beir anger toward the people wbo&#13;
sell these images. they turn their&#13;
anger inward.&#13;
In considering the movie,&#13;
"Emmuel, The Joys of a&#13;
Woman". I ask that you examine&#13;
your own reactions to pornography&#13;
in general. We need to&#13;
ask ourselves why we are creating&#13;
a society which needs such&#13;
"stimuli" to be "turned on." Only&#13;
when people stop buying pornography.&#13;
will it no longer pervade&#13;
our lives.&#13;
Carol Frank&#13;
----~&#13;
"HAWKEYE! WAIT! YOU'VE BEEN DRAFTED! REPOln TO&#13;
VIETNAM IMMEDI~TELY!"&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
Tradition falls in line&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
This week's paper may look a&#13;
little different to many of you. We&#13;
have a center spread set up on&#13;
pages 4 and 5 to cover the PSGA&#13;
elections. And some of you will&#13;
find this all to be unnecessary&#13;
coverage. We've decided that this&#13;
election does deserve constant&#13;
coverage. after all. these are the&#13;
people that some very small&#13;
percentage of students elects.&#13;
Thatfact doesn't have to remain&#13;
true, but as tradition here at&#13;
Parbide, the voter turnout rarely&#13;
creeps much above 15%. We&#13;
wouldn't want to break tradition.&#13;
It would he like eating PRIMO&#13;
noodles every Sunday for 20 years&#13;
and suddenly stopping. Or maybe&#13;
it would be like adding some kind&#13;
of meat or sauce to those Primo&#13;
noodles. Whatever the analogy,&#13;
the end result is "tradition."&#13;
Lately though, it seems as if&#13;
some traditions have been broken.&#13;
There will be no more of this&#13;
ritualistic sitting around at eight&#13;
o'clock on Monday nights to wait&#13;
for the newest episode of&#13;
M"A"S"H. In this case the Primo&#13;
noodles have all been finished. but&#13;
they were fun while they lasted&#13;
weren't tbey?? How will we live&#13;
through the reat of 1983 without&#13;
Too many chiefs not enough Indians&#13;
by Joobaa J. Witherspoon&#13;
Gam Writer&#13;
The curious circumstances&#13;
surrounding this year'. election of&#13;
student officers is not one which&#13;
should be overlooked as the advent&#13;
of Election Day nears. Over&#13;
the last few weeks. a strange&#13;
phenomena has been occurring&#13;
within these hallowed halls of&#13;
learning.&#13;
By the deadiine of noon on&#13;
Friday. February 25. no less than&#13;
21 candidates sought an elected&#13;
seat, .x of which want the highest&#13;
. ranking, $1,300 • a - year office;&#13;
namely. tbe Presidency of&#13;
Parkslde Student Government&#13;
Asaoclation, Inc. (PSGA). This is&#13;
without precedent - never before&#13;
have six students run for&#13;
president of PSGA at one lime.&#13;
Of those six candidates. two&#13;
have never had a student&#13;
government seat, yet are involved&#13;
in other areas of student activity.&#13;
The other four candidates are&#13;
senators with varying Interests.&#13;
serving on commlttees and in&#13;
student ... pnlzatlons.&#13;
yet these people aD want to be&#13;
president and !bey Irq with&#13;
tbem variolll different ideas about&#13;
bow PSGA should be run, and the&#13;
direction it sbould take.&#13;
But the question that may come&#13;
to mind in many students is: Why&#13;
are so many students running for&#13;
President this year? Indeed. why&#13;
would anyone tun at all?&#13;
Student elections of past years&#13;
have never collected more than&#13;
15.5percent of the student body in&#13;
any election. This would seem to&#13;
indicate that traditionally few&#13;
students really care wbo wins.&#13;
That means if there is a six - way&#13;
tie. each candidate only needs&#13;
2.58 percent of !be total student&#13;
voters. That's apathy at it's worst.&#13;
Some people take the position&#13;
that it is good that so many&#13;
students are rwming because it's&#13;
a sign that students are getting&#13;
more involved in' their student&#13;
government. Maybe. But the&#13;
average Parllside student still&#13;
doean't even know what PSGA Is.&#13;
let alone what it does (or doesn't&#13;
do).&#13;
Some people take tbe view that&#13;
it is good so many people are&#13;
running because it shows concern&#13;
about bow student government&#13;
should be run. Maybe. But that&#13;
view might be somewhat naive.&#13;
After aD, willyousee Ol' hear from&#13;
these people in PSGA activities in&#13;
tbe future if they lose? Will they ,&#13;
still be as concerned if they don't&#13;
win? Whatever happened to&#13;
Loretta Lacy?&#13;
Some people take the position&#13;
that there is a power vacwm&#13;
heing created because the incumbent&#13;
President cannot run 'for&#13;
another term. Maybe. But without&#13;
mature, responsible involvement&#13;
by the students. there really is no&#13;
power. only !be title. the money&#13;
and the prestige that goes with&#13;
getting elected by 15.5 percent of&#13;
the student body.&#13;
But don't get !be impression&#13;
that these candates aren't serious .&#13;
All of the candidates running for&#13;
President and for senator seats&#13;
that I have talked to are truly&#13;
interested and concerned people&#13;
who do want to change PSGA for&#13;
the better. Everyone agrees that&#13;
there should be a change. which&#13;
should give Jim Kreuser&#13;
something to think about on his&#13;
way out.&#13;
But the saddest irony about this&#13;
year's PSGA campaign is that at a&#13;
time when more students are&#13;
running for office than ever&#13;
bef... e. the rest of the student body&#13;
doesn~t even care what happens.&#13;
Parkslde has an elite few that are&#13;
running the whole show and the&#13;
massive majority of students are&#13;
Contlnaed On Page Six&#13;
a different form. They're&#13;
Primo. but tbey feel diff&#13;
going down. It's still winter&#13;
it's different. '&#13;
Who knows. maybe the&#13;
Even Wisconsin's weather has government elections will&#13;
become somewhat out of tradition really big this year. It&#13;
this year. While most of US are like adding meatballs and&#13;
used to intolerable bouts of snow both. to the Primo nondles.&#13;
and cold. this year Old Man we could even get a 30%&#13;
Winter has been taking a nap. At the polls next week. That&#13;
least be has been so far. and not asking too much though.&#13;
many of us would complain too is hard to break. but som&#13;
much. But if Winter were to be good things can come from&#13;
those same Primo noodles. they breaking. My family rec&#13;
wouldn't be the same at all. they gave up their Sunday&#13;
would seem to have' taken on quite nondles.&#13;
More letters . . .&#13;
PAR is not a pri&#13;
organization. Itis a student&#13;
allegedly "non . profit" t&#13;
student money. For this&#13;
they have social responsibill&#13;
the members of this Uni&#13;
community. Asking that&#13;
nographic movies not be sho&#13;
what is meant to be&#13;
educational environment,&#13;
not be viewed ...&#13;
Rather. it should be seen&#13;
positive attempt to correct&#13;
panel's amazing disregard of&#13;
social responsibilities.&#13;
ignorance of pornogra&#13;
degrading and objectif&#13;
treatment of women. and&#13;
effects on women, is an insult.&#13;
panel, members' apathetic&#13;
titudes and obvious lack of&#13;
judgement should not&#13;
tolerated.&#13;
People wbo are interested&#13;
this problem are invited to m&#13;
Continued On Page SIs&#13;
the fresh and clever wit that those&#13;
new M"A"SOH episodes brought&#13;
every week? It could prove to be&#13;
quite a struggle.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On April 7. 8. &amp; 10 (Thurs .• Fri..&#13;
and Sun .• day and night times) a&#13;
pornographic movie has been&#13;
scheduled to he shown by P AB's&#13;
film panel. This letter is written to&#13;
voice a complaint being conveyed&#13;
by myself and a considerable&#13;
number of people I have spoken&#13;
with (students and faculty).&#13;
Many members of our&#13;
University community are being&#13;
made uncomfortable hy the lack&#13;
of good judgement demonstrated&#13;
by PAB's film panel. One must&#13;
question their understanding of&#13;
their social responsibilities. They&#13;
are making no "efforts to foster&#13;
an environment of respect for the&#13;
dignity and worth of all members&#13;
of the University community,"&#13;
(Resolution #2384 of the Board of&#13;
Regents of the UW System) and&#13;
are actually causing harmful&#13;
effects on our abilities to study or&#13;
work in our academic setting.&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
~&#13;
Edl&#13;
anger NewsEdl&#13;
Feature Ed'&#13;
Sports Ed'&#13;
Photo Edl&#13;
Copy Edi&#13;
Business Mana&#13;
AdMa&#13;
Oi stribution Mana&#13;
Assistant Business Ma&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Sharon Aken, Terry Byrne, Maureen Burke, Jea&#13;
Bue"!ker Phi.llips, Carra Cariello, Catherine C.ffee&#13;
Patricia. CumbIe, Dan Dowhower, Michael Kallas, ca&#13;
Kortendlck, John Kovalic, Rick Luehr, Robb Luehr, Ka&#13;
Rayburn, Napolean Scarbrough, Jennie Tunkiecz.&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by stUdents Of UW . p~rkSide and they ate toHIr&#13;
res~sible for Its editorial polley and content.&#13;
Published ~Yery Thursday during the academic year except during breakS andhOJI&#13;
RANGER Isp.rlnted.bV the Union Cooperative PUblishing Co., Kenosha, wlsconskl,&#13;
Written permission IS required for reprint of eny portion of RANGER.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Park,side Ranger, Universltv of Wlsc:Onill'&#13;
Parkslde, Boll No. 2000, KenOsha, Wisconsin, 53141.&#13;
Letters !O the Editor will be accepted If typewritten, doublespaced on standal'd sfJI&#13;
paper wIth 008' : Inch margins. Ail letters must be signed and a telephone numblf' 1ftelUded&#13;
for verlf,catlon '&#13;
Names will be withheld fOr valid reasons • ~ If&#13;
Deadline for letters is Mondav at J p.m. for publication on Thursdav. Ttui R.utoE&#13;
reserves ail editorial privileges In refusing to print letters which contain, f4I" fit&#13;
defamatory Q]ntent.&#13;
RANGER Thursday. Merch 3. 1913&#13;
;;$ ovesick' brings romantic&#13;
comedy to life&#13;
by Rkk Luehr&#13;
_ romantic comedy has long&#13;
a lIl8p1eof the film world.&#13;
there have been few&#13;
comedies made, and&#13;
of t\JeSO (like last year's&#13;
Panky') ha ve failed&#13;
ably. Finally we have&#13;
, a romantic comedy&#13;
.,. up to ita p-edecessors.&#13;
Moore plays Dr. Saul&#13;
a poychiatrist whose&#13;
II' include a nyma&#13;
man who just lays in&#13;
far lbe entire session, and&#13;
__ mlcs professor from&#13;
who thinks that his&#13;
are being scrambled by&#13;
rnm the top of the World&#13;
eeoter. Ooe day another&#13;
triJl admita to Saul that he&#13;
in love with me of his&#13;
. saul suggests that he&#13;
ber to another doctor. He&#13;
saul's advice and Saul ends&#13;
wItb the patient.&#13;
!be first time he sees her,&#13;
IIin loYe.Her name is Chloe&#13;
(EUJabeth McGovern) and&#13;
10 a playwright who suffers&#13;
lDJiely attacks. During&#13;
Drst session with Chloe, he&#13;
10 fantasize about her.&#13;
beIl\DS an up and down&#13;
p that is really more up&#13;
than down. Saul's life is further&#13;
complicated by periodic visita&#13;
from Sigmund Freud (Alec&#13;
Guiness) who counsels him, sort&#13;
of.&#13;
'Lovesick' was written and&#13;
directed by long time Woody&#13;
Allen collaborator Marshall&#13;
Brickman. Brickman had given us&#13;
a very witty script which is&#13;
enhanced by the wmderful performances&#13;
of the cast. Moore&#13;
basically plays the same&#13;
character as he did in '10', the&#13;
middle - aged man obsessed with a&#13;
younger woman. He is such an&#13;
engaging performer however, and&#13;
he can play this character so well&#13;
you don't mind seeing this per:&#13;
formance again.&#13;
Elizabeth McGovern is one of&#13;
Hollywood's best young actresses.&#13;
In 'Lovesick' she gives a performance&#13;
as good as those she&#13;
gave in 'Ordinary People' and&#13;
'Ragtime.' I also think that when&#13;
they invented the concept of&#13;
'cute,' they had Miss McGovern in&#13;
mind. Her lovely face and radiant&#13;
smile will charm your socks off.&#13;
My favorite performance in&#13;
'Lovesick' is that of Alec Guioness&#13;
as Sigmund Freud. Popping into&#13;
Saul's life at any moment, his dry&#13;
comments on the state of things,&#13;
prOVide the film with some of its&#13;
furmiest moments.&#13;
In addition to the starring roles&#13;
there are solid performances by&#13;
Alan King, Selma Diammd, and&#13;
John Hustm as members of the&#13;
psychiactric society that tries to&#13;
oust Saul for having a relatiooship&#13;
with a patient.&#13;
'Lovesick' is billed as a fUm for&#13;
the 'incurably romantic.' That it&#13;
is. In addition, it makes you leave&#13;
the theater smiling. What more&#13;
can you ask?&#13;
with Dick&#13;
arking problems proliferate&#13;
necks like E.T. looking for home.&#13;
Arriving early avoids this.&#13;
However, for some, an empty lot&#13;
causes problems. They either&#13;
can't decide where to park, or line&#13;
their car up sCfJare between the&#13;
yellow lines, leaving plenty of&#13;
room for the next fifty cars.&#13;
Other drivers like to park in the&#13;
"fast get· away" position, as if&#13;
pointing their car away from the&#13;
buildings will get them out of here&#13;
sooner. And then there are the&#13;
cars that make it to school in the&#13;
morning with every available inch&#13;
of window space covered with&#13;
frost. Amazing.&#13;
Apparently, people enjoy the&#13;
freedom of driving in parking Iota.&#13;
Rules of the road need not apply.&#13;
Of course, they11 be some jerk&#13;
driving right at you, forcing a&#13;
decision on your part. "Let's&#13;
pretend we're in America. I drive&#13;
on the right side and you on the&#13;
left, OK?"&#13;
Directional use in parking Iota is&#13;
non . existent. (For the less informed,&#13;
"directional" is college -&#13;
talk for "blinker." For the lesser&#13;
informed, the "blinker" is that&#13;
bar jutting out of the left of the&#13;
steering column.)&#13;
Let's face it - there isn't ample&#13;
parking(1here's sample parking.&#13;
Yet, we should be proud of the&#13;
hassles. Parking problems are&#13;
characteristics of all great public&#13;
events, like swnrner concerts and&#13;
ball games. However, the note I&#13;
found pinned under a wiper blade&#13;
in Phy Ed says it all: "Nice park&#13;
job, asshole. Next time leave a&#13;
can opener. "&#13;
If current economic conditions&#13;
persist, a policy change is in order.&#13;
Mini - car parking will he&#13;
discontinued. Lots will be divided&#13;
into American made and Imports,&#13;
with the latter placed in the far&#13;
comers. This is AMC country,&#13;
remember? Alliance gets&#13;
preference.&#13;
Imagine the great TV commercial&#13;
all this would make,&#13;
borrowing the Di - Gel jingle: "I&#13;
like parking (WHUP) but it&#13;
doesn't like me."&#13;
PARKS IDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
3-60 RECORDING STARS&#13;
Top ~&#13;
40 ""&#13;
Hit&#13;
LOVED&#13;
BY&#13;
YOU&#13;
Top&#13;
40&#13;
Hit&#13;
LOVED&#13;
BY&#13;
YOU&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
WITH COMEDIAN&#13;
JIMMY MILLER&#13;
March 11, 1983&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Doors open 8:30 pm&#13;
$2.00 UW-P Students $3.00 Guests&#13;
All tickets at door $4.00&#13;
UW-P 1.0. Required&#13;
Showtlme 9:00 pm&#13;
Murphy talks&#13;
about art and life&#13;
by Toay Rogen&#13;
Feature_&#13;
Sidney Murphy is a black artial&#13;
from Chicago, and last week his&#13;
exhibit entitled, "Imminent&#13;
Conceptions in Black Art: 1be&#13;
Mind's Eye - An Exercise in&#13;
Balance," was displayed in Main&#13;
Place. In an interview, Murphy&#13;
discussed his approach to art and&#13;
to life.&#13;
"I think it is important for me to&#13;
keep myself balanced, my life&#13;
balanced I and DOt become&#13;
pressured or let stress take over&#13;
my life. I want to create, to the&#13;
best of my ability, whatever I'm&#13;
trying to do, to make it an art, and&#13;
not just an object of artwork. I&#13;
want to develop an art ... In order&#13;
to become an artist I felt I had to&#13;
develop my own style, my own&#13;
work that I was responsible for,&#13;
and not evolve out of the ideas of&#13;
others but having myself coming&#13;
out in my wort," be said.&#13;
Murphy talked about some of&#13;
his works. "The first piece that I&#13;
worked m took about twelve&#13;
hours, straight through, and when&#13;
I finished I was just so happy I just&#13;
ran outside and screamed. I had&#13;
my first piece together, and it&#13;
balanced, and it was interesting.&#13;
A little playful maybe, but it was&#13;
what I was looking for. Ever since&#13;
then I've just been going from a&#13;
visual sense of what I wanted to&#13;
see balanced.&#13;
"I would find some materials&#13;
and ... them in a _y tbat -.lei&#13;
express the mood I _ in at Ibe&#13;
moment, or lOme experience I&#13;
had been througb," Murphy&#13;
stated.&#13;
Was Murphy'S art i!IljuoaI..&#13;
just his peraooaI experience, ...&#13;
did it relate to the blnk&#13;
movement as a wbole! MUl'Jlby&#13;
replied, "I can't separate tbolIe&#13;
~ogs. For a long time, blaek&#13;
people have been put Iolo a&#13;
situstim where they haft been&#13;
pressurized, and haft had to deal&#13;
with so mud! in IWstory. And a lot&#13;
of the history is IWdden.&#13;
A 10Dll time ago in Ejypt and&#13;
Africa there were black people&#13;
who did wonderful tbiop and had&#13;
blossoming civilizations. ADd&#13;
those same people wbo ......&#13;
around then are around DIIW, but&#13;
for some reuoo tbere is a purposely&#13;
placed mentality lbat S8JS&#13;
that there is DO connection. But&#13;
there is a coonectioo. But ....&#13;
creativity is starting to come out&#13;
again, it can't be held back&#13;
anymore.&#13;
''Tbetaoguageofmenisbui\diog,&#13;
and for a long time bIacka have&#13;
been restricted from bun........&#13;
But at some time you haft to telIr&#13;
down somethiDll to build&#13;
something new, not OIlIyphysical&#13;
structures but tearing down some&#13;
of the old attitudes and&#13;
philooophies that have created&#13;
hell for other people in the world."&#13;
Franzcine Caldwell&#13;
Organizing Black History Month&#13;
by Tooy Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Franzcine Caldwell is Coordinator&#13;
of Minority Programs at&#13;
Parkside, and recently helped to&#13;
organize activities for Black&#13;
History Month. In an interview t&#13;
Caldwell talked about the importance&#13;
of the events and their&#13;
relevance to black as well as white&#13;
students.&#13;
"Black History Month has been&#13;
going on for many years on&#13;
college campuses and has even&#13;
spread to the elementary and high&#13;
schools. The primary purpose of&#13;
the month is to spread information&#13;
about the cultural contributions of&#13;
blacks in America - what black&#13;
people bave developed, conceived,&#13;
and implemented to help become&#13;
an integral part of the American&#13;
way of life. It is appropriate for&#13;
the events to be in an academic&#13;
setting - that's the place where&#13;
Enjoy God's Country&#13;
with Style.&#13;
most people go to learn.&#13;
"It started out originally for&#13;
black students In school. where&#13;
blacks could bave p-aise for their&#13;
contributioos and fill the voids of&#13;
doubt that blacks themselves had&#13;
about their contributions .• ow it&#13;
has evolved into a forum to instruct&#13;
the majority in black&#13;
history and their contributions. It&#13;
speaks to the black experience:'&#13;
Caldwell stated.&#13;
Caldwell went on to explain how&#13;
the theme of Parkside's Black&#13;
History Month was decided and&#13;
what speakers were cho8en. "We&#13;
decided that 'The Busill\lSs of&#13;
Black Survival' would be our&#13;
theme, black survival meaning&#13;
how can a student move through&#13;
the system more smootbly.&#13;
"We wondered what sort of&#13;
needs could be fulfilled by having&#13;
Black History Month at Parkalde,&#13;
Continued 00 Page SIx&#13;
On I.p&#13;
., Union S.... n&#13;
4 Thursday, March 3, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Senate candidates: Showing&#13;
concern for the issues&#13;
And!/ Buchanan&#13;
Andy Bucbanan, seeking a&#13;
Senate seat, would like to become&#13;
active in both SUF AC and the&#13;
Union Advisory Board. Buchanan&#13;
said he "would seek to reexamine&#13;
some heavily funded activities,&#13;
particularly the Union and the&#13;
Campus Health Center." He&#13;
added that he would like to see&#13;
mere financial support for some of&#13;
the underfunded but cost effective&#13;
clubs and organizations.&#13;
Buchanan has been a member&#13;
of the soccer team for two years.&#13;
In addition, he has spent a year&#13;
and a haH as Ranger's business&#13;
manager, which he feels has given&#13;
him the .necessary financial&#13;
management experience.&#13;
He would like to see PSGA take&#13;
a more active role in decision -&#13;
making in the future. "I'd like to&#13;
think that PSGA could be a more&#13;
influential organization, instead of&#13;
rubber - stamping administration&#13;
decisions," he said.&#13;
Scott Goebe/&#13;
SCott Goebel is seeking election&#13;
to the PSGA Senate because "I&#13;
have the experience in dealing&#13;
with penple through my wOl'kas a&#13;
salesperson. I have plenty of lime&#13;
to spend working for my penple."&#13;
Goebel Is interested in&#13;
OI'g8nizinga ride - share program&#13;
on campus, an.i in getting&#13;
students at Parkside more involved.&#13;
"I would like to inspire&#13;
other students to become involved&#13;
inthe issues concerning them, U he&#13;
said.&#13;
He believes that "everything is&#13;
rwming smootbly" in PSGA at&#13;
this lime and sees no need to make&#13;
any immediate changes.&#13;
Chris Hamme/eu&#13;
Chris Hamrnelev, the current&#13;
president of the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, has had previous&#13;
Senate experience as president&#13;
pro tempore, and serving on the&#13;
Legislative Affairs and SUFAC&#13;
committees.&#13;
Hammelev said that she would&#13;
first seek to "deal with&#13;
parliamentary procedure" in the&#13;
Senate. uTo me," she added, ..it&#13;
seems to hinder things more than&#13;
help."&#13;
Hammelev, who currenUy holds&#13;
a Senate seat, said, "In general.&#13;
I'm interested in all student issues&#13;
- no one issue in particuler."&#13;
Carol Kazarian&#13;
Senate candidate Carol&#13;
Kazarian is "open to many different&#13;
attitudes existing here at&#13;
UW-Parkside." Kazarian said she&#13;
has taken an active role in student&#13;
organizations here.&#13;
She is most. interested in the&#13;
effectiveness of the Academic&#13;
Skills program. "The initial&#13;
concept of the Academic SkiDs&#13;
program requirement is excellent,"&#13;
she said. "However, too&#13;
often the students never realize&#13;
they are near or at academic&#13;
probation." She added that&#13;
anxiety causes students to take&#13;
unrealistic action. She said that&#13;
too many successful candidates&#13;
are being denied academic&#13;
progression because of students&#13;
with poor grade point averages.&#13;
Kazarian believes that PSGA is&#13;
"doing a fine job in operating an&#13;
efficient organization."&#13;
Marie Marten&#13;
Marie Marten (not pictured) is&#13;
PSGA PRESIDENTIAL&#13;
CANDIDATE DEBATE&#13;
Upper Main Place&#13;
Monday, Mar. 7 at 1 p.m.&#13;
Sponsored by CR!.oger&#13;
J&#13;
interested in addressing the issue&#13;
of tenure decisions in the Senate.&#13;
She said she "would form committees&#13;
to promote student activity&#13;
and input with involvement&#13;
from the faculty and administration&#13;
...&#13;
Marten has "a great interest" in&#13;
bringing changes to Parkside. She&#13;
is willing to stick lVith things, she&#13;
said, and added. "I am not easily&#13;
discouraged. "&#13;
Marten said she would first&#13;
have to determine whether any&#13;
changes were needed before&#13;
giving suggestions. She said that&#13;
she would look at the issues involved&#13;
before making recommendations.&#13;
Bennett Schliesman&#13;
Bennett SCbliesman believes he&#13;
will be a good choice for the&#13;
Senate because, "I've had a lot of&#13;
experience working with penple&#13;
and working with bureaucracies."&#13;
He said he enjoys working with&#13;
and belping people.&#13;
The two issues -which most&#13;
concern Schliesman, he said, are&#13;
tenure decisions and parking. "U&#13;
you spend the extra money for a&#13;
white permit, you should be able&#13;
to find parking in those lots."&#13;
On tenure decisions, he said,&#13;
"We are primarily a commuter&#13;
college with deep ties to the&#13;
community. Our primary emphasis&#13;
should be on teaching, not&#13;
research."&#13;
wide variet&#13;
Jeanne Buenker·Phil/ips&#13;
Jeanne Buenker - Phillips is a 19&#13;
year old Communication major&#13;
and a candidate for the PSGA&#13;
office of President. Phillips has&#13;
been a PSGA Senator since the&#13;
summer of 1981. She has been&#13;
United Council Women's Affairs&#13;
Director and also formed the.&#13;
Women's Mfairs sub - committee&#13;
at Parkside. Phillips has served&#13;
as the Assistant Pro ' Tempore of&#13;
the Senate, and was later and&#13;
currently stands elected as the&#13;
President Pro - Tempore of the&#13;
Senate. She is the co - editor of The&#13;
PSGA newsletter Dialogue, and is&#13;
a Ranger Staff member. Her&#13;
involvement also runs into&#13;
working as the Vice - President of&#13;
the UW-Parkside Association of&#13;
Communicators.&#13;
When asked, Phillipa found that&#13;
she would like to see the issues of&#13;
awareness dealt With on all&#13;
levels of activity for this campus.&#13;
"The Senate as a whole, functioning&#13;
organ of this university,&#13;
often operates with a certain&#13;
amount of indifference. as any&#13;
organization can and often does.&#13;
Part of the indifference is because&#13;
the members don't respond to the&#13;
authority and opportunity of their&#13;
various positions. We have to be&#13;
sure that people are operating to&#13;
their potential and not wasting&#13;
resources. Once waste starts to&#13;
develop, the members of an&#13;
organization will only focus on&#13;
that, and it tears the organization&#13;
apart." explained Phillips.&#13;
Finally, Phillipa addressed&#13;
duties the senators must deal wi&#13;
on a regular hasis. "Senators ar&#13;
elected to act as student liai&#13;
between administration,&#13;
student government and t&#13;
student. They are the student&#13;
representatives, and are to act&#13;
according to what this student&#13;
body prioritizes. That's wby&#13;
complete student involvement is a&#13;
must on this campus as on any&#13;
other. We travel frequently to&#13;
United Council and make known&#13;
the priorities of this campus in&#13;
compliance with what we&#13;
currently understand those&#13;
priorities to be and will continue to&#13;
represent the students and voice&#13;
their views to the best of 0lU'&#13;
ability."&#13;
Vice presidential candidates&#13;
represent diversity of views&#13;
~IIIIII&#13;
Mike $coon&#13;
Mike Scoon, currently a PSGA&#13;
justice t is seeking the vice&#13;
presidential seat in this election.&#13;
SCoon,25, is a pre - med major and&#13;
has formerly held a senate&#13;
position, where he served as&#13;
assistant pro tempore.&#13;
Scoon believes there are many&#13;
issues facing Parkside students.&#13;
Among these, he said, was the&#13;
problem of giving students a&#13;
greater voice in the faculty&#13;
selection process. He proposed&#13;
forming a student committee for&#13;
each division to advise the&#13;
divisional executive committee of&#13;
student opinion.&#13;
An organizer of "Save the&#13;
Library Day" last spring, Scoon&#13;
believes that the library needs to&#13;
get adequate funding to perforoi&#13;
its mission. "The library is the&#13;
basis of the school," he said.&#13;
Scoon said that the Senate would&#13;
need to be fully staffed to do its&#13;
job. At this time, he said, Senate&#13;
committees are running with one&#13;
or two members each, creating an&#13;
unacceptable workload on the&#13;
Senators.&#13;
Scoon believes he is the hest&#13;
candidate for vice 'prestdent&#13;
because of his experience in&#13;
student government. He said that&#13;
since he has recently completed&#13;
the course work for his major. he&#13;
will have the time to devote to his&#13;
dulies if he were elected.&#13;
Mart!/ Rheaume&#13;
Marly Rheaume, 25, is running&#13;
with John Monks for the office of&#13;
vice president.&#13;
Rheaume is majoring in&#13;
Business and Applied Computer&#13;
Science. "As an independent&#13;
student with experience in hoth .&#13;
the blue collar and white collar&#13;
worlds, I'm prepared to bring a lot&#13;
of knowledge and insight into the&#13;
office," stated Rheaume. Also,&#13;
Rheaume feels that his&#13;
disassociation from PSGA in the&#13;
past and his association with&#13;
Parkside students puts him in the&#13;
unique position of being able to be&#13;
totally objective and representative&#13;
of the student body. "I think&#13;
these qualities 'are essential for&#13;
successful execution of this office,"&#13;
stated Rheaume.&#13;
Rheaume feels that when addressing&#13;
the broader issues, one&#13;
has to rememher that Parkside is&#13;
called a "community oriented&#13;
.university" with an "industrial&#13;
mission." "This would, for&#13;
example, seem to place a high&#13;
priority on teaching excellence,"&#13;
said Rheaume.&#13;
Rheaume feels that it is&#13;
necessary to hike a hard look at&#13;
the present structure of PSGA. "If&#13;
a method exists to run PSGA in a&#13;
more efficient and representative&#13;
manner, then Ithink we owe it to&#13;
the students to find it." said&#13;
Rheaume.&#13;
Luis VaIJdejuli&#13;
Luis Valldejuli is 21 years old,&#13;
and is Jeanne Buenker - Phillips&#13;
running mate for Vice - President.&#13;
Valldejuli has been a senator for&#13;
three years, was Assistant Pro. -&#13;
Tempore of the Senate and IS&#13;
currently the Chairman of the&#13;
SUF AC sub - committee of the&#13;
Senate. "My main objectivt:s,"&#13;
commented Valldejuli, "is to fIrst&#13;
emphasize that senators as well as&#13;
anyone else having to do with the&#13;
student governance of this&#13;
University should be willing to&#13;
devote part of their lime to performing&#13;
certain given responsibililies.&#13;
"The student government will&#13;
have to reach out to the different&#13;
organizations oil this campus to&#13;
see that happen. The opening of&#13;
the Minority Retention Center&#13;
brought us to the realization that&#13;
there is a group of students on this&#13;
campus that is not being&#13;
represented in the Senate.&#13;
Valldejuli ended his comments&#13;
with the relationship he and&#13;
Phillips have developed throdgh&#13;
student government. "Jeanne and&#13;
I have been very active in the&#13;
past. We have grown from our&#13;
involvement and developed a good&#13;
friendship. U we didn't belie.eJn&#13;
each other, we wouldn 'to h~ve&#13;
chosen one another as rUD01ng&#13;
mates. "&#13;
d&#13;
KANGE:K&#13;
f candidates seek the PSG A presidency&#13;
t I would be the best&#13;
because I believe I&#13;
ability to approach&#13;
lh an open and ob-&#13;
:' said Monks. Monks&#13;
Ilis fellow candidates&#13;
've because they&#13;
set to their ways and&#13;
dB PSGA. "Also:'&#13;
have the drive and&#13;
begin new programs&#13;
them through." In&#13;
feels that his&#13;
to economics will&#13;
. "I can logically&#13;
s and consider&#13;
and beneli ts of&#13;
ted Monks.&#13;
Monks intends to&#13;
issues. HI feel that&#13;
teaching excellence&#13;
must be considered,"&#13;
He also wants to look&#13;
's job placement&#13;
ially considering&#13;
p1oyment. "We also&#13;
a closer look into the&#13;
of the Student&#13;
Council, and the&#13;
Review Committee,"&#13;
. He also feels that&#13;
hich directly effect&#13;
t Parkside must be&#13;
·deration.&#13;
elected, plans to inelliciency&#13;
of the&#13;
of the PSGA. "For&#13;
plan on having the&#13;
ltted III time, and I&#13;
lch the budget closely&#13;
'I@," said Monks.&#13;
s that his chances of&#13;
are as good as any of&#13;
andidates.&#13;
Phillip Pogreba, 22 in seeking&#13;
the PSGA presidency, said, "when&#13;
and if I get elected, I'm going to&#13;
have the entire o!lice changed&#13;
, around."&#13;
Pogreba said that PSGA was the&#13;
only major organization with a&#13;
limited membership, while being&#13;
the most powerful. That has&#13;
limited the student government's&#13;
ability to get anything done he&#13;
said:&#13;
He would like to begin a&#13;
program of "massive recruitment,"&#13;
to bring more, harder&#13;
working Senators into the&#13;
organization. "There's too many&#13;
people right now using that o!lice&#13;
as a bookshelf and a coatrack," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Pogreba has been a Senator for&#13;
two years. He was a member of&#13;
SUF AC until last semester and&#13;
served as the Senate's President&#13;
Pro Tempore during the last year.&#13;
In addition to working on seven&#13;
faculty committees, he has served&#13;
as PSGA's United Council coordina&#13;
tor , and was a member of the&#13;
Director's committee, the policy&#13;
setting body of UC, which sets&#13;
fiscal policy and originates&#13;
constitutional changes.&#13;
An industrial and environmental&#13;
hygiene major,&#13;
Pogreba said he would watch the&#13;
budget very closely to avoid any&#13;
over - spending, which happened&#13;
last year. "We would ftod out&#13;
exactly where we'll be short, and&#13;
where we could trim," he said.&#13;
"I know (Mike) Scoon cares,"&#13;
Pogreba said of his running mate.&#13;
"And he's got experience." He&#13;
helieves that an effective vice&#13;
president can do much to enhance&#13;
PSGA's effectiveness. "He's got&#13;
as broad a base as I do," Pogreba&#13;
added.&#13;
"I think it's every student&#13;
leader's responsibility to educate&#13;
'their constituency," Pogreba&#13;
said. "Il people want to know&#13;
something, it's their responsibility&#13;
to sit down and explain it." He&#13;
believes that a student leader can&#13;
he most effective as a communicator.&#13;
"You should educate&#13;
the students on their rights and&#13;
responsibilities," he added.&#13;
Pat Ramsdell, a Junior from&#13;
Kenosha, has been a senator for&#13;
the past year and feels that it's&#13;
time for a change. Alter seeing&#13;
who was running for president, he&#13;
decided it was time for him to&#13;
enter the race. He feels the other&#13;
candidates running now are either&#13;
running for personal gain or else&#13;
they are setting the wrong goals&#13;
for PSGA. He said that a candida&#13;
te for president should work&#13;
his way up the organizational&#13;
ladder and added he has done this.&#13;
"I know some people have been in&#13;
the organization longer, but I&#13;
honestly couldn't support tbem. I&#13;
honestly feel that if I can do a&#13;
better job than the other candidate,&#13;
then Ishould run," he said.&#13;
And so he is.&#13;
"Right now stndent government&#13;
is totally unproductive. There is&#13;
nothing that has come out of that&#13;
o!lice for months," Ramsdell&#13;
says. "They've got so much&#13;
bureaucracy that it's hindering&#13;
anything that's got to be done," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Il Ramsdell were elected, he&#13;
would try to promote Parkside to&#13;
the community as he feels that&#13;
Parkside has a great deal to offer&#13;
the public. ''There's got to be&#13;
some pride in the students," he&#13;
said, and added that through more&#13;
student awareness of what PSGA&#13;
is and who's in it, more students&#13;
would get involved and be prouder&#13;
hoth as stndents and as alumni.&#13;
Ramsdell also feels that PSGA&#13;
should be more-involved to United&#13;
Council. As president be would get&#13;
PSGA involved to UC activities.&#13;
Ramsdell's biggest complaint&#13;
isn't with the administration or&#13;
faculty but rather with the PSGA&#13;
itself, and he says it's because&#13;
PSGA has no direction. "Student&#13;
government doesn't have a goal.&#13;
At least I've never heard of one.&#13;
They (the otber Senators) live by&#13;
meeting, and it's ridiculous.&#13;
We've got to get some short- term&#13;
and long - term goals."&#13;
Ramsdell slated that Parkside&#13;
definitely needs more student&#13;
awareness and the best way to do&#13;
that is through student involvement.&#13;
Daue Schroeder&#13;
Dave Scbroeder, running for&#13;
PSGA president, believes that one&#13;
of the biggest problems currently&#13;
facing PSGA is the budget&#13;
shortfall. "111 have to work with&#13;
. the treasurer and with the UC&#13;
directoe," he said. "Most of our&#13;
money went for UC trips."&#13;
Schroeder said that if he were&#13;
elected, be would try to work more&#13;
closely with the senate to iron out&#13;
difficulties. ''That was one of the&#13;
basic problems with the budget&#13;
this year, that neither side was&#13;
listening to the other, and&#13;
everyhody was working behind&#13;
everybody elses hack."&#13;
Schroeder, a dramatic arts&#13;
major, would also like to address&#13;
student apathy. He said that&#13;
PSGA did not address the interests&#13;
of certain student groups&#13;
on campus. HI'm not sure that the&#13;
senate right now is composed of a&#13;
good cross section of the student&#13;
body," he said. Schroeder is&#13;
currently vice chair of the Student&#13;
Organization Council, and added,&#13;
"SOC is the best place to go&#13;
because we get a cross section of&#13;
all interest groups there. I've&#13;
heard a lot of issues from them."&#13;
In addition to being vice chair of&#13;
SOC, Schroeder is currently head&#13;
of SOC's Budget and Review&#13;
Committee, and is holding&#13;
positions on three faculty committees.&#13;
He would like to see&#13;
PSGA gain more seats on tbe&#13;
faculty committees.&#13;
He would also like to expand&#13;
PSGA's legislative affairs committee,&#13;
be said, to become a&#13;
potent lobbying force for Parkside&#13;
students. "Thanks to Jim&#13;
Kreuser, we have a good working&#13;
relationship with Kenosha&#13;
politicians. But we need to&#13;
establish this relationship with the&#13;
Racine politicians also. Ilwe can&#13;
get a good lobbying force there,&#13;
we may have some dout in the&#13;
state legislature," he said.&#13;
Schroeder added that be would&#13;
"steer the senate toward better&#13;
management of the committees,&#13;
and to broaden these committee's&#13;
scopes, especially committee&#13;
information of the United Council.&#13;
"&#13;
Mosood ShcJ1iq&#13;
PSGA presidential eandldate.&#13;
Maaood Sbaflq, 1earMd at an&#13;
early age the value of an&#13;
education and how to be independent.&#13;
He was born to Pakistan and at&#13;
the age of five be went off to&#13;
boarding school in Abbotabad.&#13;
Four years later he transfered to&#13;
Kuwait to a ttend an American&#13;
school. He was forced to leave&#13;
Kuwait to 1967 because of the war&#13;
between the Arabs and the Iaralls.&#13;
Shaliq then returned to Pakialan&#13;
and graduated to 1974 from a high&#13;
school in Peshawar. Aller&#13;
graduation, Sbafiq moved to the&#13;
United Arab Emirates and&#13;
worked to save money fcJr In.&#13;
college educatilll. 'nIen at the age&#13;
oi D, SIJaIiq moved to ElJSIand&#13;
attended school there for 10&#13;
months. He decided to transfer to&#13;
the United States because of his&#13;
interest in Accounting and&#13;
Computer Science and be felt that&#13;
the programs are more advanced&#13;
here.&#13;
Shaliq, now 26 years old,ls to his&#13;
second year at Parkside. He Is&#13;
Photo Editor of the Ra~er, a&#13;
member of tbe Accounting Club&#13;
and also a Volonteer Income Tax&#13;
Assistant for the IRS this year. He&#13;
speaks English and Urdu fiuently&#13;
as well as some French, German&#13;
and Arabic.&#13;
Shaliq feels that his hackground&#13;
and experiences will be belpful if&#13;
be is elected PSGA president. "I&#13;
think I have a good understandi~&#13;
of the American culture and&#13;
values because I came from&#13;
another country," be said.&#13;
'Ibere are many cha~es and&#13;
additions that Shafiq would like to&#13;
make to student government if he&#13;
is elected. "My aim Is to make the&#13;
students more politically aware. I&#13;
think the students shou1d know&#13;
what's gol~ IIIto the school, their&#13;
couniry and a1Jo other countries,"&#13;
be said.&#13;
Another of Shallq's goals Is to&#13;
create better communication&#13;
between the student government&#13;
and the clubs and professional&#13;
organizations. Hill candidacy baa&#13;
been endoned by the Accountq&#13;
Club and the InternatloDal&#13;
Students Organization.&#13;
Presidential candidate debate&#13;
set for Monday in Main Place,&#13;
Is sponsori~ a debate ",estiOllBasked by the moderator, candidates. It's a good opPSGA&#13;
presidential R8qer editor Pat Hensiak. Alter portunity for students to see the&#13;
on Monday Mar. 7, at the question and answer period, candidates under a little bit of&#13;
per MaiD Place. In Ita the candidates will answer pressure, and you can see what&#13;
, the debate is an questions from the audiencor. people are really like when&#13;
rtunity fcJr students The debate Is expected to last they're exposed to pressure."&#13;
candidates clooe up. lrom two to two and one - hall ''This is an important time of&#13;
te will consist of a live holU'S,due to the large ...... ber of year for every student affected by&#13;
'ng __ '" by each candidates. Ac&lt;ordinll to HensIak, this campus because these are the&#13;
ndidorkW;~ by ''TIle debate shou1d prove to be as _ts _ represeul and make&#13;
and a_ ~ In IDterestiDllbls year as It was last the structure of our student&#13;
candidates will addres8 year, ... to the oil_\)' of the g............. ," - &lt;IlIIduded.&#13;
Stories by: Sharron Aken, Pat Hensiak. Jennie&#13;
Tunkieicz. Jeff Wicks and&#13;
Bob Kiesling.&#13;
Photos by:&#13;
Michael Kailas and Masood Shafiq.&#13;
6 Thursday. March 3. 1983 RANGER&#13;
**********&#13;
Veteran's Club&#13;
'TIle Veteran's Club will be&#13;
holding a meeting on Tuesday,&#13;
Mar. 8 at 12 p.m, in the Career&#13;
Resource Center. The Club needs&#13;
to organize a run to be held on&#13;
Apr. 16. We have a lot of jobs and&#13;
no people to fill them.&#13;
Geology, Physics&#13;
The Parkside Geology and&#13;
Physics Colloquium will be&#13;
sponsoring a presentation,&#13;
"Geophysical in Antartica," on&#13;
Friday, Mar. 4 at 3 p.m. in GRQ.&#13;
113.The speaker is Dr. Charles R.&#13;
Bentley, of the UW·Madison&#13;
Department of Geology and&#13;
Geophysics.&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
On Friday, Mar. 11 at 1 p.m. the&#13;
UWPDT is going to conduct the&#13;
Very Special Darts Festival. This&#13;
will be a double elimination&#13;
English 301 darts tournament&#13;
open to any Parkside student,&#13;
staff or faculty memher. TrophIes&#13;
will be awarded to first and&#13;
second place winners. A $1&#13;
registration fee will be charged.&#13;
bnmediate1y after the Very&#13;
Special Darts Festival, the&#13;
UWPDT Social Committee will be&#13;
sponsori~ the "You Deserve a&#13;
Break Today" party somewhere&#13;
within the confines of the Union.&#13;
For more information contact El&#13;
Presideoto Nick.&#13;
Final Notice! If you do not sign&#13;
up for the Very Special' Arts&#13;
Festival we will publish those&#13;
pictures of you and the Sbeepdog.&#13;
We will also send copies of the&#13;
photos to your motber, boss, sister&#13;
and pastor. Face up to moral&#13;
obligations and sign up for the&#13;
Very Special Arts Festival. Help&#13;
someone besides yourself during&#13;
spring break. The UWPDT will be&#13;
Club Events&#13;
sponsori~ a post festival feast&#13;
and party for all participants. For&#13;
tbose who didn't sign up, well,&#13;
you'll just have to face the eonsequences.&#13;
The trikes are coming - Mar.&#13;
25. Be there, Aloha.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
Inter Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship will have a social time&#13;
on Wednesday, Mar. 9 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Union '1I.YI. This will be a time for&#13;
members to think abollt plans for&#13;
next year.&#13;
ISO&#13;
The International Student&#13;
Organization is endorsing Masood&#13;
Shafiq for PSGA president. We&#13;
wlsh Masood the best olluck in the&#13;
election.&#13;
Table Tennis&#13;
The Table Tennis Club is endorsing&#13;
Maaood Shafiq for PSGA&#13;
president. We feel that he offers&#13;
the leadership th&amp; University is&#13;
looking for.&#13;
UWPAC&#13;
University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside's Association of Communicators,&#13;
formerly known as&#13;
the Communication Club, which&#13;
was formed October 1982,is now&#13;
adding to Its foundations. Members&#13;
are in the process of planning&#13;
future activities. These events&#13;
may include films, videotapes,&#13;
and speakers wbo will discuss&#13;
topics pertinent to communication.&#13;
David Rabbel, club advisor, and&#13;
Mary Ginther, president, initiated&#13;
the UW-PAC. It was formed to&#13;
develop and present programs&#13;
and activities to students interested&#13;
in communication, and to&#13;
provide a formal medium by&#13;
which students may offer input&#13;
regarding the Communica tion&#13;
Program. The club is one part of&#13;
the overall effort to make the&#13;
Communication Program state -&#13;
of - the - art.&#13;
Anyone interested in participating&#13;
in this dynamic,&#13;
proactive organization may&#13;
contact: Mary Ginther, 637-3466;&#13;
Vice - President Jeanne Buenker -&#13;
Phillips, 634-2284; Secretary&#13;
Becky Bogar"'s, 634-7210; or&#13;
Treasurer Matt Tuttle, 886-0615.&#13;
IFranzcine Caldwell-I&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
and we realized that we would&#13;
prohably have to spread subject&#13;
matter over a broad range of&#13;
areas. So we brought in medical&#13;
people, people with knowledge of&#13;
the media, and we brought in&#13;
blacks from the academic community.&#13;
And we brought in people&#13;
from the business world, because&#13;
business, of course, is the major&#13;
that students are going for now.&#13;
The survival thing comes in where&#13;
we talked about how these people&#13;
made it through the system to&#13;
become exemplary role models.&#13;
We got some very vivid explana&#13;
tions of how they succeeded,"&#13;
she stated.&#13;
Caldwell was pleased with this&#13;
year's Black History Month and&#13;
hopes to keep improving on it.&#13;
"We are prohably expanding the&#13;
program from two to three weeks&#13;
next year, and we want to have&#13;
activities throughout the year ...&#13;
I think this year's program was a&#13;
success. I don't tbi.nk it is&#13;
idealistic to say that we 'came into&#13;
real contact with students in&#13;
terms of spreading knowledge. I&#13;
think we were able to get our point&#13;
. across," she said.&#13;
Photo classes to be held&#13;
Two photography classes, noncredit,&#13;
will begin in March at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
One, "For people wbo hate&#13;
cameras, but love good pictures,"&#13;
will begin March 7 and be held on&#13;
four Mondays, 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. in&#13;
Tallent Hall, with a fee of $19.&#13;
Instructor Paul Flagg describes&#13;
his course as lighthearted, for&#13;
people with cameras who don't&#13;
want to know everything about&#13;
photography, but want to know the&#13;
basics about cameras, films and&#13;
composition so they can take&#13;
better pictures - on vacation, on&#13;
holidays, or just of the grandkids.&#13;
Flagg received an M.S. degree&#13;
from Indiana University in film&#13;
production and was their staff&#13;
photographer, as well as teaching&#13;
for Wustum Museum, Carthage&#13;
College and Parkside.&#13;
The second class is on Basic&#13;
Camera Skills, an introductory&#13;
workshop where there will an&#13;
opportunity to learn, through&#13;
class projects, ~ various camera&#13;
controls and techniques, and help&#13;
given to produce the kind of&#13;
photographs the students desire.&#13;
Robert Schaap, of UWMilwaukee&#13;
is the instructor. He,&#13;
has over 20 years experience and&#13;
270 acceptances in international&#13;
competition.&#13;
Equipment needed will be a&#13;
35mm camera with adjustable "f"&#13;
stops and shutter speeds, and a&#13;
More letters . . .&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
with us on Tuesday, March 8 at&#13;
1:15 p.m, at the Comm. Arts&#13;
lounging area (Lt). If you can't&#13;
make the meeting, feel free to&#13;
leave a message in Kathy Phillips'&#13;
mailbox (Education Office). You&#13;
will be contacted.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Donna L. Sahakian&#13;
light meter of some type. The fee&#13;
is $35. The class will he held ill&#13;
Tallent Hall on Friday, March 18,'&#13;
6:30 - 9:30 p.m., and Saturday,&#13;
March 19, 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Advance registration for both&#13;
classes is requested by Parkside.&#13;
Phone 553-:Q12.&#13;
Too many chiefs&#13;
not enough Indians&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
not getting involved.&#13;
It doesn't have to be that way,&#13;
however. There are people in oUl'&#13;
student government who will&#13;
listen. Our constitution lets&#13;
students have a big part in how&#13;
they want this campus to be run,&#13;
and PSGA is a memher of United&#13;
Council, a powerfullobbyi~ force&#13;
in Madison. PSGA could be even&#13;
more powerful If it is backed by&#13;
the stndents it represents.&#13;
The time has come for Parkside&#13;
students to unite, and become&#13;
more involved. SOC experienced&#13;
growth this year. Wlpter Carnival&#13;
experienced growth this year.&#13;
Even PSGA, flawed as it is, might&#13;
experience growth. Or maybe&#13;
because there is so much that is&#13;
wrong with PSGA, people are&#13;
getting Involved, which is good.&#13;
What none of the Presidential&#13;
candidates should forget Is that&#13;
you cannot lead without a&#13;
following. PSGA suffers from an&#13;
Identity crisis. Students must&#13;
become more aware of what&#13;
PSGA is doing.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin once said,&#13;
"The key issue is active participation&#13;
in student government,&#13;
student' organizations and the&#13;
student newspaper. This is&#13;
essential for a strong university."&#13;
He couldn't be more correct.&#13;
RANGER Thursday. Milrch 3. 19I3&#13;
paid .,.-..P• .G.A. Constit&#13;
We, the stUdents of&#13;
WiSConsin - Parkslde fJIottt. Un1wnlty Of&#13;
ourst'lves PU~.nl to her"", organize&#13;
:».09(5) aoct Ih. Perksl:~.ln S'-tvte&#13;
men' Association Inc C tUden' Gcwwn&#13;
#If ma.-.ner set fOrth' in ~tIt\ltIOrt Nt. ,(.1 In&#13;
_eel our representatlv IS constitution and&#13;
InStltutlona. gOVer-nance ~ ~rticlpe" In&#13;
Jorfh below. We invest the ~.,...,. Nt&#13;
constitution in the Park lid • of this&#13;
c;overnment Association Inc A~ Student&#13;
,.rksl~ Student Governm«" prhlous&#13;
ccnstituliOns shall be null and A~iatlon&#13;
r,llflcatlon of this constitution onVOMaupon&#13;
... 6. 1980. This constitution shall be reh 5&#13;
constitution of Parkside Student Go the SOle&#13;
ASSOCiation Inc. lind the student =ment&#13;
sublect only to amendments y and&#13;
The ~arkslde Student' Governme&#13;
,MIOCiatlon, Inc. Shall be I"&amp;SPOnslbl to ttl'll&#13;
~nts of the University of WiS:on' It&#13;
,.,kSlde. sIn&#13;
!he Parkside Student Government&#13;
ASIOClatlon Inc. shall have the IXlWer t&#13;
tarCe and protect 'he fOllowing .. rtlcl~ e;-&#13;
pIIIinQ motions, resolutions or taking leg:'&#13;
tdlCfl 10 Insure thaf no Student's rights are&#13;
vIOlated.&#13;
fll(lSe students Seeking positions In the&#13;
PIIrkslde Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. (P.S.G.A., Inc.J must fulfill .. Ii&#13;
rlQulrements of that office In accordance&#13;
wIfh Student Life Eligibility Criteri .. specified&#13;
~ the senate Rules.&#13;
ARTICLE I&#13;
5tCf6on 1. All legislative powers granted&#13;
..,..In Shall be vested in the Senate of the&#13;
p.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
SldIOIl 2. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc. _n consist of 18 student members, half of&#13;
VlftIdl will be elected in the spring .. nd h.. lf in&#13;
... f8I1, wtIOSeterm shall be tor one year.&#13;
sectten 3. The Senate of the P.S.G~A., Inc.&#13;
_" chOOH their own officers anet also ..&#13;
PrtSlclent Pro Tempore.&#13;
SId\IilI 4. In the ..bsence of the VlceI'fIlIdtrl1&#13;
of P.S.G.A., Inc. who shall be the&#13;
..-csent of the Senate. the President Pro&#13;
Ttmpl:..-eShalt be the President of ttle Senate.&#13;
The President Pro Tempore shall be a&#13;
.,.tor and shall be a member of all Senate&#13;
cammlttees.&#13;
Vt'1IIn vacancies happen In the represen·&#13;
tltillI'l frum any at large seat, the President.&#13;
PI"D Ttmpore shall fill such vacancies With&#13;
III CllI'lcurrence of a simple majority of the&#13;
."Ire legislative branch of the P.S.G.A .• Inc.&#13;
SldIeNt S. A simple majority of the total&#13;
.,.,. shall constitute a Quorum to do&#13;
........ SIdllIn'. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
_" have the power to determine the rules of&#13;
III proceecllnQs. censure its membel"S for&#13;
....... Iyeondud and. with the concurrence&#13;
" two thirds of the entire Senate. expel a&#13;
lMl'IbIr. The senate shall keep a iournal of&#13;
• protetdings ... nd publish· the SlIme mono&#13;
_ at the minimum, a copy of the joumal "'11 be available for review by the public in&#13;
.. p.s.G.A .• Inc. offices.&#13;
TIle StnIte of the P.S.G.A .• Inc. shall meet&#13;
•• est.bUShed place and time no less than&#13;
.. .. week during the fall and spring&#13;
_esters. and no less than once a month&#13;
lMinD ttl. IUmmer session.&#13;
Upon presentation of a petition by a simple&#13;
_Iorlty of the entire Senafe a meeting shall&#13;
• ClUId by the Vice·President or in the case&#13;
..... VIc.·Presldent·s absence the President&#13;
PrDTempore shatl have the responsibility to&#13;
e111• mettlng within 48 hours.&#13;
IIctIoa 1. Bills may either OI'iglnate in the&#13;
..... or be sent to the Senate from the&#13;
~branch of the P.S.G.A .• Inc. EV~y&#13;
"enter, rt$Olutlon, or vote on which the&#13;
~ Of ttle senate Is necessary shall&#13;
.... 1IIIUd ttle senate by a simple majOl"ity&#13;
_thlH bepr.sentecl to the President of the&#13;
I':I.G.A •• Inc. before It takes effect. If the&#13;
firllldlntdoes not approve, he/she shall send&#13;
back to the senate lor reconsldertion with&#13;
..". f'MICIn$ for re/ectlon.&#13;
If• .".. SUch- reconlider"':.c"",,,,-. -.- ·slmple&#13;
.... Ity or the entire Senate shall agree to&#13;
_ the bill. It shall become law. But In all&#13;
Wdl 0," the votes of senate shall be&#13;
~lnId by a roll call vote. and the names&#13;
• 1lIl'IOftI voting tor and against the bill shall&#13;
lII&#13;
...... ed.tn the lournal of the Senate. if any&#13;
.... " not be returned ~ the President&#13;
tIIhIn tin sctlool dayS after It has been&#13;
........ to hlmlher. the same shail become&#13;
.....• !nthlm ..mer as If he/she had signed it,&#13;
~inOSoftheSenateof the P.S.G.A .•&#13;
~I be Mnt to the executive branch for&#13;
_"...-.tIOn purposes. If the President&#13;
-.... the ItQllslation, he/she shall send it&#13;
to the sen.te. A two·thlrds vote of the&#13;
:::elenate nil be required to override the&#13;
...... The senate shall have the power&#13;
llilNlke motIOns, resolutions. or t.. ke legal&#13;
..... wttlch shall be necessary and proper&#13;
fir CllTyIng into execution the foregolnv&#13;
POIfen, .... all otNr pgwen ....... by "'iii ca:::.~~n the PS.G.A., Inc.&#13;
__ II ~ve' t:': s... of tfte P.S.G.A.. IftC_&#13;
stlMIcIft by a ..:::rlntlto 'mend "'- con s.....In the vote of IN tntlre&#13;
PUMd by "'-&#13;
='of en "'i4''''~....... be P'-ced •• MId am.dment INII&#13;
... _on the bellot of not electIOn. If&#13;
ts COItflrm ... s1m~ maJority ."*__.t by •&#13;
Constitution If:' It .... 11be IddId to ....&#13;
tt:c am~""""t wms::-"ts vat. ..-Inst If.&#13;
the s.n.te don "etllll. In ..,. e¥lftt&#13;
arnenclment SlId:- CClftfwm the propoud&#13;
on ft1e ballot' The rMnd"*,t WIll not..,....&#13;
tNit IS tum· .. ~tofana~t&#13;
chooHs, follow tl'le may. It n,. or she 10&#13;
tlcle V, SectiOn 2 PI'Oadures set up In AI·&#13;
When arTl&amp;ndrm:nts&#13;
shall appear on th~forlPP"O¥'lttI ....&#13;
ballots. In c.... s of Ober enct March&#13;
,,'_erenclum may be hel~~ "~ ..If*~1&#13;
....I'.The Senate "II hive the ...&#13;
POWer of ImPNdmtent Ind the&#13;
all Impeachments. WMn sitt PGWer to try&#13;
purpose th .... shall be of 0Itt1 eM'~;:.::.t&#13;
When ttIe Pr_lcMnt Of ttle P 5 G.A .&#13;
tried the Chief Justice of the' J'udlc:f~II~&#13;
shall preside. an::t no person mall t..&#13;
vlc1ecl without the concurrenc:e of two-th:&#13;
01 ttle entire Senate. JudQement In cnes of&#13;
impuChment shall not extend further than&#13;
removal from office and dlsqualiticatlon to&#13;
hold anet enjoy any office or position that the&#13;
P.S.G.A .• Inc. has jurisdiction over ap&#13;
polntment to. or election for. ImPNChment&#13;
shall not bevln until two· thirds of the entire&#13;
sen~teof the P.S.G.A., Inc. have voted to hOld&#13;
an Impeachment hearlnv&#13;
section 11. Roberts Rules of Order shIll&#13;
govern the PJ"OCeecilngs of III PMksldI&#13;
StUdent Government Association. Inc.&#13;
meetlnvs exeept when InconsiStent with ttle&#13;
Constitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc,&#13;
ARTiCLE II&#13;
Section 1. All executive POlNel"S.wfthln this&#13;
article. shall be vested In the Presletent of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Section 2. The President r.hatl hold office&#13;
during the term of one year togettler with ttle&#13;
Vice-President who will be chosen for the&#13;
same term. They shall be ellVlble for reo&#13;
election and sh .. 11 not serve more than 2&#13;
consecutive terms.&#13;
BefOre the President and the VicePresident&#13;
elect enters on the execution of tl"e&#13;
office of the Presidency or Vlce-Presletency.&#13;
he or she shall take the following OIlth:&#13;
"I do solemnly swur lor affirm) that I will&#13;
falthfulfy execute the office of President (or&#13;
Vice·Presldent) of the Partcslde Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and will to the&#13;
~t of my ability preserve. protect and&#13;
defend the constitution and actions of the&#13;
Parkslde 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 deter·&#13;
mined by a maiority 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 im·&#13;
peachment proceec:tings the President Is&#13;
founel to be innocent, all benefits will be paid&#13;
to him/her retroactive from ttle date Of&#13;
suspension. Increases in compensation will&#13;
not be awarded to a President whlle In office&#13;
lInless 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 Pre&amp;idency of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
section 3. 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;
correspondlnv secretary and ell other officers&#13;
of the executive branch of the P.S.G.A .• Inc .&#13;
and all student ludges with the consent Of two·&#13;
thirds of the entire senate .&#13;
The President Shall have the pOWer to line·&#13;
Item veto specific portions of Senate bllls .&#13;
He/she may Ilne·ltem veto the P.S.G.A .• Inc .&#13;
budget, but shall not line· item veto the&#13;
Segrevated Fee Budget. The President may&#13;
not veto levlslatlon 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;
IICflvlna .. the ...... ttve branct'l 01 the&#13;
P I.GA.. Inc. by • mal_Ity ..,.... of 1M SMa ... Any """"" .. ltNn r __ ..... t..&#13;
~tad In wrltMg end ShIll be ~&#13;
... lftln ........ III the ~ ... 01 Iud'i ,..,.t fro ftl9 ~.S.G.A .• 1-.. "*,"ber ....&#13;
rwqulnd to tumilh fM report.&#13;
The PraicMnt shiM ........ ""' by and&#13;
With the aetvQ anll conunt of the L ttv.&#13;
br..-.ctl 01the P.S.G.A .• Inc. to sign contrktl..&#13;
provided tt'lat. malorltY 01 the ftItira SMMte&#13;
a&gt;n&lt;U ....&#13;
TM PresMMnt shill draw up" P.S.G.A .•&#13;
Inc. tludgIIt .n11 Mnd It to fM L..... tlvlr&#13;
br-.ctl of the PS.G ..... Inc. tor appn:ivar.&#13;
The Preklftlt shall tau care that Ine&#13;
constitution of \'he P.5.G ...... Inc. enct its by·&#13;
IIws t.. _ttMuIly exacuNd.&#13;
The Pr .... t. VQ·~t and all of·&#13;
fleen of the P.S.G.A,. Inc .... 11 be removed&#13;
from Offk:.lor dar.Uetlon of duty or failure fa&#13;
take care tha, the c:ona.ltutlon of the P .S.G-A&#13;
Inc. and Its by·la .. be f.lthfully executed.&#13;
Seettoft 41. The Presfdftlt of the PS.G.A.&#13;
Inc. shall nominate student appointees to all&#13;
faculty codified committees wittl a simple&#13;
maiorlty of ttle entire Senate needed for&#13;
approval and shill publish such vacancies in&#13;
the studMlt newspaper.&#13;
sect-. s. The treasurer of the P.S.G.A .•&#13;
Inc. shill keep records and reapts on all&#13;
_pendltu,... of all P.S.G.A., Inc. monle'S and&#13;
shall make SUCh records public.&#13;
ARTICLE III&#13;
Section 1. All judicial powen of the&#13;
P.S.G ...... Inc. shall be vested In jUdiciary&#13;
court,"nd In lower courts that the senate of&#13;
the P.S.G ...... Inc. may establish. Th. iudges.&#13;
of all courts, shall maintain good beMvlor&#13;
and char.e:t.r during their terms of office.&#13;
Section 2. The iudicial court shall canslst of&#13;
lour judg. and one Chief Justice. Student&#13;
members of the iudiclal branch of the&#13;
P.~.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 . Parkslde after a fwo.thlrdl&#13;
approval by the entire Senate of the P.S.G.A .•&#13;
Inc. Appointments to ttle judicial branch 01&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc .• Shall be for three yeers.&#13;
.sectlon 3. In the case of deciding the constltutionalltyof&#13;
the adions of ttle P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. the decisions shall be binding on all&#13;
parties InVolved. and shaU be forwarded to&#13;
ttIe de5lvnatecl disciplinary head of the ad·&#13;
mlrllstratlv, branch of the University of&#13;
WisconSin • Parkside on to the appropriate&#13;
authOrities tor Implementation .&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
Sflctkm 1. The P.S.G.A .• lnc., sublect to the&#13;
responslblliti. and powers 01 ttle Board of&#13;
Regents. the President of tttl! University of&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chancellor 01 the&#13;
University of Wisconsin . ParkSlde, and the&#13;
faculty of the University of Wisconsin .&#13;
Parkslde shall be active partlclpanls In the&#13;
immediate govern .. nce of and policy&#13;
development tor such Institutions. As such •&#13;
the P.S.G.A. shall have primary respon·&#13;
sibility 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 gruup of the&#13;
students of the University 01 Wisconsin .&#13;
Parkslde allowed to participate In in.&#13;
stitutlonal govemance .&#13;
SUB-ARTICLE I&#13;
section 1. The P.S.G.A., Inc .• in con·&#13;
sultation with the Chancellor of the Unlver·&#13;
sityof 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 CDrl·&#13;
stitute substantial support for campus&#13;
student activities.&#13;
SeCtton 2. An A:iTiIl.='~."t·'."n"committeeshali 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 conlunctlon&#13;
with the Ch.. ncellor of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin • Parkslde.&#13;
A. MEMBERSHIP. The Allocations&#13;
Com m Ittee She II consist of 8 voting members.&#13;
6 of whom shall be P.S.G.A .• Inc. senators.&#13;
The remaining 2 sh.. 11 be chosen by the&#13;
student body of the University Of Wisconsin·&#13;
Parkslcte. one elected In the spring, one&#13;
elected In the fall. Three P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Senators shall be chosen In the sprlnv and&#13;
three shall be chosen In tttl! fall by blind&#13;
drawing of interested P.S.G.A .• Inc. senators.&#13;
The drawhiv shall be conducted by the&#13;
Judicial Branch of the P.S.G.A .• Inc. The&#13;
term of office shall be one year. The com·&#13;
mlttee shan elect Its own chairperson after&#13;
each spring election. In addition, the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Educational ser·&#13;
vices, Assistant Chancellor for Ad-&#13;
"'lnl ..... non and Ftka A fit no IftII ""-&#13;
c."""" Controt .. may •• It'! II'lt COtn&#13;
rn"" as r-'I voflntl memb«i Sh&lt;a.tld •&#13;
'tKancy occur on the "'loutiOnS com",m.&#13;
thI foIlowtrtg prvclldUnS IN ~ UMd&#13;
• The p.o...... t Pro T*",pore of the&#13;
P So G'" Inc s.n. .. .n c:onwUatiOn wlttl ...&#13;
Chance lor or ." ,.,.. wilt n ...... unCI(&#13;
cup«I ~torI. $Nt w It'i4 coMlr"'8tton&#13;
of the P.S G .... Inc sene ..&#13;
2, n... Prft&gt;derli of ttle P $ GA. Inc. In&#13;
CCln5I.Iltation w th e ~ancetlClr eM' c:IeUgnM.&#13;
s~U ~ppool'll to any at..,...,.. Mit on the&#13;
AUocatlons Cornm "ft. The PSG A. Inc&#13;
Sene _ don not nMd to approve .....&#13;
PresIdent·, eppoinlment.&#13;
e. PROCEDURES, Upon ttw ca_ 01 1M&#13;
~ncellor ..nd the Prftidwltof .. P S.GA.,&#13;
lnc the COmm,ttw ShIll IIW'UIlly prapenI&#13;
recommen6ahons on tN "",...1 of "'"&#13;
Segregated University Fee, Should ",e&#13;
P_S.G.A., IN:. cancur In ... , ueoo... I•• non.&#13;
the President of P.I.G.A •• lnc. thlH_1iIwtIe&#13;
the Chancellor and ChIII.,...-.n of "'-&#13;
AllocatiOnS commltNe. ShOuld .... CNncellor&#13;
concur In IN P.S.GA .• Inc. rwcom&#13;
menoatlon, helN .... arT'" tor Its im.&#13;
p1ement.tlon. ShoutlII .. ChIIncatIor ftOt&#13;
cooc:ur, !tie proylsioM ........ I'IIIof'Ittons&#13;
shall be uHd. The senate mtIy "Of.rnenct""&#13;
Allocations Commltt .. rKommenditlon.&#13;
Refection cf the Commltt • rKom·&#13;
mendation takes • 213 vote of ..,tl~&#13;
sen. Ie. In the c-.of refection by the senate.&#13;
the reasons tor relaetlon shall be ... to&#13;
and torwardld to the Cha~ of the&#13;
Allocations Commltt ... Th. AlIoc.tlons&#13;
Com mitt .. shIll reconsider Itl recom·&#13;
"*'CIafton 1ftlI .. 1n forWIInlI " to the .......&#13;
C. N.GOTIATtOlIS. The ~ 01 ..&#13;
P.S.G.A..lnc Cha",*,-, Of S.U.P .....C.&#13;
and the t Pro T..... 01 "-&#13;
P.S.G.A .• Inc. Slnliteor .... r ~ (Who&#13;
must bemem .... of .... P.5.GA .• lnc.) tllaill&#13;
be rllM'tlMfttaft'*' of the P.S.GA ••Inc. In My&#13;
consultation wittl tl'le Chancellor or t11S1Mr&#13;
deslvnee In dMllnv wtttI the P.S.G ...... Inc.&#13;
Allocanons committee. If the Pres..,.. Pro&#13;
Tempore of the P.I.GA., Inc. Senate Is •&#13;
member of 5.U.F .....C. than ttl. s.tetar WItt\&#13;
the most sentorlty of the P.S.G.A .• Inc. s.M.&#13;
will assume the dutln of"" Pro T.mpore In&#13;
negotlltlonS wlttl the Chanc.llor.&#13;
If the P.S.GA., Inc. and the CMnceIlor&#13;
cannot reconcU. their dtfferences In ~&#13;
allocation of ttle allOcable portion of&#13;
segregated Unlvtnlty Fees •• ch will submit&#13;
a set of recommendatIOnS to "" BOIlni of&#13;
Regents for flnaf dispolltlon.&#13;
D. DUTIES. The Alloc.tIonS COmmlftM&#13;
shall have primary responsibility In SItting&#13;
the allocabte portion of the ... xlllary bUdget&#13;
and to Insure proper monetary I!'lCP8ndttures&#13;
In total and wl",ln budgetary categories. The&#13;
AllocationS Committee stIIll meet year round&#13;
to review the allocable portion Of "'e&#13;
segregated Fees Budget according to ttl.&#13;
prDCedures. set up In the senate Rules.&#13;
SUB ARTICLE II&#13;
Section 1. A standing Senate COmmitt-.&#13;
the Student Org.nlzatlon COuncil. shall be&#13;
established consisting of the Presidenft (or&#13;
their designees) of all stUdent organilations&#13;
who choose to participate.&#13;
sectton 2. No student shall be denied&#13;
membership to any on-campus organllation&#13;
tor reasons of r ..ce, cotor. religious crMd.&#13;
natiOnal orl91n, .. x, ~st criminal record •&#13;
political belief. political action, or se'ltUlI&#13;
preference.&#13;
sectiOn 3. Students shail be free to&#13;
assemble, to demonstrate. to communka",&#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 •. Students shall be fre-e to use&#13;
campos facilities for meetin;s of student&#13;
OI'ganiUltions, subject to uniform regulanons&#13;
to time and manner governing the facility.&#13;
Section 5. Students shall have the right to&#13;
invite and hear speakers of their choice and&#13;
approval shell not bewltheld by the P.S.G.A .•&#13;
Inc. or universIty auttloritles for purposes of&#13;
censorship.&#13;
Section ,. Affiliation with an extramural&#13;
organiUttlon shall not in Itselt disqualify a&#13;
stUdent organilatlon from student govern·&#13;
ment recognition or institutional recognition.&#13;
Section 7. The student press shall be free of&#13;
censorship anel advance approval of copy.&#13;
and Its editors shall be free to develOp their&#13;
own editorial policies and news coverage.&#13;
SIIctlon •. The student press shall be ac·&#13;
corded all those rights as stated In the United&#13;
States COnstitution.&#13;
section 9. Students shall have the rlVht to&#13;
distribUte or sell information of a printed&#13;
nature that does ~ot conflict wlttl Unly,""y&#13;
of Wisconsin . PaPkslde binding contr.cts.&#13;
ARTICLE V&#13;
section 1. Fall elections lor Itle P.S.G.A ...&#13;
Inc. shall be held the "'Ird week 01 october.&#13;
At that time. one half of the rtrpresentatlves&#13;
from the legislative branch as well nonaat7&#13;
•&#13;
on&#13;
.... SUF.AC_t ......&#13;
-.et1OnI .s GA, 1ft( __ Ie ....&#13;
Ovr'"lt the Of __&#13;
........ At,..t t Va ~remaln,","""""''''''_'' ,.,.. SUFAC .. t fwe .......&#13;
0pIr M-.etIIL&#13;
..... 1. "'.-...ntL upon ,......... •&#13;
PII" lI~Of ..&#13;
... ltudInlbOdy ,... ..&#13;
~ ..~~ ......&#13;
INS alIII'ttvtton • 10 ..,.....&#13;
,... The _Itlen 1 .......&#13;
to bOtt'I the MIl"'" Vice ...........&#13;
anclI IN Pi"ftlCMft1 Pn T....... of ~.sGA&#13;
Oft&lt;_11) For rcall s.na __ 0f9ac. Of&#13;
PSG-A inc Urtl~1y CIf~&#13;
ParlISIcIe student mtIY s ..... 1M petIttDft ...&#13;
..... UftlYWStty of W~ .....&#13;
studInt ma,. Si9ft II F ..... ~ til ..&#13;
PWksJde ..tvdInt bOlty""'" .. 1M ..........&#13;
21 The rKllI petltIan mull ..,. a&#13;
sta ..... , CIf 1M r U..' Nft'OIrtII fr'Ofl'l&#13;
Officii. ,... .. must wtttI., ~ In the ...... twm 01 oI9tc.&#13;
31 The stvdIftt(a) tNU ..,.... ... "'"loft&#13;
to the sen.... Upon racMvInI vwlftOlttlft Of&#13;
1M .-man. 1M s.na .. muIIf "'uNIlIIIttIIY&#13;
notify the schoo4 peper IN' ...... _ In&#13;
,...... ... • IPtdeI elactloft WI) ....&#13;
p&amp;ace. There must ........ ~ 11&#13;
IdIaOl CIIy&amp; etter ftCIIltkatlOft of ......&#13;
PIIltlon t&amp; ~ by .... sen. •.&#13;
.) Upon rewlYlnI tM recall petlfat the&#13;
s..... must lmrnecl""'y tum It OV'W to the&#13;
lIectlon committee. T'hI lI ... kIn CDfNIIIttM&#13;
...11 ........flve dayS to v.-Ify the ftIfMI on tM&#13;
penttan. In tIM' e_no.-ct.&#13;
cammltNe. sanate ""* ....-w OM&#13;
wl"'ln flva dayS.&#13;
tf n ..... MIMI on "'" petitIOn.&#13;
... 1Mnune. 01 1,..... ...&#13;
.... Is.. COt •• , mull notify&#13;
1M studan«.) wtJo 1M pettt1oft.&#13;
Upon notlflCattan. ..,. ....&#13;
IId'lODI _ get ~ ....,Ired at&#13;
..me.. If t.11 fro do so. ,...11&#13;
_Itkln ~ null. AI ........&#13;
of ttw stuclentts) Who ftIrI prltftloft,.&#13;
1M atectton commlttM ".., w.et the&#13;
nllmes 11 1.&#13;
No ' IM can be NIftOWlI from "'-&#13;
pelrtlon ."., fllinv. Once the pMttton II&#13;
preuntacI to tM senate, " CIInnot be ...&#13;
drawn. A penon Cllnbe rac:alled only once I*"&#13;
Of*tse during hislhw twm In oIfkI. The&#13;
penon &gt;MID Is dtad In thel"lcall pettNon ...&#13;
have hlslMr name pt8Clld Oft 1M _11ot&#13;
-..tomatiCally untess he/ .... r.lgns.. StuIIonts&#13;
wM W1sIl to run fOr ttw _Itlon "" folloW&#13;
norm.1 e~ PJ"OCIIdUre.&#13;
SI If .. sen.1Or • Offlc:er and IS&#13;
reappointed to I posit.,. wt1tIln the m of&#13;
Office he/sMl", Mtd.lt shlU be ~&#13;
onl,. • continuation of illS .... m.&#13;
"'RTICLEVI&#13;
SICtkNl I. An .ppUc_ shall not be denied&#13;
admission to the University of WIKonsin&#13;
Parllsfde tor ~ of,.-. ~. --.&#13;
origin. rellgJous creed. sn. preyklus crlminlt&#13;
record, political bellm. potlflal action. or&#13;
sexu .. ' prefe,...,ce&#13;
s.ct1M 2. Flnancl.' .Id shiM not be denIM&#13;
for r .. toonS of r.ce. CGIor. natlonlll origin.&#13;
religioul creed, sex. previous crlmln.1&#13;
rK«d, political DelIet&amp;, polltlcel eenon. or&#13;
se)lUlI JiM el'I.I&lt;:I.&#13;
secttoII 3. Students .,.. frM to 'ake ..&#13;
ceptlon to tt'Ie da'. ~ eM' vIewS ofteAcI&#13;
in any cou'" of .. tucty .nd m.y aetvoce ..&#13;
alternative optnlons to thoM preMftiM wll'tiln&#13;
the classroom&#13;
sect ... 4. "'I Student DlKlptlnMY me",""&#13;
will be processed tt1r'OUQ1h ..... Unlvantty of&#13;
Wisconiin P.f'UlcM StucNnt D*'PI nary&#13;
Procedures Chapter UWS 17.&#13;
section 5. Studlnts shill be ev.h"'''' onty&#13;
on their knowledge of Itle ~ec:t II'ld&#13;
acaciemk performlnce and In tum ....&#13;
responsible to maintain ..tlnclardl of&#13;
academic performance "tabUshed for eaetl&#13;
course they have enrolled in.&#13;
section ,. Disclosure ot students polltlc.l or&#13;
pc-sonal beliefs In connection wlttl course&#13;
work shall not be macie public wlttlouf ..&#13;
press permission of the student.&#13;
section 7. Student rKQrds on iKHamk&#13;
performance and disciplln.ry .ctlons shill be&#13;
separate.&#13;
section •. Information from couftMllng .nd&#13;
disciplinary flies sh.1I not M m" avan.-&#13;
to persons on or off c:ampus wlttMlUt .... n·&#13;
press consent Of ttIe studInt inYoInII, IJ(capf&#13;
under leg.1 compulsion.&#13;
SKtMn , .... 11recorda .ncI!nfOrmatlDfl kept&#13;
(WI fli ••• 11be reedll,. aeutlbte to .. iNdent&#13;
to Whom they pert.ln.&#13;
sect_ It. Students SNlIt haW .. rtgt;t to&#13;
be preMtlt at.1I commlftM 1ftftfin81dlreclty&#13;
IffectIng !be studentl&#13;
$ICfklJl '1. Ttt,: CilftItftUtIOMI rlgMl Of any&#13;
student, a~ st.ted In thl unit_ St... (oft&#13;
stlto';iion, shall not be dlftled anyone •• t ..&#13;
unl.,....l"" 01 WIKonSm ..... bIcIt.&#13;
FALL SENATORIAL&#13;
ELECTIONS&#13;
MARCH 8 &amp; 9&#13;
Petitions Available in P.s.G.A. Office&#13;
•&#13;
RANGER&#13;
I&#13;
Thursday. March 3. 1983&#13;
Coach pro~Je&#13;
Hein shows fencers road to success&#13;
by Palricla Cumbie&#13;
Loran Hein is the men's and&#13;
women's Fencing coach here at&#13;
Parkside and has been al&#13;
Parkside for 17 years, including&#13;
coaching when Parkside was the&#13;
University Center in Kenosha. He&#13;
received his Bachelors at Millon&#13;
College and his Masters at North&#13;
East Missouri State College.&#13;
Besides coaching fencing he is an&#13;
administrative assistant to Wayne&#13;
Dannehl, teaches math courses,&#13;
and coordinates the intramural&#13;
sports.&#13;
Fencing is a sport on campus&#13;
that has no recruitillll· The team&#13;
consists of interested students&#13;
wiltilIll to compete. "I've had&#13;
tremendous success with the&#13;
students in fencing, and both&#13;
teams started out very strongly. I&#13;
began at the center and there was&#13;
some fencing there." Loran added,&#13;
"Usually the students find it&#13;
interesting and they join the team.&#13;
There are varying degrees of&#13;
experience and to he successful&#13;
you have to work hard."&#13;
And bard work is what it's all&#13;
about when it comes to heing&#13;
successful. Fencing is usually a&#13;
brand new sport for everyone, and&#13;
work, along with encouragement&#13;
Racewalkers&#13;
This past Friday, the USA I&#13;
TFA indoor nationals were held at&#13;
Madison Square Garden in New&#13;
York. Former Parkside walkers&#13;
finished first and second. Ray&#13;
Sharp set a new world record in&#13;
the two mile walk with a time of&#13;
12:3.33. Jim Heiring was second in&#13;
12: 15.36. Current Parkside&#13;
student, Will Preischel was sixth.&#13;
Women's Basketball&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
The Women's Basketball team&#13;
finished \heir regular season with&#13;
a 11 - 14 record. They lost last&#13;
Tuesday against Milwaukee, 73 -&#13;
65. Coach Goggin felt although&#13;
they didn't win, it was a good&#13;
game.&#13;
NAIA district playoffs started&#13;
last night with a home game&#13;
against Marion College. "We&#13;
played them for the first time last&#13;
year in the playoffs and we won&#13;
quite easily. I don't anticipate any&#13;
problems," commented Goggins.&#13;
Starters were Laurie Pope.&#13;
Jeanne Jacobs, Robin Henschel,&#13;
Cindy Ruffert, and Tracy&#13;
Sylvester .&#13;
"How we play now is critical,&#13;
because if we don't win row we&#13;
don't go any further ." said&#13;
Goggin.&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
This weekend four memhers of&#13;
the Womens Track team traveled&#13;
. to Kansas City, MO to compete in&#13;
the NAIA Indoor Nationals at&#13;
which the distance medley team&#13;
placed fifth. According to Coach&#13;
Lucian Rosa the top six teams in&#13;
brings more success. "Learning,&#13;
time, and experience make for a&#13;
better competitor. Everyone&#13;
learns 'under fIre'," commented&#13;
-&#13;
Sport News&#13;
Wrestlers in Nationals&#13;
commented. "If our four all place&#13;
in the top four, we will bave a good&#13;
chance of fUlishiDll in the top ID&#13;
teams." After Fargo, those fOG&#13;
qualifiers, plus Tyrone Harris&#13;
(158), Todd Yde (16'1),Brian Iret&#13;
(190), and Paul Roth (Hwt.l, will&#13;
travel to Mimt, N.D. for the NAJA&#13;
Nationals on Mar. 3, 4," 5. Atlh1s&#13;
tournament, tbere will be double&#13;
the competition with 30 men per&#13;
weight class rather tban only 16.&#13;
Coach Koch looks for the Rangers&#13;
to place a t least the top five&#13;
teams. In the last 10 years,&#13;
Parkside has placed in the top 30&#13;
every time except once. Koch&#13;
feels that the Rangers even bave a&#13;
chance to win that tournament.&#13;
"It will take a super team effort to&#13;
win it, but it's not impossible to&#13;
win. My ultimate goal is to have&#13;
individuals win championships&#13;
and become All - Americans. I&#13;
aim to do well at the Nationals,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
He feels it is going to be difficult&#13;
with two National tournaments so&#13;
close together. "If we do well in&#13;
the first tournament, we could&#13;
have a mental letdown for the&#13;
second tournament or visa versa.&#13;
It's almost impossible to take first&#13;
at both. I can't recall having two&#13;
National tournaments so cIose&#13;
together. It would take quite a&#13;
performance to do exceptionally&#13;
well in both," he commented.&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
It's golog to be a busy week for&#13;
the wrestlers who qualified for the&#13;
two National Tournaments tbat&#13;
the Rangers will be competing in.&#13;
First, on SUn., Feb. 27 and Mon.,&#13;
Feb. 28, four Parkside wrestlers&#13;
competed in the NCAA 11&#13;
Nationals in Fargo, N.D. They&#13;
are: Mike Vania, Mike Winter,&#13;
Mike Muckerheide, and Ted&#13;
Keyes. Head coach Jim Koch&#13;
thought that the Rangers have&#13;
three good chances to place at&#13;
Nationals. "Muckerheide is&#13;
wrestling better than ever hefore&#13;
in his life . This is a very good time&#13;
in the season for him to reach his&#13;
peak. If he can put logether a&#13;
weekend like he did at Regionals,&#13;
he will have an excellent chance of&#13;
placing."&#13;
Coach Koch also feels that Ted&#13;
Keyes (177), also has a very good&#13;
chance. "Ted is probably our most&#13;
improved wrestler. He's hard to&#13;
heat and it takes a really good&#13;
wrestler to beat him. He could&#13;
very well place in the upper part&#13;
of the top eight."&#13;
Koch also feels very confident&#13;
about Mike Vania (126) who has&#13;
been consistant all season and&#13;
Mike Winter (142), who could very&#13;
probably make All . American.&#13;
"I'm looking for a good, strong&#13;
performance at Nationals," Koch&#13;
Schinderle I Kollman 6-6&#13;
Sylvester I KIofenstine 3-9&#13;
Henderson I Pollock 1-11&#13;
The teams will begin second&#13;
round play on Wednesday, March&#13;
23.&#13;
The Men's Basketball league&#13;
found The Why taking over first&#13;
place in the league with an exciting&#13;
45-44 win over McNulty's on&#13;
Sunday. Playing their second&#13;
game of the night, The Why also&#13;
defeated the Hawks 67-57 to increase&#13;
their hold on first place.&#13;
Other standings are as follows:&#13;
The Why IHl&#13;
Misfits 5-1&#13;
McNulty's 4-1&#13;
Reign of Pain 4-1&#13;
S.G!s3·3&#13;
Hawks 3·3&#13;
Olson's 1-3&#13;
The Clash 1-6&#13;
Lone Rangers 1-4&#13;
Grit's Gunners 0-6&#13;
Quality circle&#13;
to meet Tuesday&#13;
Tim Opps also played well with 15&#13;
points and nine rebounds.&#13;
"We played well both games,&#13;
the benched players also played&#13;
well," Johnson said.&#13;
On Tuesday, March 1 the&#13;
Rangers took MSOE (Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering) for the&#13;
first playoff game. "MSOE is a&#13;
two man team. It's like they only&#13;
have two players," Johnson said&#13;
in a pre - game interview.&#13;
Parkside was the favored team&#13;
for this game.&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
STANDINGS&#13;
After the first round of play in&#13;
the 2 on 2 Coed Basketball league ~&#13;
Pope / Grochowski are leading the&#13;
field with an 11-1 record. Their&#13;
closest competitors are Ruffert /&#13;
Anderson with an Il-4 record. The&#13;
remainder of the teams trail as&#13;
follows:&#13;
An Organizational Communications&#13;
student group is&#13;
inviting all interested persons to&#13;
attend a Quality Circle Workshop&#13;
on Tuesday, March 8 at 6:00 p.m.&#13;
in Moln. 113. The workshop will&#13;
emphasize the advantages of a&#13;
Quality Circle and specific Quality&#13;
Circle techniques, such as&#13;
developing skills in. communication,&#13;
problem solving,&#13;
effective teamwork and problem&#13;
prevention attitudes. Quality&#13;
Circle programs can be applied to&#13;
many different situations. This&#13;
wor kshop is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
PAIKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 am - 4:00 III&#13;
• Jube Jells&#13;
• Licorice Bully&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Milk Carmels&#13;
• Orange Slices&#13;
• Peanut Butter Chip&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
• Pep perm int Kisses&#13;
• Rootbeer Barrels&#13;
• Sour Balls&#13;
• Spearment Leaves&#13;
• Starlite Mints&#13;
• Carmel Targets&#13;
• Cinnamon Discs&#13;
• Candy Pops&#13;
• Corn Nuts&#13;
• Assorted Perky&#13;
• Assorted Royal&#13;
• Assorted Toffee&#13;
• Bridge Mix&#13;
• Burndt Peanuts&#13;
• Butterscotch Discs&#13;
• Candy Coffee Discs&#13;
• Carmel Bully&#13;
• Chocolate Drops&#13;
• Chocolate Jots&#13;
• Chocolate Peanuts&#13;
• Chocolate Raisins&#13;
• Chocolate Stars&#13;
• Jelly Beans&#13;
• California Mix&#13;
• Caribbean Delicacy&#13;
• Carob Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Car(,b Raisins&#13;
.. Carob Peanuts&#13;
• Natural Pistachio&#13;
• Red Pistachio&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Su"f1ower Seeds&#13;
• Student Food Mix&#13;
• Yogurt Malted Milk Ball&#13;
• Yogurt Peanuts&#13;
• Yogurt Raisins&#13;
• Yogurt Sesame Brittle&#13;
• Smoked Almonds whole&#13;
I&#13;
does well considering the teams&#13;
we compete against has fencers&#13;
with years of experience, and&#13;
Parkside's have only a few&#13;
months under their belt."&#13;
Loran appreciates those&#13;
students who do come out for the&#13;
sport because they do have to&#13;
learn something very different.&#13;
Whereas other sports a person is&#13;
at least familiar with rules and&#13;
equipment. The fencers represent&#13;
themselves and the midwest, and&#13;
that is a responsibility.&#13;
There are 25 teams in the&#13;
midwest and the best fencers&#13;
come from the midwest. The&#13;
NCAA Men's Fencing Championship&#13;
will be held here at&#13;
Parkside the 24, 25 and 26 of&#13;
March.&#13;
This will be the third time in six&#13;
years that the competition will be&#13;
held here at Parkside. There will&#13;
be three competitions - foyle,&#13;
sabre and epee, which are types of&#13;
dueling swords.&#13;
Outside of his school related&#13;
activities, he is an active member&#13;
in church serving on committees&#13;
and doing as much work as&#13;
possible. Loran's other activities&#13;
are primarily listening to music&#13;
and reading.&#13;
COACH HEIN&#13;
Loran. There has always been an&#13;
individual who makes it to the&#13;
NCAA Nationals. This year is no&#13;
exception. "Our team usually&#13;
that event broke the old record.&#13;
"They ran very well. Itwas a good&#13;
race." The relay was made up of&#13;
Deb Spino, Dona Driscoll, Jane&#13;
Roszykowski and Sue Meyer.&#13;
Dona Driscoll qualified for the&#13;
finals in the 600 yard run. Before&#13;
the qualifying heat, something&#13;
went wrong with Driscoll's hip.&#13;
Rosa took her to the doctor who&#13;
was unable to detect the origin of&#13;
the pain. His advice was for her to&#13;
run if she felt she was able to.&#13;
Although just by making it to&#13;
the finals, one is an automatic All .&#13;
American, for Driscoll this was&#13;
not the case. In the third&#13;
qualifying heat, two girls fell. The&#13;
coaches appealed and the two&#13;
girls were allowed to run in the&#13;
finals, making eight runners in the&#13;
final. With her painful hip,&#13;
Driscoll finished in 1:31. Her&#13;
qualifying race was 1:29.&#13;
Sue Meyer ran an 11:24 in the&#13;
two mile but did rot qualify for the&#13;
finals. Only the top four are taken ..&#13;
Deb Spino did not run the open&#13;
mile because of her knee injury.&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
by Carra Cariello&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 24, the Rangers&#13;
played against St. Scholastica in a&#13;
home game. The Rangers won es53.&#13;
Then on Feb. 26, they hosted the&#13;
U.W. Eau Claire Bluegolds. The&#13;
half'- time score was 35-30in favor&#13;
of the Rangers. The final score&#13;
was 74-62, a Ranger victory.&#13;
Coach Johnson tommen ted&#13;
moments after the game: "I'm&#13;
really happy with this one." The&#13;
high scorers were Jay Rundles 17,&#13;
Erik Warneldorf 16 (10 rebounds),&#13;
Brian Diggins 12 (nine rebounds).&#13;
ClASSIFIEDS&#13;
MiSCELLANEOUS&#13;
TYPING, MY HOME. Professional, speedy&#13;
servlc e. Student ram. call Debbie at 681·&#13;
BOOK "". SALE: "Presidents, Pontlcs, and&#13;
AmerlcIIM." A specllli collection lit Th.&#13;
Old Book Corner, Martha Merrell's&#13;
Book$fore. 312 6th st.. Racine. Used lind&#13;
hllrd to tlnd titles lit paperback prices.&#13;
WANTED: eert . time Music Director tor&#13;
Cathollc Folk Choir working with&#13;
musicians. SUnday am mass. call Father&#13;
Daniels at 631·16\9, St. Patrlcks Church.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
TME ROGERS of Racine spring collection for&#13;
young men Is now .vllilable. see Tony In the&#13;
R.nger office for detaUs.&#13;
PA.: You c.n use our Glctlonary anytime.&#13;
SCOOT.R: My ,\ e.ar1tlllng! LOve. E.T.&#13;
May T.T.: Fire up d.t bBddass . J.&#13;
THANKS TODD tor 1.-w:Ilngus the stereo.&#13;
ptER.E: Thanks It mllllcn tor lendl"'il us the&#13;
dub house.&#13;
PAT: My thumbs are In gr.at stlape and&#13;
I'MdY tor banlel! Vllierie&#13;
LUIS: Take good care of yo..... buml"1&#13;
V ..... le&#13;
MICHAEL Dinner was terrific I You can&#13;
COOklor me .""tlmell ThankS. V.I ... "&#13;
SHARON AND DAWN: Just love your mitts.&#13;
MAP&#13;
JOANNE _ Whats this talk about a Dead&#13;
party? Brian&#13;
D.P. AND B.· Thanks for Sunday night! Now&#13;
I really know what excitement lSI&#13;
RHONDA _ I think Its Beth's turn to sleep on&#13;
the couch.&#13;
VOTE for Andy Buet'llll"lllnfor PSGA Senate.&#13;
M~. JOHNSQN TOday Parkside, 'rem.&#13;
marrow Wisconsin. IRs. J.&#13;
STEVE: You love us and you know It I . Pac&#13;
Man and Ziggy&#13;
BABY OWL: Thanks for dinner. Are you still&#13;
'collecting' spoons?&#13;
BRAVE MOLLY, DAHLlNG, you are sen·&#13;
satlonalill Hug, HUV, Dahllng, Blanche.&#13;
MOLLY, piN. remember to send two 8Xl0&#13;
gll»sy'S to Pollyancl Dolly. The banners are&#13;
flying In Plnkentenl I Polly.&#13;
PAT _You nevercNsefoamaze me· Pat&#13;
PAT. You never cease to amuse me either .&#13;
pat.&#13;
REO: maybe you a .... my buOdy, and maybe&#13;
you're not, bUt it's 1111 your fault, because&#13;
I'm nicer than you.&#13;
I THINK she's nicer than yOu too. Ed.&#13;
MOLLY: Boy Is SOCialSCience ludl.ythls yNr&#13;
-Ed&#13;
HOW MANY Parkslcle baskeotbllll players&#13;
does it take to screw In a llghtbulb??&#13;
ANSWE •. Just on", but he gets three credits.&#13;
RED, you really are. but thllt's O.K., Chrl5Sl~&#13;
PHIL POGREBA&#13;
FOR&#13;
PRESIDENT&#13;
MICHAEL SCOON&#13;
FOR&#13;
VICE PRESIDENT&#13;
OF PSGA&#13;
"EXPERIENCE IS THE KEY&#13;
TO EFFECTIVE LEADERSHIP"&#13;
VOTE MARCH 9 &amp; 10&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEIl OF.aR. 7&#13;
Ca.... aLnD&#13;
.U laLLS&#13;
25% OFF</text>
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              <text>W University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Teaching evaluations valuable&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee&#13;
of the faculty Senate is&#13;
currently studying the results of a&#13;
survey begun last fall to determine&#13;
student and faculty opinion&#13;
for reducing the frequency of&#13;
teaching evaluations to once&#13;
every three years. The survey&#13;
indicates that while most favor&#13;
maintaining the frequency of&#13;
evaluations, there is a desire to&#13;
reduce the amount of p aper work&#13;
the evaluations create. In addition,&#13;
the subject of peer&#13;
evaluation is under study.&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
Donald Kummings, head of the&#13;
Committee, said, "The survey&#13;
revealed that there is more&#13;
sentiment for keeping teaching&#13;
evaluations every semester." He&#13;
said, though, that the results were&#13;
difficult to assess, because some&#13;
were filled out by divisions, and&#13;
some by individuals.&#13;
"There was some interest in&#13;
cutting down the number of&#13;
forms," he added. The teaching&#13;
evaluations create thousands of&#13;
documents every semester, which&#13;
must be tabulated, and most&#13;
people recognize the need to&#13;
reduce the amount of p aper work&#13;
involved.&#13;
The PSGA Senate passed a&#13;
resolution several weeks ago&#13;
supporting the practice of&#13;
evaluating faculty members each&#13;
semester. The resolution, introduced&#13;
by David Schroeder,&#13;
states that the concept of shared&#13;
governance requires that students&#13;
have as much input into the&#13;
faculty selection as possible.&#13;
Schroeder is the Senate's&#13;
representative on the Committee.&#13;
Schroeder said that the&#13;
response was "overwhelming" for&#13;
the maintenance of the present&#13;
practice. "The need for student&#13;
evaluations is much stronger than&#13;
the need to reduce paperwork," he&#13;
said.&#13;
The survey asked, in addition,&#13;
what form the teaching&#13;
evaluations should take, and if&#13;
there was any support for a&#13;
system of peer evaluation for&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
Dwayne Olsen, an associate&#13;
professor of teaching, said that&#13;
the problem was "a two - edged&#13;
sword," because of the need to&#13;
decrease paperwork, and the need&#13;
to maintain current teaching&#13;
evaluations, which are the&#13;
primary source of information&#13;
regarding teaching used in faculty&#13;
selection decisions.&#13;
"It's something we have to&#13;
come to grips with," he said, and&#13;
added that it was very important&#13;
to have information on a teacher,&#13;
especially when the instructor&#13;
was coming up for tenure. Student&#13;
evaluations of professors are very&#13;
important, he said, but "student's&#13;
responses may not be accurate,"&#13;
due to conditioning from taking&#13;
tests.&#13;
Kummings agreed, saying that&#13;
he found in his classes that the&#13;
later in the semester an&#13;
evaluation is administered, the&#13;
lower the scores tend to be. He&#13;
said the students get tired of&#13;
filling out evaluations.&#13;
In evaluating the survey, the&#13;
committee found that most of&#13;
those questioned favored each&#13;
division having their own&#13;
evaluation format, but that it was&#13;
desirable to have two or three&#13;
standard questions on each for&#13;
every division.&#13;
Peer evaluation of t eaching is a&#13;
Demonstration gathers&#13;
support for Seybold&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Last Tuesday afternoon a group&#13;
of students and community&#13;
members held a demonstration to&#13;
protest the Behavioral Science&#13;
Division Executive Committee's&#13;
decision to deny a one year contract&#13;
extension to associate&#13;
professor of sociology Peter&#13;
Seybold.&#13;
Roger Bybee, editor of the&#13;
Racine Labor, spoke briefly&#13;
during the demonstration. He said&#13;
that while he was not well versed&#13;
in Seybold's performance as a&#13;
teacher and researcher, he "was&#13;
really moved by what I heard&#13;
down here in terms of testimony,"&#13;
from other persons testifying at&#13;
the renewal hearings.&#13;
Marie Marten, a research&#13;
assistant of Seybold's, said, "I feel&#13;
we've been totally ignored. The&#13;
people here are our employees."&#13;
She said it was wrong for Parkside&#13;
to consider research more important&#13;
than teaching.&#13;
When asked, Seybold said that&#13;
he didn't believe the student's&#13;
protest would have any effect on&#13;
the administration, but he was&#13;
encouraged by their concern. "I&#13;
feel that it is good to the extent&#13;
that students are participating in&#13;
the process as much as they can."&#13;
particularly sensitive area,&#13;
Kummings said. "Peer evaluation&#13;
is called for," he said, "but it's not&#13;
done." UW-System guidelines call&#13;
for teaching evaluation by peers,&#13;
but Parkside has not made a&#13;
practice of i t in the past.&#13;
Peer evaluation is a controversial&#13;
area, because of&#13;
possible abuses of the system.&#13;
Many instructors are against&#13;
having other faculty members&#13;
attending their classes. Also,&#13;
there is the possibility of&#13;
favoritism playing a role in the&#13;
evaluation process.&#13;
"People tended to favor the&#13;
present practice," Kummings&#13;
said. More investigation is needed&#13;
before any guidelines are implemented.&#13;
The Committee, he&#13;
said, is not prepared to make a&#13;
decision at this time, because of&#13;
the complications involved. "The&#13;
more it was tossed around, the&#13;
less it seemed like a good idea,"&#13;
he added.&#13;
The survey was originated last&#13;
summer. Kummings said that it&#13;
has been several years since&#13;
teaching evaluation practices&#13;
have been reviewed, and the&#13;
committee wished to get an idea of&#13;
opinion before it made any&#13;
proposals.&#13;
A SHOWING of creations by Sidney Murphy, on display In Main&#13;
Place: Imminent Conceptions In Black Art: The Mind's Eye —&#13;
An Exercise in Balance. "The Business of Black Survival" Is the&#13;
theme of Black History Month, being observed during February&#13;
Fine arts festival&#13;
entries available&#13;
Entry forms are available for&#13;
an outdoor summer Fine Art&#13;
Festival at Parkside to be held&#13;
August 28 under sponsorship of the&#13;
UW-Parkside Alumni Association.&#13;
Entry forms and slides for the&#13;
juried show, which will accept&#13;
entries in 12 different categories&#13;
of fine art, are due April 1. Artists&#13;
will be notified of acceptance by&#13;
May 1. More than $600 in prizes&#13;
will be awarded.&#13;
Jurors will be Douglas DeVinny&#13;
and David Holmes of th e Parkside&#13;
art faculty and two art alumni,&#13;
Vicki Kalcic of Kenosha and Rita&#13;
Van Alkemade of Racine. Judges&#13;
will be Bruce Pepich, director of&#13;
Wustum Museum of Fine Arts in&#13;
Racine, and Lisa Englander,&#13;
Racine painter and printmaker.&#13;
A similar show last year at&#13;
Parkside had 110 artists participating&#13;
and drew an attendance&#13;
of about 6,000. Sp onsors say the&#13;
space available can accommodate&#13;
additional artists meeting jurors'&#13;
standards.&#13;
Artists are invited to submit&#13;
entries in the following&#13;
categories: painting, sculpture,&#13;
fiber, clay, metal, glass, printmaking,&#13;
photography, leather,&#13;
wood, paper and drawing.&#13;
Application forms are available&#13;
from the Parkside Alumni&#13;
Association, WLLC D-173, or by&#13;
phoning 553-2452.&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan up and coming&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan a la Carte,&#13;
a touring troupe of six lyric artists&#13;
serving up song and satire from&#13;
such G &amp; S favorites as "Pirates of&#13;
Penzance" and "H.M.S.&#13;
Pinafore" will present the final&#13;
program in the 1982-83 Accent on&#13;
Enrichment series at Parkside at&#13;
8 p.m. on Tuesday, March 8, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Tickets are $8 each ($5 for UW-P&#13;
students) and are available in&#13;
person or by mail from the&#13;
Campus Union Information&#13;
Center. Master charge is&#13;
available (Phone 553-2345).&#13;
Established in 1967 by p roducer&#13;
- director Allan Lokos, Gilbert and&#13;
Sullivan a la Carte has won&#13;
consistent praise for its acting,&#13;
dancing, comic timing and singing&#13;
as a series of the nation's most&#13;
promising young artists have won&#13;
rave reviews for their staged and&#13;
costumed production.&#13;
The repertoire for their current&#13;
tour includes more than 16&#13;
numbers and draws on 42 roles&#13;
from 13 G &amp; S operettas: "Trial by&#13;
Jury," "The Mikado," "Ruddigore,"&#13;
"Yeomen of th e Guard,"&#13;
"Pirates of Penzance,"&#13;
" Pa t i en c e , " " I o l a n t h e , "&#13;
"Pinafore," "Princess Ida," "The&#13;
Grand Duke," "Utopia&#13;
Unlimited," "Pineapple Poll" and&#13;
"The Gondoliers."&#13;
Long the symbol of things&#13;
British, Gilbert and Sullivan&#13;
productions are enjoying a&#13;
Renaissance in the U.S.&#13;
Universal Studios has just&#13;
released a $10 million film version&#13;
of Joseph Papp's Broadway hit&#13;
musical "Pirates of Penzance"&#13;
with Linda Ronstadt as Mable, the&#13;
role she played on Broadway, and&#13;
Kevin Kline repeating his role as&#13;
the Pirate King. The movie&#13;
version opened in theaters across&#13;
the country on Friday (Feb. 18).&#13;
In the van of the movement,&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan a la Carte&#13;
(with Lokos as its later day&#13;
D'Oyly Carte) has been delighting&#13;
audiences of dedicated Savoyards&#13;
and G &amp; S novices alike across the&#13;
country. They have appeared with&#13;
a number of U.S. and Canadian&#13;
symphony orchestras, at major&#13;
art and music festivals and in&#13;
university and civic music series.&#13;
Critics' notices have consistently&#13;
praised both their SQIO&#13;
and ensemble work, frequently&#13;
noting their precision of dic tion in&#13;
the patter songs, G &amp; S's ultimate&#13;
challenge to the artist.&#13;
A New York critic saluted the&#13;
ensemble as "a troupe perfectly&#13;
matched to the miracles of Gilbert&#13;
and Sullivan." "A veritable love&#13;
feast of song and satire with every&#13;
word clear and true," said the&#13;
Nashville Banner. The Columbus&#13;
(Ohio) Citizen - Journal called it&#13;
"two hours of sheer enjoyment by&#13;
six incredibly talented and extraordinarily&#13;
polished performers."&#13;
And the Augusta&#13;
(Georgia) Herald extolled: "One&#13;
of th e most enjoyable evenings of&#13;
music and theater that this city&#13;
has ever experienced."&#13;
SUPPORTERS OF SEYBOLD rallied in Main Place.&#13;
Inside . . .&#13;
• Letters to the editor&#13;
• Nine candidates for PSGA seats&#13;
• New Music&#13;
• Ghandi review&#13;
• Weight loss&#13;
Thursday, February 24,1983 RANGER&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Analysis of 'Social interaction' inaccurate&#13;
To the ET7» dJ:i tor:. .. .&#13;
This is in response to the&#13;
recently published article in the&#13;
Think Piece column entitled&#13;
"Defining the 'Final Frontier,' "&#13;
authored by Mr. B.R. Preston.&#13;
Mr. Preston's analysis of social&#13;
interaction among the different&#13;
segments of society does accurately&#13;
depict the current status&#13;
of many of us. All we need to do is&#13;
to look at the situations in areas&#13;
such as Ireland, Central and South&#13;
America, Poland, Asia, and our&#13;
own nation to find examples of&#13;
ignorance based on non - understanding.&#13;
People do prejudge&#13;
others; people do disclaim others'&#13;
beliefs and ideas when those ideas&#13;
and beliefs are dissonant with&#13;
their own; and people CAN be&#13;
"God - awful" cold — IF THEY&#13;
WANT TO BE.&#13;
Your international experience&#13;
sounds commendable, Mr.&#13;
Preston, but your domestic interactions&#13;
lack desirability. Who&#13;
is to blame because you do not&#13;
know your neighbors and your&#13;
associates in academia? Are&#13;
"they" to blame, Mr. Preston?&#13;
NO, they aren't. Not all of us "go&#13;
through each day looking the&#13;
other way when a stranger&#13;
(passes by)." Some of us do make&#13;
a concerted effort to smile and&#13;
acknowledge those strangers, and&#13;
some of us do try to make&#13;
another's day just a little bit&#13;
better.&#13;
Strike up a conversation with&#13;
your neighbor or with your&#13;
classmates Mr. Preston, and your&#13;
pessimistic view of the "Final&#13;
Frontier" will quickly dissipate. If&#13;
you do not know your associates,&#13;
then how can you know if y ou'll be&#13;
able to live with them, moreover,&#13;
you might find that you cannot&#13;
live without them. This kind of&#13;
effort does not require a large&#13;
expenditure of energy and its&#13;
rewards are priceless. After all,&#13;
Mr. Preston, a friend is a stranger&#13;
you have not met yet.&#13;
Mark H. Elliott&#13;
P.O.Box 236&#13;
Bates College&#13;
Lewiston, Maine 04240&#13;
X-rated film inappropriate&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I wish to make it clear at once&#13;
that I am writing as a private&#13;
individual and not as a&#13;
spokesperson for any group.&#13;
I am dismayed at the decision of&#13;
PAB to include an x-rated film in&#13;
the film series this spring. Since I&#13;
am not a student, you may well&#13;
tell me that it is none of my&#13;
business what PAB does with the&#13;
portion of student segregated fees&#13;
allotted to the film series. True!&#13;
But I have been a teacher for a&#13;
long time and I still feel the urge&#13;
to speak out when I believe&#13;
mistakes have been made or injustice&#13;
done.&#13;
I do not consider my objection to&#13;
the showing of x-rated films on&#13;
campus a matter of censorship.&#13;
Neither I nor any other person&#13;
here has the authority to forbid&#13;
PAB to show an x-rated film. To&#13;
me, the decision of PAB to offer&#13;
such a film is basically a matter of&#13;
poor judgment, and I urge a more&#13;
thoughtful evaluation of films to&#13;
be presented. About half the&#13;
student population of UWP is&#13;
female. Is it appropriate to show&#13;
films which degrade, humiliate,&#13;
and insult half the population,&#13;
which perpetuate the myth of the&#13;
female as a mindless seductive&#13;
body to be the plaything of the&#13;
male?&#13;
Those supporting the PAB&#13;
selection will surely say that those&#13;
who don't want to see an x-rated&#13;
film don't need to attend. But I can&#13;
respond just as quickly that since&#13;
such films are readily available&#13;
off campus, those who want to see&#13;
them can do so any day of the&#13;
week. Student fees do not need to&#13;
be spent providing what is immediately&#13;
available elsewhere.&#13;
Three members of PAB attended&#13;
a meeting of a committee&#13;
to which I belong. I was first&#13;
surprised, then appalled, when&#13;
they stated that the x-rated film&#13;
was, among other things, a money&#13;
maker. I had been naive enough to&#13;
believe that a film series on a&#13;
college campus was not a money -&#13;
making proposition. I had&#13;
assumed the purpose was to&#13;
provide educational and entertaining&#13;
films, both old and new,&#13;
at a convenient place and at a low&#13;
price for the college community.&#13;
Is it really necessary to show&#13;
films of little or no redeeming&#13;
educational / social value as a&#13;
money raiser?&#13;
If there is any group in our&#13;
society that ought to respect the&#13;
dignity and worth of all human&#13;
beings, it is a college community&#13;
where intellectual inquiry is&#13;
valued. To encourage and perpetuate&#13;
a demeaning portrait of&#13;
women is inappropriate to an&#13;
intelligent society; to use the fees&#13;
of the student body to present an&#13;
inaccurate and debasing view of&#13;
women is, in my opinion, highly&#13;
inappropriate to a college society.&#13;
Thanks for letting me say my&#13;
piece!&#13;
Stella C. Gray,&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
Student's interest is strong point&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
It's always nice to see a student&#13;
who has a cause, somewhere on&#13;
campus, a concern that they feel&#13;
right about fighting for. There are&#13;
a number of students involved in&#13;
the Student Government here, and&#13;
even though they don't always all&#13;
agree on a particular subject, they&#13;
meet certain goals as a whole&#13;
function within the Parkside&#13;
community.&#13;
The members of the various&#13;
other clubs and major&#13;
organizations also meet on a&#13;
somewhat regular basis to define&#13;
and meet certain goals they have&#13;
set as whole groups. When&#13;
something positive happens as a&#13;
result of their efforts, they have&#13;
good reason to be pleased with&#13;
their accomplishments. On this&#13;
campus, as on many others&#13;
throughout the world I'm sure,&#13;
there are those few students who&#13;
focus on certain subjects not as&#13;
members of a large group, but as&#13;
individuals.&#13;
On February 10, the Ranger&#13;
printed a story about Regina&#13;
Rademacher, a student at&#13;
Parkside fighting to save the open&#13;
primary in Wisconsin. Put the&#13;
primary issue aside, and the&#13;
secondary issue becomes that she&#13;
is a student who has taken the&#13;
time to find a cause and work with&#13;
it, to fight for it. Good for her!&#13;
There are other students on this&#13;
campus who have taken the time&#13;
to note the things about the&#13;
campus that they would like to see&#13;
changed. One student has even&#13;
stood on her own to oppose the&#13;
showing of X-rated films. At this&#13;
point, I'm not making any&#13;
judgement on a film being shown&#13;
this campus, rather, I'm just&#13;
pointing out that it is a good thing&#13;
that someone had concern to take&#13;
a stand and point out to various&#13;
people on this campus that she&#13;
does not approve of the showing of&#13;
a film of this type. There are&#13;
concerned students on this&#13;
campus, people with genuine&#13;
concerns about basic things. Some&#13;
of them are willing to take a stand,&#13;
even on their own at first.&#13;
The point is not to get everyone&#13;
on campus suddenly upset or&#13;
outraged about any random&#13;
subject on campus, but rather if&#13;
you have a problem with&#13;
something, to speak up about it, to&#13;
speak out about it, and see what&#13;
can be done. The response won't&#13;
always be "NOTHING." Even if it&#13;
does mean standing alone for a&#13;
cause, that doesn't mean you&#13;
shouldn't take that stand, or be&#13;
that individual.&#13;
Schroeder announces candidacy&#13;
Think Piece&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
Writing this column is an event I&#13;
often look forward to. However,&#13;
last week I shirked my responsibilities&#13;
and didn't deliver. My&#13;
excuse is a common one: Winter&#13;
Carnival. Yes, ladies and gentlemen,&#13;
last week I slurpped jello&#13;
(a dying art), sacrificed my own&#13;
blood, dressed like a moron,&#13;
played a competitive sport in the&#13;
snow (which was more like ice),&#13;
made an ugly banner (which&#13;
placed), painted an uglier window,&#13;
consumed unprecedented&#13;
amounts of alcohol, and had one of&#13;
the best times of my life. But no&#13;
column.&#13;
What made me feel even guiltier&#13;
was the fact that so many of you&#13;
had written letters or stopped me&#13;
in the halls to talk about the&#13;
column. I appreciate the input and&#13;
look forward to more. So, in order&#13;
to make it up to you, here's two&#13;
short Think Pieces this week.&#13;
» * *&#13;
I set out to explore a topic for&#13;
this week's column when a&#13;
devastating tragedy struck my&#13;
Take time; we're poor&#13;
family. A relative had died&#13;
unexpectedly. On my way into the&#13;
library Sunday night a friend&#13;
stopped me to say that a mutual&#13;
friend of ours was going into the&#13;
hospital Monday for open heart&#13;
surgery.&#13;
So here I sit; pen in hand trying&#13;
to sort things out. On my way to&#13;
this desk I passed two close&#13;
friends. They were exhausted&#13;
from studying and asked me to&#13;
cheer them up. After a few&#13;
minutes they were laughing and I&#13;
was feeling at ease just being with&#13;
them.&#13;
Then I arrived at this desk. Next&#13;
to me sat the person who gives me&#13;
support by making me stand on&#13;
my own. And I realized, it's not&#13;
what you've got but what you do&#13;
with it that really counts.&#13;
I can exist for 20 years but if I&#13;
never share the first day of Spring&#13;
with a friend; the awe - taking&#13;
clusters of snow flurries with a&#13;
class; a reality - rocking hang -&#13;
over with a classmate; or a&#13;
depression with someone close,&#13;
then have I really lived?&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
My name is David Schroeder,&#13;
and I am announcing my candidacy&#13;
for the office of PSGA&#13;
President. I have very strong&#13;
feelings as to the way a student&#13;
government should work on a&#13;
campus such as our own. At this&#13;
time, PSGA is headed in that&#13;
direction, but is also running into&#13;
obstacles. These obstacles are, by&#13;
no means, insurmountable. Under&#13;
the right leadership, they can be&#13;
reduced drastically. I feel that I&#13;
am the right person to do that job.&#13;
Besides being a PSGA Senator,&#13;
Chair of the Legislative Affairs&#13;
Committee and on several&#13;
Faculty Committees, I am the&#13;
Vice Chair of the Student&#13;
Organizations Council, which, I&#13;
feel, is a sort of a barometer for&#13;
the opinion of the student&#13;
population. Through this office, I&#13;
have heard different thoughts&#13;
from almost all the different&#13;
groups of students on this campus.&#13;
I have also learned about the&#13;
budgeting process that the&#13;
University uses.&#13;
Most of all, I think it is very&#13;
important that the student&#13;
population makes a truly informed&#13;
decision as to who is the&#13;
person to represent them for the&#13;
next full year. Therefore I urge&#13;
you to attend the debate of the&#13;
candidates that the Ranger is&#13;
sponsoring. Also feel free to talk to&#13;
me at any one of the following&#13;
phone numbers: 553-2244, 553-2594,&#13;
694-0719.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
David Schroeder&#13;
A few weeks ago I urged you to&#13;
take the first step and say hello.&#13;
Now I'm asking you to take it&#13;
further. You've got to walk; to run&#13;
together. You've got to let people&#13;
know what they mean to you while&#13;
you can. Don't make plans for a&#13;
lunch next week, share a sunset&#13;
today.&#13;
• * *&#13;
Our second topic is less on the&#13;
humanistic side, leaning more&#13;
toward being food - for - thought.&#13;
As a matter of fact, it is about food&#13;
and notebooks and beer. Put your&#13;
thinking caps on. You have some&#13;
numbers coming your way. Our&#13;
Food service charges 60c for a&#13;
hamburger, 70C for a&#13;
cheeseburger, and 99c for a fish&#13;
while McDonald's charges 55C,&#13;
60C, and 84c for the items&#13;
respectively. The food service&#13;
charges 40c for bagels and english&#13;
muffins which can be purchased&#13;
in bags of s ix for about 89c retail.&#13;
They charge 45C for two pieces of&#13;
raisin toast which may be purchased&#13;
for around $1.07 per loaf&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
ganger Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
c. A1 STAFF&#13;
RY,tn°JL du-.,Terj7 Byr"e' Maureen Burke, Jeanne&#13;
KwhmLV ii-Pu' C,arra Carie,,°' Patricia Cumbie, Dan&#13;
Dowhower, Michael Kailas, Carol Kortendick, John&#13;
NNaanpoo lpeaann S«c arbK roughu,r ' JeRnonbieb TuLunekhierc, z. Kathy Rayburn,&#13;
uw parkside and ,hey are soieiy&#13;
WriHP ER iS Primed by ,he UnVoT?Cwper^fve'p/hr r^XCep* dUrin9 breakS 3nd holidayS'&#13;
i ten permission is required for reorint nt * ubl|shing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed•« £V ?or,ion of RANGER.&#13;
Letter's to Wisconsin ST Ra"9er' Universi,y &lt;* WisconSin&#13;
P3P-T on® inch nwglns^S^enerVm^kT' doublespaced on standard size&#13;
ctoded for verification. " let,ers must be signed and atelephone number Indefemf?&#13;
a" edi,orial privileges3^3 reU.'Jnn ?ub,ica,ion on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. n refuS'ng to print letters which contain&#13;
Grossman to speak&#13;
on nuclear cover-up&#13;
New Vnrlr . H„ i _ .&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 24, 1983&#13;
inveTtilTk ' 1)386(1 author and&#13;
rw»t e reP°rter Karl&#13;
S5S5R- wlU present a lecture&#13;
Mot c °ver " up: What You Are&#13;
NuclearPpSed &gt;!° Kn°W About&#13;
nuclear Power" at the Union&#13;
Wednesday&gt; Mar. 2 at 7&#13;
P-m. The program is $2 for the&#13;
general public; $1.50 for Parkside&#13;
fvan hi' Advance tickets are&#13;
available at the Union Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
Grossman is the author of a&#13;
book with the same title as his&#13;
slide - illustrated lecture and of&#13;
another book, "The Poison&#13;
Conspiracy," which deals with&#13;
toxic chemical poisons, their&#13;
manufacturers and government&#13;
regulatory agencies.&#13;
WSMTSTvan m neWS anch0r °n&#13;
WSNL-TV in New York and his&#13;
reportage is syndicated in many&#13;
New York area papers. He has&#13;
been producer - host of his own&#13;
weekly TV program, "Karl&#13;
Grossman Reports," and has&#13;
written for such magazines as the&#13;
Columbia Journalism Review, In&#13;
These Times, Environmental&#13;
Action and Mother Jones.&#13;
Grossman says he obtained&#13;
many of the government&#13;
documents and photographs&#13;
Parkside scholarship&#13;
applications available&#13;
Applications for Parkside&#13;
scholarships are now being accepted&#13;
for the 1983 - '84 school&#13;
year. Nine scholarships in all&#13;
totalling $2,400 are being awarded&#13;
to continuing students. The&#13;
scholarships are:&#13;
Joan M. Esser — One $400&#13;
scholarship, awarded on the basis&#13;
of need, scholarship and interest&#13;
in ecology. Applicant must have&#13;
completed 30 - 90 credits at the&#13;
time of application.&#13;
Kenneth L. Greenquist — Two&#13;
$250 scholarships, based on need&#13;
and scholarship. Applicant must&#13;
have completed 75 - 105 credits..&#13;
Bernard C. Tallent - Four $250&#13;
scholarships, based on scholarship,&#13;
need and service. Applicant&#13;
must have completed 60 - 90&#13;
credits.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie — Two $250&#13;
scholarships, based on scholarship&#13;
and need. Applicant must&#13;
have 75 - 105 credits completed.&#13;
Application forms can be picked&#13;
up at the Library / Learning&#13;
Center Information desk, the&#13;
Main Place Information Kiosk,&#13;
the Union Information Desk and&#13;
all divisional offices. The deadline&#13;
for application is Friday, Mar. 11,&#13;
1983.&#13;
Earth Science major&#13;
to get name change&#13;
by Sharron Aken&#13;
The Earth Science Discipline&#13;
has requested that its name be&#13;
changed to Geology.&#13;
"We have been thinking of&#13;
changing the name since October&#13;
of '81. We weighed all the pros and&#13;
cons and decided it would be best&#13;
to change the name," said A.F.&#13;
Schneider, Earth Science Coordinator.&#13;
"The most pertinent reason for&#13;
the name change is that is would&#13;
simply reflect more clearly the&#13;
character of the faculty." said&#13;
Schneider. Homer Knight, Science&#13;
Division Chairman, agrees&#13;
saying, "The change would reflect&#13;
the present interest of the staff."&#13;
The Earth Science staff is trained&#13;
in the area of Geology, and conducts&#13;
their research on Geology&#13;
related topics.&#13;
In addition, the Earth Science&#13;
department feels that the image of&#13;
the program will be improved by&#13;
this change. Particularly it will&#13;
influence entering students and&#13;
their parents in view of the tarnished&#13;
and degrading connotation&#13;
that "earth science" conveys in&#13;
the local high schools.&#13;
"Of even greater importance is&#13;
the probability that would accrue&#13;
to our majors, especially&#13;
graduating seniors who seek&#13;
employment in industry. Employers&#13;
seek geologists, not earth&#13;
scientists," said Schneider.&#13;
Students who inquire about a&#13;
geology program are told that&#13;
Parkside does not offer a geology&#13;
major, only an earth science&#13;
major.&#13;
Another important factor is that&#13;
several parts of the earth science&#13;
program, notably the environment&#13;
concentration, are not&#13;
being serviced, principally&#13;
because the former meteorology&#13;
position has been abolished, and&#13;
the program no longer has the&#13;
services of many faculty members,&#13;
who in the past contributed&#13;
much to this facet of the program.&#13;
In order to establish this change&#13;
it had to first be passed by the&#13;
Science Division Executive&#13;
Committee. The requested change&#13;
was passed by the committee on&#13;
Oct. 20,1982. Then the change had&#13;
to be passed by the Academic&#13;
Planning and Program Committee.&#13;
The APPR Committee, at&#13;
it's meeting on Dec. 1, 1982,&#13;
recommended approval of the&#13;
requested name change. Then, the&#13;
request is to be passed by the&#13;
UWP Faculty Senate for final&#13;
approval. The meeting of the&#13;
Senate took place Feb. 22, 1983.&#13;
"The only reason I feel that the&#13;
Senate would have had for not&#13;
passing the change, would have&#13;
been that they might feel it would&#13;
retain the broad area," said&#13;
Knight.&#13;
"I feel that the Senate would&#13;
have had no reason at all for not&#13;
passing the change. In fact, I&#13;
would have been very surprised if&#13;
it didn't pass," said Schneider.&#13;
The change from Earth Science&#13;
to Geology will be established in&#13;
the new fall semester catalog.&#13;
Students should note, however,&#13;
that no courses are being dropped&#13;
due to this change.&#13;
Nine candidates seek president,&#13;
vice president seats&#13;
KARL GROSSMAN, author of&#13;
the book, "Cover - up: What&#13;
You Are Not Supposed To&#13;
Know About Nuclear Power,"&#13;
will appear in the Union&#13;
Cinema Wednesday.&#13;
under the U.S. Freedom of Information&#13;
Act.&#13;
Grossman has received a&#13;
number of awards for his&#13;
reportage including the George&#13;
Polk award, one of the highest&#13;
honors in U.S. journalism, and has&#13;
been a journalism faculty&#13;
member at the State University of&#13;
New York at Old Westbury.&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
There are currently six students&#13;
vying for the position of President&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. These candidates&#13;
are John Monks, Jeanne&#13;
Buenker - Phillips, Phillip&#13;
Pogreba, Pat Ramsdell, Dave&#13;
Schroeder and Masood Shafiq.&#13;
The election will be held on March&#13;
9 and 10.&#13;
John Monks is 21 years old and&#13;
majoring in Economics and&#13;
Political Science. He has played&#13;
soccer at Parkside for three years&#13;
and works in the Union building&#13;
Monks ran unsuccessfully in last&#13;
year's election as a write - in&#13;
candidate for vice president. If&#13;
elected President, Monks wants to&#13;
straighten out the office, increase&#13;
communication between students&#13;
and the government, and concentrate&#13;
on the concerns of the&#13;
students.&#13;
Marty Rheome, 25 years old, is&#13;
running with Monks for the office&#13;
of vice - president. Rheome, came&#13;
to Parkside in 1976. He then went&#13;
to the University of Minnesota in&#13;
Minneapolis, worked in a factory,&#13;
and has experience with lower&#13;
management at a company in&#13;
Montana. Rheome returned to&#13;
Parkside in 1981 to complete his&#13;
double in Business and Applied&#13;
Computer Science.&#13;
Jeanne Buenker - Phillips, a 19&#13;
year old Communication major, is&#13;
a presidential candidate. Phillips&#13;
has been a PSGA senator since the&#13;
summer of 1981. She has been&#13;
active as the United Council&#13;
Election&#13;
rules&#13;
announced&#13;
Petitions for the upcoming&#13;
PSGA elections are due tomorrow,&#13;
Friday, Feb. 25. They must&#13;
be turned in to an Elections&#13;
Committee member in the PSGA&#13;
office in WLLC D-139A. Any&#13;
person interested in running for&#13;
president, vice president, senate,&#13;
SUFAC or the Union Advisory&#13;
Board who has not turned in a&#13;
petition can still run as a write - in&#13;
candidate. All write - in candidates&#13;
must fulfill the same&#13;
requirements as those declared&#13;
candidates for the same positions.&#13;
Candidacy must be declared in&#13;
writing and filed with the elections&#13;
committee by March 4 at noon in&#13;
order to be eligible as a write - in&#13;
candidate. Write - ins must also&#13;
file a release form with an elections&#13;
committee member. A list of&#13;
write - in candidates will be&#13;
available at the polling place.&#13;
Absentee ballots will be&#13;
available on Mar. 1 at the PSGA&#13;
office. They must be picked up&#13;
and returned in person or postmarked&#13;
by noon Wednesday, Mar.&#13;
The elections will be held&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday, Mar. 9&#13;
and 10, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. The&#13;
polls will be located on the concourse&#13;
level of Molinaro. Each&#13;
voter must be a Parkside student&#13;
in order to register a valid ballot.&#13;
Each student may vote only once.&#13;
Any contestation, complaint or&#13;
comment on the conduct of the&#13;
elections must be filed in writing&#13;
with any member of the elections&#13;
committee by Mar. 24. The&#13;
decision of the PSGA Senate will&#13;
be final and binding when dealing&#13;
with contestation or complaint.&#13;
Write Ranger&#13;
a letter !&#13;
Women's Affairs Director and&#13;
also formed the Women's Affairs&#13;
Sub - Committee at Parkside.&#13;
Phillips served as assistant Pro -&#13;
Tempore of the Senate and was&#13;
elected president Pro - Tempore&#13;
in December. She is co - editor of&#13;
the PSGA newsletter Dialogue&#13;
and a Ranger staff member.&#13;
Phillips is also vice - president of&#13;
U. W. Parkside Association of&#13;
Communicators. If elected, her&#13;
main goal is to formulate a&#13;
Minorities Affairs Committee.&#13;
Luis Valldejuli, 21 years old, is&#13;
running with Phillips for the vice&#13;
president's office. He has been a&#13;
senator for three years, was&#13;
assistant Pro - Tempore and is&#13;
currently chairman of the&#13;
Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee. Valldejuli&#13;
is a Political Science and Spanish&#13;
major.&#13;
Phillip Pogreba has been a&#13;
senator for two years. He served&#13;
on SUFAC for one and a half years&#13;
until last semester and was&#13;
president Pro - Tempore for one&#13;
year. Pogreba served on several&#13;
committees such as Academic&#13;
Progress Planning and Review&#13;
Committee, Academic Actions&#13;
Committee, Library Learning&#13;
Center Committee and the&#13;
Disciplinary Committee. He also&#13;
served on three Administration&#13;
Committees. Pogreba is 22 and&#13;
majoring in Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene.&#13;
Running with Pogreba for the&#13;
vice - presidential position is Mike&#13;
Scoon. Scoon.is currently a Justice&#13;
Academic games&#13;
and has served as a Senator and&#13;
assistant Pro - Tempore. He&#13;
served on SUFAC, Save the&#13;
Library Committee and six other&#13;
committees. Scoon is 25 years old&#13;
and is majoring in Life Science&#13;
and Pre - Med.&#13;
Pat Ramsdell is a 20 year old&#13;
business major and a presidential&#13;
candidate. He became a Senator&#13;
this fall and is currently assistant&#13;
Pro - Tempore of the Senate.&#13;
Ramsdell also served on SUFAC&#13;
and is Parkside's Academic Affairs&#13;
Representative at the United&#13;
Council.&#13;
David Schroeder, presidential&#13;
candidate, has been a Senator&#13;
since November. He is vice&#13;
chairman of SOC, chairman of the&#13;
Budget and Review Committee,&#13;
and Legislative Affairs Chairman.&#13;
He has also served on the Ad hoc&#13;
Committee to formulate SOC&#13;
guidelines, Winter Carnival&#13;
Committee and three Faculty&#13;
Committees. Schroeder feels that&#13;
SOC has become much more&#13;
concerned about the direction it is&#13;
moving in this year. The potential&#13;
candidate is 21 years old and&#13;
majoring in dramatic arts.&#13;
Masood Shafiq is 26 years old&#13;
and majoring in Management&#13;
Accounting and Computer&#13;
Science. He is a member of the&#13;
Accounting Club and Photo Editor&#13;
of the Ranger. Shafiq's goals, if&#13;
elected, are to make students&#13;
more politically aware and&#13;
allocate more funds to&#13;
professional clubs and&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The "Triple Threat" theory&#13;
of academic excellence&#13;
by Jeanne Buenker - Phillips&#13;
Like the great football players&#13;
of the past, faculty members are&#13;
theoretically "triple - threat."&#13;
Besides being good teachers and&#13;
respected scholars, they are&#13;
supposed to be good "university&#13;
citizens" as well.&#13;
Generally this latter injunction&#13;
means that faculty have a&#13;
responsibility to participate in&#13;
faculty governance, mostly by&#13;
serving on some of the many&#13;
committees which establish&#13;
policies and help the university&#13;
operate on a day - to - day basis.&#13;
Because Parkside is also a&#13;
community - based university,&#13;
faculty are also expected to&#13;
participate in community affairs&#13;
using their expertise as consultants&#13;
or putting on programs of&#13;
interest to community people.&#13;
Faculty governance really&#13;
begins at the divisional level.&#13;
Each division is governed by the&#13;
executive committee which&#13;
consists of all the tenured&#13;
members in the division presided&#13;
over by the chair who is elected by&#13;
the members of the division to&#13;
serve a one - year term. The&#13;
executive committee determines&#13;
the annual merit ratings of each&#13;
professor, makes the original&#13;
d e t e r m in a t i o n r e g a r d i n g&#13;
renewals and tenure and is&#13;
primarily responsible for the&#13;
hiring of new faculty members.&#13;
Most divisions have a number of&#13;
committees to deal with a variety&#13;
of functions such as curriculum,&#13;
budget, and personnel. The&#13;
executive committee however is&#13;
the final arbiter on all matters at&#13;
the divisional level.&#13;
At the campus - wide level,&#13;
faculty members have a wide&#13;
variety of committees to choose&#13;
from depending on their interests&#13;
and abilities. Since these bodies&#13;
set policy and make operational&#13;
decisions about every aspect of&#13;
university life, the apex of the&#13;
university government is the&#13;
Senate, which is the chief policy -&#13;
making body for the faculty. The&#13;
Senate only meets once a month&#13;
therefore the day - to - day&#13;
operation of faculty government is&#13;
handled by the University&#13;
Committee which really functions&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
Ranger&#13;
General Membership Meeting&#13;
Friday, Feb. 25 at I p .m.&#13;
in WLLC D-139 C&#13;
Current members should attend&#13;
to renew their membership.&#13;
New members welcome!&#13;
Thursday , February 24,1983&#13;
Anthro Antics&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Gina G. Sheppard - Wolthausen&#13;
In a time long ago, in a place not&#13;
far away a Shannaki spirit made a&#13;
joke about the Terrapin God&#13;
having a square back. As a result&#13;
the Shannaki spirit was cursed to&#13;
five man lives among the men&#13;
with the Keytoea spirit. This is&#13;
Folklore! But does this tale affect&#13;
anyone's life today?&#13;
According to Homer Hockett&#13;
(1938) "Legends and traditions&#13;
should be avoided .. . nothing can&#13;
be made of them of any positive&#13;
value for the simple reason that&#13;
they cannot be traced to their&#13;
origins." Today, Folklore has&#13;
been deemed as an embellished&#13;
history. The narratives are not&#13;
only told by a people about&#13;
themselves, but they also articulate&#13;
the feelings of a group&#13;
about events in their lives and the&#13;
world they live in.&#13;
The Anthro Club is pleased to&#13;
announce that our next seminar is&#13;
entitled "What Is The Folklore&#13;
Anthropology Connection''. Our&#13;
guest speaker will be Wendy&#13;
Leeds - Hurwitz who teaches&#13;
Communication at UW - Parkside.&#13;
She has her Masters in Folklore,&#13;
and is currently completing here&#13;
doctoral dissertation on the&#13;
connections between Folklore,&#13;
Anthropology, and Linguistics in&#13;
America in the 1920's.&#13;
This seminar will focus on how&#13;
Folklore is the child of both Anthropology&#13;
and Literature. Leeds -&#13;
Hurwitz will also show how&#13;
Folklore as practiced today has&#13;
synthesized the approaches of its&#13;
parent disciplines into a method of&#13;
its own.&#13;
All are invited to attend&#13;
February 28, at 4:00 p. m. in&#13;
MOLN 324 and see how an inter -&#13;
disciplinary approach can benefit&#13;
our understanding of other&#13;
peoples' legends and also our own.&#13;
To those still concerned about&#13;
the Terrapin God curse, yes it&#13;
affects some peoples lives today.&#13;
First, a terrapin is a turtle,&#13;
pronounced tar - pen in the&#13;
dialect. A Shannaki (sha-knockkey)&#13;
is a Cherokee since white&#13;
contact. A Key - tow - a is the&#13;
original Cherokee spirit when&#13;
spirits were free to roam. The five&#13;
man lives without the Keytoea&#13;
spirit curse was completed in&#13;
March of 1982. At that time the&#13;
Shannaki spirit joined with the&#13;
Keytoea spirit and they together&#13;
will return to the descendents of&#13;
the original owner in March of&#13;
1983. This has far reaching&#13;
economic, social, and moral&#13;
implications for the descendents.&#13;
CLIMB, group of actor -&#13;
educators, to appear&#13;
CLIMB, a theatrical troupe of&#13;
specially trained actor - educators&#13;
devoted to arts programming for&#13;
the disabled, will present a free&#13;
lecture - demonstration at&#13;
Parkside from 3:30 to 5 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, Mar. 1, in Union 104-106.&#13;
The program is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside unit of the Student&#13;
Wisconsin Education Association&#13;
(SWEA), which is inviting area&#13;
teachers, education, psychology&#13;
and drama students, as well as&#13;
other interested parties. The&#13;
program is planned as a prelude&#13;
to the Very Special Arts Festival&#13;
for handicapped children, held&#13;
each March on campus.&#13;
A Minnesota - based&#13;
organization, CLIMB has won&#13;
wide recognition for its pioneering&#13;
work in developing the artistic&#13;
potential of the physically or&#13;
mentally disabled, emotionally&#13;
disturbed, learning disabled,&#13;
chemically dependent and&#13;
children learning English as a&#13;
second language.&#13;
CLIMB was honored in 1981 as&#13;
the best new children's theater&#13;
company in America by the&#13;
Elect&#13;
Jeanne&#13;
Buenker-Phillip s&#13;
and&#13;
Luis Valldejuli&#13;
PSGA President and&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Vote for Jeanne and Luis #&#13;
on March 9 &amp; 10&#13;
paid advertiseme nt&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
ISO&#13;
The International Student&#13;
Organization will have a meeting&#13;
Friday, Feb. 25 at 1 p. m. in Union&#13;
106. Topics of discussion will be&#13;
ISO's dinner Party and the upcoming&#13;
election of officers. ISO ,_r\T&#13;
office hopefuls may submit their UWi L/ I&#13;
candidacy at Friday's meeting.&#13;
Club Events&#13;
subjects and America's involvement&#13;
in this highly controversial&#13;
area of the world.&#13;
There will be time for a question&#13;
and answer period. The program&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
Accounting&#13;
The Accounting Club has&#13;
started up its advising lab for all&#13;
accounting principles students.&#13;
The lab is staffed by juniors and&#13;
seniors majoring in accounting.&#13;
They are there to answer any&#13;
questions students might have&#13;
about their accounting principles&#13;
classes. The lab is open Monday&#13;
through Friday from 9 a. m. to 12&#13;
p. m. in MOLN D-133.&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
American Theater Association&#13;
through its Zeta Phi Eta award&#13;
and has also received recognition&#13;
from the National Committee /&#13;
Arts for the Handicapped and the&#13;
Minnesota Department of&#13;
Education.&#13;
The group was founded in 1975&#13;
by Executive Director Peggy&#13;
Wetli, an experienced singer and&#13;
actress and a graduate of the&#13;
University of Minnesota. Its actors&#13;
are professionals chosen by&#13;
audition, and undergo an extensive&#13;
apprenticeship training&#13;
program which teaches skills in&#13;
special education, creative&#13;
dramatics and theater.&#13;
Its programs include both&#13;
original scripts directed and&#13;
performed by CLIMB actor -&#13;
educators for child audiences and&#13;
plays written and directed by&#13;
CLIMB but performed by disabled&#13;
and able - bodied students.&#13;
Although there is no admission&#13;
charge, persons wishing to attend&#13;
are asked to make reservations by&#13;
calling the Education Division,&#13;
553-2351, to ensure adequate&#13;
seating.&#13;
The Chemistry and Physics&#13;
Clubs are visiting Argonne&#13;
National Laboratory on Mar. 5.&#13;
These government labs are the&#13;
location for research in nuclear&#13;
physics, chemistry and physical&#13;
chemistry. The tour of these&#13;
facilities will begin at noon and&#13;
last three to four hours. Buses will&#13;
leave Parkside at 10 a.m. from the&#13;
Union Bazaar. Sign up sheets are&#13;
located at GRQ 108 and 231. The&#13;
deadline is noon on Friday, Feb.&#13;
25.&#13;
Political Science&#13;
On Wednesday, Mar. 2 at 1 p.m.&#13;
in MOLN 109 there will be a forum&#13;
on Central American political&#13;
movements. The program will&#13;
explore the present political and&#13;
living conditions in El Salvador&#13;
and Nicaragua.&#13;
Patricia Castro, a Baptist&#13;
minister, and Enrique Baldonia, a&#13;
Catholic priest, will address these&#13;
This is your last chance to&#13;
volunteer for the Very Special&#13;
Arts Festival before we send the&#13;
hit men to your house. The Dart&#13;
Team needs at least five more&#13;
members to sign up as tour&#13;
guides. There will also be a Post -&#13;
Festival Feast and Party. If you&#13;
are not going to Florida, give your&#13;
time to some children who need it.&#13;
There will be another Dart Team&#13;
meeting on Monday at 1 p.m. in&#13;
MOLN 126. This may be your last&#13;
chance to save your sister's life.&#13;
Pre Med&#13;
The Pre - Med Club will be&#13;
meeting on Monday, Feb. 28 at 8&#13;
p.m. in the D-l staff lounge of the&#13;
Library. Dr. Dennis Fahey, DDS,&#13;
a graduate of the Marquette&#13;
Dental School, will discuss dentistry,&#13;
dental school, and his&#13;
recent trip to Haiti, where he&#13;
spent two weeks working with the&#13;
Red Cross. Anyone interested in&#13;
attending is welcome.&#13;
SWEA&#13;
As a prelude to the Very Special&#13;
Arts Festival, SWEA is sponsoring&#13;
a performance and&#13;
workshop by CLIMB (Creative&#13;
Learning Ideas for Mind and&#13;
Body), in Union 104-106 from 3:30&#13;
to 5 p.m. (Hi Tuesday, Mar. l.&#13;
CLIMB is a theatrical troupe of&#13;
specially trained actor /&#13;
educators devoted to arts&#13;
programming for the disabled.&#13;
The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Freshman merit&#13;
scholarships offered&#13;
A new Merit Scholarship&#13;
Program for first year students at&#13;
Parkside will be inaugurated with&#13;
next fall's freshman class.&#13;
The scholarships are based&#13;
solely on demonstrated academic&#13;
achievement in high school and&#13;
potential for continued academic&#13;
excellence at Parkside. The&#13;
awards are privately funded.&#13;
Deadline for applications is&#13;
April 1, 1983.&#13;
Most of t he scholarships will be&#13;
in the amount of $1,0 00, payable in&#13;
installments of $250 per semester&#13;
over the first two years of study at&#13;
UW-Parkside. Recipients must&#13;
maintain full - time student status&#13;
and appropriate academic&#13;
records for the four semesters to&#13;
remain eligible for the award, and&#13;
must be first - year students,&#13;
regardless of age, entering UWParkside&#13;
for the first time.&#13;
Winners of t he scholarships will&#13;
be selected by the Faculty Awards&#13;
and Ceremonies Committee. They&#13;
will be notified on or before May 2,&#13;
1983, and must indicate acceptance&#13;
by May 16, 1983.&#13;
Application forms are available&#13;
from the Awards and Ceremonies&#13;
Committee, UW-Parkside, Box&#13;
No. 2000, Kenosha, WI 53141&#13;
(Phone 553-2397).&#13;
AA/UVW»AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAArf Think Piece&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
retail. The bookstore charges&#13;
$2.39 for a three subject notebook&#13;
(150 s heets) and $1.49 for an 80&#13;
page notebook while a local&#13;
convenient store charges only&#13;
$1.28 for a 100 sheet notebook. And&#13;
we all know that the $3.00 c over&#13;
charges and 550 beers of the Union&#13;
can be undercut anywhere in&#13;
either town.&#13;
The point is not that they're&#13;
charging a few more pennies here&#13;
and there, the point is that we're&#13;
being screwed. When will this&#13;
university realize that we are&#13;
students living at or near the&#13;
poverty level? How can they&#13;
expect people living on fixed incomes&#13;
to afford these prices? If&#13;
we could, we'd all be going to&#13;
Madison or the bourgeois Ivy&#13;
Leagues!&#13;
Why does this university constantly&#13;
treat the students as&#13;
second class citizens? Why are&#13;
outside organizations always&#13;
given priority just because their&#13;
bank books host more digits than&#13;
ours? One shining example of this&#13;
school's insensitiveness towards&#13;
the students is the way that&#13;
everything closes so early. Let's&#13;
look at the following scenario: you&#13;
get out of a five hour physics&#13;
lecture at 10:00 p. m. You're&#13;
Enjoy God's Country&#13;
with Style. 4ft&#13;
thirsty and would like a beer (but&#13;
will settle for a coke). All the food&#13;
services are closed. The Rec&#13;
center is closed. The machines&#13;
(which only sell sodas) are&#13;
broken. So you either pay a $3&#13;
cover charge to get into the Union&#13;
or you go to a local bar.&#13;
How can campus life possibly be&#13;
promoted if such ridiculous&#13;
conditions are maintained? Of&#13;
course, if you can afford the $2.50&#13;
cost to see the basketball game&#13;
you can get into the dance for free&#13;
(funny the library doesn't offer a&#13;
comparable deal). If all other&#13;
refreshment facets of these institutions&#13;
are going to be cut off&#13;
then the Rec center should stay&#13;
open until 12:00 a. m. At least this&#13;
way there will be a place we don't&#13;
have to pay an admission to just to&#13;
buy a coke.&#13;
I don't know about the rest of&#13;
you, but I'm going to apply for&#13;
financial aide next semester. Just&#13;
to be able to participate in a few of&#13;
the student activities out here&#13;
(although $1000 can only go so&#13;
far). I love this school and I'm&#13;
proud of it. It's about time that the&#13;
administration stop fighting those&#13;
feelings and begin to evoke them.&#13;
""W5 CO nC u ctossi ' On Tap&#13;
at Union Square&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 24,1983&#13;
by Dave Schroeder&#13;
Kate Nelligan proves that she is&#13;
a powerful actress in the new&#13;
movie Without A Trace. In it, she&#13;
stars as a part time professor at&#13;
Columbia as well as a recently&#13;
separated wife and mother. The&#13;
story of how her child disappeared&#13;
and her painful wait for some kind&#13;
of development in the case quickly&#13;
unfolds.&#13;
This movie could have been&#13;
very cliche ridden. The mother&#13;
could have cried a lot. The police&#13;
could have been totally insensitive,&#13;
etc. But instead, it was&#13;
the exact opposite. The movie tells&#13;
us how this disappearance affects&#13;
all those involved in the case.&#13;
Judd Hirsch plays Detective&#13;
Minnetti, a veteran who begins to&#13;
fear for the safety of his son of the&#13;
same age as the missing child.&#13;
Stockard Channing plays the&#13;
mother's very concerned best&#13;
Without A Trace' leaves good impression&#13;
. friend. David Dukps ic fVlA rfiiJU . .&#13;
cue ios C ennrt combination of fear, guilt, sorrow,&#13;
These performances are what InilT ,°n etach *?rt of the&#13;
makes the movie click tE! Pcopie closely entwined in the web&#13;
The of this case is what sets this movie&#13;
apart from most movies of this&#13;
genre, which usually deal with&#13;
only one of these emotional&#13;
aspects.&#13;
Stanley Jaffe must also be noted&#13;
for his apt direction. Through his&#13;
hand we see once again that the&#13;
best movies are not the over -&#13;
dramatic ones, but instead it is the&#13;
film that is so painfully real that&#13;
&lt;fl Aeu*&#13;
grips our attention. All I'm going&#13;
to say about the ending isI w as not&#13;
totally satisfied with it. But it is&#13;
such a difficult ending to deal&#13;
with, that I for one, don't have any&#13;
suggestions as to how to make it&#13;
any better.&#13;
Nevertheless, Without A Trace&#13;
is still a very fine movie that was&#13;
written, directed, and acted well,&#13;
and is well worth seeing. It has&#13;
earned its three star rating. ***&#13;
One sad note. While sitting in&#13;
the theater watching the story&#13;
unfold, I was terribly shocked to&#13;
hear a father periodically lean&#13;
over to his son of about seven&#13;
years of age and say, "See, this is&#13;
what will happen to you if you take&#13;
a ride with strangers!" I found&#13;
this very unnecessary, and&#13;
frightening to a child of that age.&#13;
Somehow, no matter how innocent&#13;
this may seem at the time, this is&#13;
not the film to use as a&#13;
disciplinary instrument for&#13;
children, and it might be good to&#13;
be careful as t o what you say to&#13;
your kids during it.&#13;
Regency Cinema worth a look&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
I first went to the new Regency&#13;
Theaters a few weeks ago to see&#13;
'Das Boot.' I knew that Regency&#13;
had six separate theaters, so I was&#13;
expecting six very small&#13;
auditoriums with tiny screens. I&#13;
must say I was pleasantly surprised.&#13;
A brief description: The'&#13;
building has an enclosed box -&#13;
office right out front, sort of like&#13;
old - time theaters. After buying&#13;
your tickets outside, you walk into&#13;
the lobby, which is pretty well&#13;
organized with a sort of 'refreshment&#13;
stand in the round' planted&#13;
in the center of the lobby. This was&#13;
a good idea - a refreshment&#13;
counter flush against the wall&#13;
would have made for very long&#13;
lines. The lobby is clean, bright&#13;
(the walls are painted white if I&#13;
remember correctly) and in&#13;
general nice, if not austere. On to&#13;
the theaters.&#13;
The theaters are small, but they&#13;
are well proportioned, being short&#13;
and wide with fairly large&#13;
screens. The sound and picture&#13;
quality was very good for both of&#13;
the films I have seen, and in&#13;
general I was surprised and&#13;
pleased with the auditoriums.&#13;
The opening of the Regency&#13;
brings six new screens to Racine,&#13;
making a total of fourteen for the&#13;
city. Jim Janssen, manager of the&#13;
Regency, believes that with the&#13;
added theaters Racine may be&#13;
able to see a wider variety of films&#13;
in the future, including foreign&#13;
films. In addition to 'Das Boot,' a&#13;
German film which played a week&#13;
ago, the Regency is currently&#13;
showing 'The Year of Living&#13;
Dangerously,' an Australian&#13;
film. Another unique feature that&#13;
Regency offers is that wonderful&#13;
old convention known as the weekday&#13;
matinee. Most Racine&#13;
theaters have some weekday&#13;
matinees during the summer, but&#13;
Regency features them now, and&#13;
all shows before 6 p. m. are two&#13;
dollars. So check out the Regency.&#13;
You might be, as I was, pleasantly'&#13;
surprised.&#13;
NOW HEAR THIS .. . NOW HEAR THIS!&#13;
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28 IS&#13;
MASH&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
IN UNION SQUARE&#13;
SEE THE FINAL SHOW ON OUR&#13;
7 FT. TV SCREEN AND SAY&#13;
FAREWELL TO HAWKEYE,&#13;
FATHER MULCAHY, HOT LIPS&#13;
HOULIHAN, KLINGER AND ALL&#13;
THE GANG FROM THE 4077TH.&#13;
SPECIAL 2 V* HOUR SHOW&#13;
7:30 TO 10:00 PM&#13;
Sound Digprnqs&#13;
Miles Davis blows PAC away&#13;
by Napoleon Scarbrough&#13;
On my first expedition I happened&#13;
across a bit of treasure that&#13;
has been buried for some eight&#13;
years beneath the rubble of&#13;
commercial AM. Legendary jazz&#13;
trumpeter Miles Davis has dusted&#13;
himself off and made a triumphant&#13;
return to the stage.&#13;
Naturally your roving reporter&#13;
Napoleon, conquerer of the&#13;
colossal sound, was on hand to&#13;
witness this resurrection of sound&#13;
treasure for his devoted followers.&#13;
The show, which was held last&#13;
Thursday at Milwaukee's PAC,&#13;
got off to a slow but steady start!&#13;
After the first number, a kind of&#13;
jam, the room began to come&#13;
alive. Thanks to the precision&#13;
rhythm section including&#13;
drummer A1 Foster, bassist Tom&#13;
Barney and percussionist Mino&#13;
Cinelu, the place began to rock as&#13;
Miles used the synthesizer to&#13;
punctuate his horn lines. Later, as&#13;
we all fell into the groove (which&#13;
was now knee deep), Miles&#13;
strolled up and down the stage,&#13;
blowing like a Florida hurricane.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
i crniDc • Thursday, Feb. 24&#13;
at 1 P- m- in Union 207. Charles Wallace and Milton Lewis will talk nn "The&#13;
Org an zia iforf ^ and °Pe" ,he pub"&#13;
gaAmCem- .Assdimonisasti °thne * Co^or , s *a&#13;
MJ?era'ra;» 12 in Uniop *»»•• Admission is&#13;
Sh" w!" be rePea,ed at 1 p- m. and at 7:30p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
with Tnrf rrt'cT^n«V,n,0n.!:qUarf fea,urin9 "Dazzle." Admission at the door is 50c for students&#13;
with ID cards and $2 for others. Sponsored by the Black Student Organization.&#13;
_ A A 1 S a t u r d a y , F e b . 2 6&#13;
sored by Shiden^Ufe* ,eaturing ,he Reid Flemmin9 Band, after the basketball game. Spon-&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 27&#13;
MOVIE "Mash" will be repeated at 7:30p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Feb. 28&#13;
?inhtVthTLE,hat.-t^15 P'm' in Union 106' Prof- Sue s,rickler will talk on "Legislative Oversight&#13;
With Teeth. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, Mar. 1&#13;
L at ^h30^3' mi103' Robert Coles' of Harvard University will talk on "What is&#13;
JT American Family." The lecture is free and open to the public&#13;
?hJ^ aIwP' "V Ln "1® Union Cinema featuring the Parkside Wind Ensemble. Admission at&#13;
the door is $1 for students and senior citizens and $2 for others.&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 2&#13;
iSi"rlXplaininl' Women's Adulthood Experience" by Prof. Teresa Peck at 12 noon in&#13;
Union 106. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
F 1 ,P' I"' •?. ^nLN 109' Pa,ricia Castro, a Baptist minister, and Enrique Blandon, a&#13;
catholic priest, will talk on "Central American Political Movements." The event is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
BLOOD PRESSURE from 5 p. m. to 8 p. m. on the Molinaro Concourse. All are welcome. Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
LECTURE "Cover Up: What You Are Not Supposed to Know About Nuclear Power" by Karl&#13;
Grossman at 7 p . m. .n the Union Cinema. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center. Prices are $1.50 for Parkside students and $2 for others. Sponsored by PAB&#13;
This Friday, Fob. 25th&#13;
Maxa i.P.&#13;
NEW WAVE LOUNGE&#13;
2148 Racine St., Racine&#13;
Phone 634-9299&#13;
00&#13;
The band had other outstanding&#13;
musicians on hand, such as Mike&#13;
Stern, who alternated from rhythm&#13;
to lead guitar. His stirring solos&#13;
did much to electrify the concert&#13;
hall. Also present was young Bill&#13;
Evans, whose soprano and tenor&#13;
sax work, as well as his soulful&#13;
piano solo, led me to the conclusion&#13;
that Miles still knows how&#13;
to knot together a tight young&#13;
band, a band that can really&#13;
cook when let loose in the kitchen.&#13;
Finally, there was veteran&#13;
guitarist John Scofield, whose&#13;
blues guitar gave the music a&#13;
down - home feel.&#13;
When the row I was in stopped&#13;
rocking, my chair was still&#13;
knocking, thanks to the groove&#13;
that penetrated my body and&#13;
elevated my spirit. I looked&#13;
around to see i f anyone else was&#13;
"in the groove," and sure enough,&#13;
as th e show came to a close, all&#13;
sixteen hundred in the audience&#13;
rose to a standing ovation as they&#13;
swayed to the sound that still&#13;
coursed through their bodies. A&#13;
great show!&#13;
* # *&#13;
This was not, however, "the"&#13;
musical treasure that I am&#13;
looking for, but it is a dig in the&#13;
right direction, for in it, I have&#13;
found a clue. Stay with the sound&#13;
expedition as we journey into the&#13;
uncharted jungle of K.&#13;
Jazz artist&#13;
to perform&#13;
Pianist and recording artist&#13;
George Winston, whose latest&#13;
album "Winter Into Spring" hit&#13;
the top 30 jazz listings of both&#13;
Billboard and Cash Box&#13;
magazines last fall, will perform&#13;
at Parkside at 8 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
March 9, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater under&#13;
sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board (PAB).&#13;
All seats are reserved. Advance&#13;
tickets are available at the&#13;
Campus Union Information&#13;
Center. Admission is $4 ($2 for&#13;
UW-P students).&#13;
Winston, who describes himself&#13;
as a "folk pianist," blends impressionistic,&#13;
blues, black gospel,&#13;
Latin and stride in his work. His&#13;
tough - t o - c ategorize music has&#13;
scored with adult - contemporary,&#13;
pop and jazz audiences.&#13;
Winston began playing electric&#13;
keyboards in 1967 and switched to&#13;
acoustic piano in 1971. A year later&#13;
he made his first album originally&#13;
titled "Piano Solos" and re -&#13;
issued later under the title,&#13;
"Ballads and Blues."&#13;
His album of solo piano compositions,&#13;
"Autumn," was&#13;
recorded in June of 1980 and drew&#13;
praise from such well - known&#13;
show - biz journals as "Rolling&#13;
Stone," "Downbeat" and&#13;
"Billboard." Heavy air play on&#13;
both jazz and progressive rock&#13;
radio stations helped boost it to&#13;
become one of the biggest selling&#13;
acoustic LPs ever recorded on an&#13;
independent label.&#13;
Thursday, February 24, 1983&#13;
'Ghandi' is mixture of philosophy and politics&#13;
hbvy GG.. HHpelltgrepsconnn J— u- u 1 • J '&#13;
Special to the Ranger&#13;
When "Ghandi" opened locally&#13;
last week (at the Marc in Racine&#13;
and the Lake in Kenosha) my&#13;
husband and I went, even though&#13;
our plans were messed up by his&#13;
working too late to eat more than&#13;
a few crackers before we raced to&#13;
the Lake. Which turned out to be&#13;
pretty irrelevant by the time this&#13;
long (three hours plus) film was&#13;
over — and we'd watched the&#13;
Mahatma return to simplicity and&#13;
repeatedly fast to personalize the&#13;
suffering of the masses. It would&#13;
have been hard to eat at McDonald's&#13;
after all that.&#13;
It was the publicity that got to&#13;
us, media suckers that we are.&#13;
The commercials: millions of&#13;
people yelling "Ghandi-ji" in&#13;
chorus. The small man in white&#13;
homespun turns his gaze to look&#13;
kindly and sadly toward his&#13;
people. The write - ups: most&#13;
popular publications have carried&#13;
some form of propaganda on the&#13;
film during the past two months.&#13;
The Milwaukee Journal seems to&#13;
have reserved space for coverage&#13;
of some aspect of the film every&#13;
Sunday since New Year's.&#13;
Television: even PBS got into the&#13;
act last Sunday with "The Making&#13;
of Ghandi."&#13;
I went to see "Ghandi" ready to&#13;
be inspired by a great and compassionate&#13;
thinker and activist. I&#13;
wanted to see the recreation of a&#13;
human saint. While I got what I&#13;
ordered from Ben Kingsley and&#13;
others, I left the theater with more&#13;
than a measure of doubt about&#13;
Richard Attenborough, the man&#13;
behind the making of "Ghandi."&#13;
Attenborough has been on a&#13;
personal mission to make this&#13;
movie for the past twenty years.&#13;
He was primarily responsible for&#13;
raising funds for it and was the&#13;
major controlling influence at&#13;
every other stage of production.&#13;
The film's basic plot can be&#13;
jelled down to this: a member of a&#13;
people oppressed and exploited by&#13;
racism, religious discrimination,&#13;
and colonially enforced poverty&#13;
achieves the pseudo - status of t he&#13;
oppressor through education and&#13;
the resulting achievement of a&#13;
power position, that of a lawyer.&#13;
Ghandi returns to his people at the&#13;
film's beginning as a rather&#13;
dapper young man to find that&#13;
nothing he has gained can change&#13;
his basic status as a Kaffir. He can&#13;
still be kicked off a train in South&#13;
Africa for riding first class; he&#13;
can still be told "there are no&#13;
Indian lawyers," logic to the&#13;
contrary.&#13;
Ghandi begins to meet with&#13;
other token Indian exceptions and&#13;
begins to see that overthrowing&#13;
the oppressor means more than&#13;
becoming an oppressor. In&#13;
struggling to free non - whites in&#13;
South Africa, he also begins to see&#13;
there is work beyond fighting&#13;
individual pieces of legislation.&#13;
Ghandi is moved by his struggle to&#13;
return to his "roots" in India to&#13;
fight against colonial British&#13;
oppression, and to try to find a&#13;
way of relating to others as&#13;
equals. He thinks an oppressed&#13;
group can teach the oppressor the&#13;
value of h uman dignity over that&#13;
of property. He is somewhat&#13;
successful, but is assassinated&#13;
before he can show the Indian&#13;
people that systematic oppression&#13;
must be tackled within the nation&#13;
also.&#13;
One of the most beautiful&#13;
examples of Ghandi's large view&#13;
of th e world is the development of&#13;
his wife during the movie.&#13;
Married to Ghandi at 13, she is&#13;
hardly an independent creature at&#13;
first. But as Ghandi grows, she&#13;
also grows. After spending most of&#13;
her life (in the movie) huddled at&#13;
the fringes of the action with other&#13;
women, she evolves in starts and&#13;
stops into a woman who asserts&#13;
that if her husband is arrested,&#13;
she will speak to the people in his&#13;
place. She tells a western reporter&#13;
that to Ghandi "women and untouchables"&#13;
are the two groups&#13;
most oppressed in India.&#13;
Despite the fact that I was&#13;
deeply moved by "Ghandi," or&#13;
perhaps because of it, I am&#13;
disturbed by the making of it.&#13;
Among the many incongruities of&#13;
the movie's production:&#13;
• Although most of "Ghandi"&#13;
was filmed in a tropical climate&#13;
and focused on millions of people&#13;
living at subsistence level, the&#13;
overall portrait the movie painted&#13;
was as pristine as a Mr. Clean&#13;
commercial. The only fly in India&#13;
between the late 1920's and 40's&#13;
would appear to have been&#13;
hovering over the deathbed of a&#13;
man being systematically starved&#13;
off of his land by the British. Not&#13;
too realistic.&#13;
• This film purports to be about&#13;
a man loved and revered by all of&#13;
India. There are a few touching&#13;
scenes in which Ghandi interacts&#13;
with the common people individually,&#13;
but overwhelmingly&#13;
the majority of scenes revolve&#13;
around Ghandi's interaction with&#13;
the British. Is this film about the&#13;
pulling together of a great people&#13;
or about political negotiations. We&#13;
all know which type of plot is seen&#13;
as more exciting to the media.&#13;
• While "Ghandi" is about the&#13;
"success" of India's claim to&#13;
independence, the on - location&#13;
filming of it seems to be a strange&#13;
means to an end. A co - producer&#13;
on the PBS show explained that&#13;
hundreds of thousands of Indians&#13;
were needed to film some of the&#13;
great scenes (the Salt March, the&#13;
funeral) and that the company fed&#13;
about 7,000 people and "watered"&#13;
about 4,000. The Indian military&#13;
assisted them, they commandeered&#13;
local transportation,&#13;
and according to the co - producer&#13;
"it was a military project" to keep&#13;
order on the set. Is it possible for&#13;
the western world to enter the&#13;
eastern world in any other way?&#13;
• Along the same line of&#13;
thought — A ttenborough said on&#13;
the PBS show that "we must at all&#13;
times be aware of the susceptibility&#13;
of the people who are&#13;
around." In the Milwaukee&#13;
Journal Interview, he mentioned&#13;
that it was good footage to capture&#13;
the faces of the Indians in the&#13;
crowds when they first viewed&#13;
Ensemble to perform Schoenberg work&#13;
AArrnnnoMld Schoenberg's .m.. ast&lt; er- _&#13;
work for band, Theme and&#13;
Variations, will be presented by&#13;
the Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
under the direction of P rof. Mark&#13;
Eichner at 8 p.m. on Tuesday,&#13;
March 1, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The Variations were composed&#13;
in 1943, shortly after Schoenberg's&#13;
emigration to the U.S., where he&#13;
served on the faculty at the&#13;
University of California Los&#13;
Angeles (UCLA). Commissioned&#13;
by a publisher to write a major&#13;
piece for band, Schoenberg&#13;
produced what Eichner described&#13;
as "a mature work — rich with&#13;
expressive, lyrical melodies and a&#13;
compelling harmonic fabric."&#13;
The program also will feature&#13;
the Giles Farnaby Suite by&#13;
Gordon Jacob. Farnaby was a&#13;
16th century composer and a&#13;
builder of virginals, a&#13;
Renaissance keyboard instrument&#13;
similar to a harpsichord, and&#13;
many of his compositions are&#13;
included in the Fitzwilliam&#13;
Virginal Book, an anthology of&#13;
Renaissance keyboard pieces by&#13;
English composers. Jacob's Suite&#13;
contains eleven of these tunes&#13;
arranged in the symphonic setting&#13;
of the modern wind band.&#13;
The concert also will include&#13;
Girolamo Frescobaldi's Toccata,&#13;
a transcription from a Baroque&#13;
organ piece; Four Scottish&#13;
Dances by Malcolm Arnold, who&#13;
has composed movie scores and&#13;
theme music in addition to&#13;
"serious" works; and Robert E&#13;
Jager's Third Suite, a three -&#13;
movement satirical piece. Jager&#13;
is a winner of the prestigious&#13;
Ostwald Award of the American&#13;
Bandmaster's Association.&#13;
The 41 - member Wind Ensemble&#13;
will present a concert on&#13;
May 10 on campus also.&#13;
Admission is $2 for the general&#13;
public; $l for students and senior&#13;
citizens.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
announces a&#13;
SOUL FOOD&#13;
LUNCHEON&#13;
(in celebration of Black History MonthJ&#13;
FEATURING:&#13;
• Deep Fried Catfish • Southern Fried Chicken&#13;
• Red Beans 'N Rice • Black Eyed Peas&#13;
• Collard &amp; Mustard Greens • Candied Yams&#13;
• Cracklin Bread • Sweet Potato Pie&#13;
FRIDAY, FEB. 23&#13;
UNION DI NI NG ROOM 1 1 am- 2 p m&#13;
The Kind' highlights Union events |&#13;
The Chicago rock band The&#13;
Kind will perform a mini - concert&#13;
at 9 p.m. on Friday, March 11 in&#13;
Union Square. Advance tickets, at&#13;
the Union Information Center, are&#13;
$2 for students and $3 for guests.&#13;
Admission is $4 a t the door.&#13;
The Kind, whose debut album of&#13;
the same name was ranked by&#13;
Chicago radio station WLS as one&#13;
Chicagofest performance last&#13;
year: "The band combines&#13;
touches of Beatlesque melodicism&#13;
with the sort of muscle needed to&#13;
reach the 80's rock audience.''&#13;
McLeese said the group has a&#13;
good chance to "break beyond the&#13;
Chicago club scene through&#13;
national radio exposure."&#13;
Lead singer and rhythm&#13;
THE KIND&#13;
of the "top 20" most popular LP's&#13;
last fall, and whose single "Loved&#13;
By You" was ranked among the&#13;
station's top 20 most popular&#13;
singles, stresses hard - driving&#13;
"power pop" and entertaining&#13;
showmanship.&#13;
The group has been praised by&#13;
Chicago - area rock music&#13;
reviewers, including Don&#13;
McLeese of the Chicago Sun&#13;
Times, who wrote of The Kind's&#13;
guitarist Frank Jalovec&#13;
established the group in the mid -&#13;
1970's and he's the sole remaining&#13;
original member. For the past two&#13;
years The Kind has been composed&#13;
of Jalovec, lead guitarist&#13;
Frank Capek, bassist Mark&#13;
Gardner and drummer Frank&#13;
Sberno, all of whom had performed&#13;
with popular musical&#13;
groups previously.&#13;
The performance is being&#13;
sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
as the executive committee of the&#13;
Senate. The University Committee&#13;
sets the agenda for the&#13;
Senate, makes recommendations&#13;
for changes and policy, supervises&#13;
activities of faculty committees,&#13;
and serves as the final court of&#13;
appeal from the decisions of&#13;
faculty committees.&#13;
Overall there are approximately&#13;
twenty - five faculty&#13;
Kingsley as Ghandi. On the PBS&#13;
show one humorously - intended&#13;
segment was about Indian males&#13;
being dressed and groomed for&#13;
filming who had problems with&#13;
haircuts given by women because&#13;
of cultural and religious taboos.&#13;
Their hair was cut anywav I&#13;
guess.&#13;
• Several Indians on the PBS&#13;
show expressed objections about&#13;
the film. Most controversial is the&#13;
depiction of Ghandi demonstrating&#13;
to western reporters his&#13;
marriage ceremony. Evidently&#13;
the Indian Hindu view of private&#13;
matters is quite different from our&#13;
western view. At any rate, Indian&#13;
followers of Ghandi have stated&#13;
that the film, in part or entirety is&#13;
sacrilegious. Attenborough&#13;
counters this by asserting that&#13;
since no Indian made a film about&#13;
Ghandi in 33 years, he did one&#13;
Very sensitive.&#13;
"Ghandi" is a beautiful film&#13;
about the spiritual growth of a&#13;
man and those around him. But&#13;
the making of the movie contrasted&#13;
with the recent slaughter&#13;
of immigrating Moslems by the&#13;
Hindu majority brings home the&#13;
point — has the western world&#13;
^rned anything lasting from&#13;
Ghandi the man or Ghandi the&#13;
principle?&#13;
Triple Threat'&#13;
committees. Of these, Personnel&#13;
Review, Research and Creative&#13;
Activity, and Course and&#13;
Curriculum have the most&#13;
prestige. In addition, there are&#13;
committees that serve certain&#13;
aspects of university life such as:&#13;
Library / Learning Center,&#13;
Athletics, Bookstore, and&#13;
Academic Actions.&#13;
Community service involves&#13;
faculty serving as consultants to&#13;
private businesses, school boards,&#13;
and local government agencies&#13;
Prior to the budget cuts of the last&#13;
couple of &gt;cars, Parkside even&#13;
had a number of outreach institutes&#13;
or centers which provided&#13;
various services to the community.&#13;
To encourage faculty&#13;
participation in community affairs,&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
established a Distinguished&#13;
S6rvice Award in faculty&#13;
outreach.&#13;
Although service is generally&#13;
looked upon as the least important&#13;
of t he three evaluation criteria, it&#13;
is however an aspect that no&#13;
faculty member could afford to&#13;
ignore or denegrate. While no&#13;
faculty member could hope to&#13;
make her / his career solely on&#13;
university or faculty service, only&#13;
those with superstar credentials&#13;
m teaching and researching could&#13;
dare to avoid this responsibility&#13;
all together.&#13;
AUTHOR'S NOTE: This is the&#13;
last of my series entitled&#13;
Academic Games." I hope that&#13;
as result, the Parkside student has&#13;
a greater understanding of the&#13;
University and of how it functions.&#13;
I would like to thank all who gave&#13;
me the insight that I needed;&#13;
especially Professor John&#13;
Buenker. Watch for my new series&#13;
m upcoming Ranger issues.&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Regency Mall/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Sports Reporter tries the Body Shoppe | Women's Track&#13;
by Carol Kortendick&#13;
After breaking my bathroom&#13;
scale at home (not due to the&#13;
added poundage from Christmas,&#13;
mind you) I seriously contemplated&#13;
yet another one of my&#13;
famous diets. The thought fled my&#13;
mind just as quickly as it popped&#13;
up when whiffs of bacon and eggs&#13;
beckoned me to the breakfast&#13;
table. Upon arriving at school that&#13;
day, however, I was soon&#13;
reminded again, when I came&#13;
upon a rather small, obscure&#13;
poster with its words blazoned out&#13;
towards me: THE BODY&#13;
SHOPPE, lose weight in ten&#13;
weeks, FREE PROGRAM! Being&#13;
a poor college student, the last&#13;
detail really captured my attention,&#13;
so I headed down to&#13;
Molinaro where the Student&#13;
Health Center awaited me.&#13;
I entered rather nervously, with&#13;
thoughts running through my&#13;
head such as, "Will they weigh me&#13;
in front of the entire student&#13;
body?" and "Is there any hope for&#13;
me?" An assistant warmly&#13;
greeted me and took my name.&#13;
She explained in some detail what&#13;
the program entailed. The&#13;
program is a personal account of&#13;
your weight loss (hopefully not&#13;
your weight gain). She then informed&#13;
me to come in next week&#13;
to weigh in and begin the&#13;
program.&#13;
Great," I thought rather&#13;
smugly. "I can lose an easy 10&#13;
pounds by starving myself this&#13;
week so I'm not the heftiest person&#13;
on the list." Well, as soon as I left,&#13;
I passed an innocent looking bake&#13;
sale dying for some hard earned&#13;
money. After cleaning up all their&#13;
goodies, I locked myself into an&#13;
unoccupied lavatory stall and&#13;
devoured every last morsel. So&#13;
much for fasting!&#13;
The next week I weighed in with&#13;
some reluctance yet determined&#13;
to rid myself of this excess&#13;
baggage. I had to then record my&#13;
beginning weight and my desired&#13;
goal.&#13;
The Body Shoppe supplied me&#13;
with my own personal folder&#13;
containing information on&#13;
nutrition, calories and a graph to&#13;
chart my hopeful weight loss.&#13;
With all that paraphernalia, one&#13;
couldn't help losing weight. I left&#13;
with a determined air, ready to&#13;
conquer the world. I passed by&#13;
another yet "innocent" bake sale&#13;
without flinching an inch. So far so&#13;
good. Stay tuned for further&#13;
reports of THE BODY SHOPPE&#13;
and my desperate attempts to lose&#13;
weight.&#13;
Spino gears up for a fast season&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
A familiar scene at the P. U.&#13;
gym this year has been Deb Spino&#13;
flying in at exactly 4:15 p. m. for&#13;
the afternoon workout with the&#13;
track team. As her team mates&#13;
say hello, Spino tries to say hello&#13;
to everyone while still getting to&#13;
practice on time, which starts at&#13;
4:15 p. m.&#13;
Spino has dominated the&#13;
Parkside running scene these past&#13;
two years. Now a national&#13;
champion four times over, Spino's&#13;
start in running was far from&#13;
unusual. A graduate from&#13;
Tremper High School in Kenosha,&#13;
she began running her sophomore&#13;
year. She was junior varsity&#13;
quarter miler and mile relay&#13;
member. Her junior year she&#13;
made the varsity team as a mile&#13;
relay member. Her senior year&#13;
she went out for Cross - Country&#13;
although she finished the season&#13;
injured. In track that year she&#13;
qualified for the state meet in not&#13;
only the mile relay but also the&#13;
mile run. Spino finished fourth at&#13;
state in 5:09, an impressive time&#13;
by any standards.&#13;
That state meet could have been&#13;
the end of Spino's running career.&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
Womeldorf combines Sports and School successfully&#13;
by Carra Carrello&#13;
Erik Womeldorf is a 20 year old&#13;
sophomore who has a double&#13;
major in computer science and&#13;
business.&#13;
Erik's been playing basketball&#13;
as long as he can remember. "I&#13;
followed in my older brother's&#13;
footsteps. I've always been tall so&#13;
I felt forced to play, but I enjoyed&#13;
playing too." Since Erik (6' 8" and&#13;
225) was tall he felt clumsy.&#13;
"Playing basketball made me less&#13;
embarassed," he said.&#13;
Erik played on an all - state&#13;
team and in an all conference&#13;
games in high school. He has also&#13;
received awards for his grades. In&#13;
high school, at Mound - Westonka,&#13;
he was on honor roll. At college he&#13;
is on the dean's list, both at&#13;
Augsburg and at Parkside.&#13;
The stereotype of being a&#13;
dumb jock bothers Erik. "The&#13;
first impression everyone feels&#13;
right away is you're dumb and&#13;
then you have to prove yourself.&#13;
With some people it's not worth&#13;
trying to prove you're smart, so I&#13;
Sports&#13;
Calendar Men's Basketball&#13;
Feb. 24, Thursday, St.&#13;
Scholastica. HERE 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Feb. 26, Sa turday. Eau Claire.&#13;
HERE 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Women's Basketball&#13;
Feb. 25, Friday. Carroll College.&#13;
HERE 3:30 p. m.&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Feb. 26, Saturday, Northwestern&#13;
Invitational. Away.&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
Feb. 25-6, Fri. - Saturday,&#13;
door Nationals. Kansas City.&#13;
In-&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
Feb. 25-6, Fri. - Saturday. Indoor&#13;
Nationals. Kansas City.&#13;
let them think I'm dumb." He&#13;
feels school is very important and&#13;
he sacrifices a lot to get good&#13;
grades. Erik received a full&#13;
scholarship to Parkside, which he&#13;
was really happy about. "I wasn't&#13;
sure how I was going to pay for&#13;
school," he admitted. He was only&#13;
getting financial aid at Augsburg.&#13;
Even though Erik likes playing&#13;
basketball there are some&#13;
drawbacks. Much time is spent&#13;
practicing or the road trips. The&#13;
team practices from 3 - 7 p. m.&#13;
after school. "After you get out of&#13;
practice, get back to the Y, make&#13;
supper and clean up, it's already&#13;
eight - thirty and there is still&#13;
homework to do." Erik continued,&#13;
"People think jocks are dumb.&#13;
We're not. There just isn't enough&#13;
time." Other drawbacks are&#13;
always being tired and sore.&#13;
The pros do out - weigh the cons&#13;
because he is able to go to school&#13;
for free or at least cheaper. What&#13;
he likes most is just being able to&#13;
play and the competition. "Being&#13;
on the team, you feel you fit in&#13;
because you have people to hang&#13;
around with." He wishes there&#13;
was more fan support. "The&#13;
crowds aren't any bigger than&#13;
when I played for high school. You&#13;
still get nervous, but it's good&#13;
because it gets the adrenalin&#13;
pumping."&#13;
Erik likes Parkside because he&#13;
gets to meet new people. "I get&#13;
homesick but it's nothing I can't&#13;
live with." Even though Parkside&#13;
is a commuter college, Erik&#13;
recommends it to people in sports&#13;
even if they don't live in this area.&#13;
Coach Rees Johnson commented,&#13;
"Erik has really improved.&#13;
At Augsburg he sat out&#13;
second semester, and sat out first&#13;
semester here. (Because of&#13;
transferring.) He started slow, he&#13;
shows tremendous improvement&#13;
and works hard. Erik isn't afraid&#13;
to get physical. He's improved in&#13;
jumping and offense."&#13;
Coach J ohnson feels Erik went&#13;
to Augsburg because it was close&#13;
to home. His brother was there&#13;
and they have a good education&#13;
program. He also feels Erik's&#13;
brother had a lot to do with Erik&#13;
transferring to Parkside. His&#13;
brother told Erik what a good&#13;
coach Johnson is. So when&#13;
Johnson came to Parkside, Erik&#13;
came too. Erik has enormous&#13;
respect for Johnson, "I couldn't&#13;
play for anyone else. He is great."&#13;
Coach Johnson has only admiration&#13;
for Erik. "Erik is a fine&#13;
person. He has a lot of character&#13;
and dedication. He's on the dean's&#13;
list with a 3.7 (grade point&#13;
average)," Johnson continued.&#13;
"Erik's not afraid to work. He's&#13;
very goal oriented. Erik's an&#13;
achiever and I'm very pleased&#13;
with him."&#13;
"Erik will be a success no&#13;
matter what he does," Coach&#13;
Johnson added, "When Erik's a&#13;
Senior he will be respected and&#13;
known by Parkside opponents."&#13;
After graduation, she decided to&#13;
attend the Kenosha Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute to obtain an&#13;
Aviation degree. When she&#13;
enrolled, Gateway did not have a&#13;
Cross - Country or Track team.&#13;
"There were some rumors that a&#13;
team was going to be forming.&#13;
Then Coach DeWitt was hired as&#13;
coach and I went out. I wasn't&#13;
expecting to run at all," she&#13;
commented.&#13;
At Gateway, Spino competed in&#13;
Cross - Country and Track where&#13;
for two years she was a junior&#13;
college national champion.&#13;
After completing her degree,&#13;
Spino received offers to run at the&#13;
University of Arizona, but she&#13;
declined as she felt it would be in&#13;
her best interest to keep the same&#13;
coach for two more years and&#13;
enrolled at Parkside. "I like how&#13;
Coach Mike coaches. I've got his&#13;
pattern of coaching down and&#13;
every year I've run under him,&#13;
I've improved." she said.&#13;
Coach DeWitt feels that Spino&#13;
has been one of the easiest&#13;
athletes to coach he has ever&#13;
coached. Since he began coaching&#13;
her four years ago he feels she has&#13;
improved much more mentally&#13;
than physically. "Deb has always&#13;
had natural ability. Her times&#13;
have improved but I think her&#13;
confidence has improved much&#13;
more. She has le arned to believe&#13;
in herself and her ability," he&#13;
commented.&#13;
Spino's talent has allowed her to&#13;
travel all over the country competing&#13;
in the various national&#13;
meets. This past summer, she&#13;
competed for the USA&#13;
racewalking team in the World&#13;
Championships held in Denmark&#13;
and Norway. Last year was her&#13;
first season competing as a race&#13;
walker. The traveling has&#13;
provided many good memories&#13;
and she considers those th e highpoints&#13;
of her career.&#13;
When asked about lowpoints,&#13;
her blue eyes had a far away look&#13;
and she softly stated, "Injuries."&#13;
For a moment, Spino seemed lost&#13;
in a world far from Parkside.&#13;
"Injuries are the real lows. It can&#13;
get very depressing."&#13;
Since December, Spino has been&#13;
hampered by a flare up pain in her&#13;
knee. This past Sunday, the pain&#13;
was so intens e she was unable to&#13;
even racewalk, which is not as&#13;
strenuous on the knees as running.&#13;
"If it wasn't for racewalking, I&#13;
think I would die. I need to keep&#13;
competitive. Walking has really&#13;
kept me in shape," she commented.&#13;
A self - admitted perfectionist,&#13;
Spino always sees ro om for improvement&#13;
in herself. She trains&#13;
year round. In fall, she competes&#13;
in Cross - Country, which is&#13;
quickly followed by track and now&#13;
that she has begun racewalking,&#13;
her summer will be spent competing&#13;
in those races, which&#13;
usually are 5 kilometers.&#13;
Spino has run every event from&#13;
the 440 yd. run to the marathon.&#13;
She considers the 1500 meter and&#13;
the mile her all - time favorite&#13;
event. "I don't like the very long&#13;
distance races but I think it is&#13;
because I really haven't put a&#13;
consistent effort into it. I guess&#13;
what you concentrate on the most&#13;
is what you'll do the best in," she&#13;
stated.&#13;
Spino's eligibility is up at the&#13;
end of the track season. Her future&#13;
plans are to concentrate on race&#13;
walking. She will be moving to&#13;
Colorado Springs, CO. to live near&#13;
and to use the facilities of the&#13;
Olympic Training Center.&#13;
DeWitt feels that if Spino concentrates&#13;
on the racewalk, she&#13;
will establish herself as the best&#13;
woman race walker in the&#13;
country.&#13;
Last year, Spino was the indoor&#13;
/ outdoor national champion in the&#13;
mile. Although her knee has been&#13;
bothering her much of the indoor&#13;
season, it is a certain possibility&#13;
that she will be back to defend her&#13;
title in Kansas City at the indoor&#13;
national meet this weekend.&#13;
The Harsh Reality&#13;
"Sometimes running can be so&#13;
frustrating. I don't go out at night&#13;
with my friends because I have a&#13;
race or a 20 miler the next day. Or&#13;
I will go past a vending machine&#13;
and want to get a Snickers, but I&#13;
won't because being a fat runner&#13;
is embarrassing. Everyday every&#13;
run brings pain. I try to keep a&#13;
positive attitude and think that&#13;
tomorrow will be better, but it&#13;
never is. The next day there is a&#13;
new pain to add to the lsi t. And the&#13;
old ones never seem to go away.&#13;
When I complain, people will tell&#13;
me to think of all the benefits I get&#13;
from running, but I can only think&#13;
'what benefits?' I see no improvements,&#13;
no gains. Only pain."&#13;
— A Parkside athlete's answer&#13;
when asked how training was&#13;
going.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING 5Va% Interest H Your Daily&#13;
Balance is $500.00 or Morel&#13;
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7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726-75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis.&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
TO HELP YOU 6R0W!&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
Thursday, February 24,1983&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••,* Cpr^DT KICW/C&#13;
Me n' s Wr e s t l i n g WI N 1 I N I -W0&#13;
by Maureen Burke&#13;
On Friday, Feb. 18, the Men's&#13;
Wrestling team competed in the&#13;
'83 Midwest Regionals here at&#13;
Parkside. The Rangers took&#13;
second place overall with a total of&#13;
59 points. There were four&#13;
Parkside wrestlers who qualified&#13;
for the NCAA Nationals on Feb 25&#13;
&amp; 26 in Fargo, N.D. They were&#13;
Mike Vania (126) who took 2nd&#13;
Mike Winter (142) who took 2nd,&#13;
Ted Keyes (177) who took 2nd, and&#13;
Mike Muckerheide (150) who too k&#13;
1st pl ace.&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
The Men's Indoor Track season&#13;
is beginning to draw to a close. In&#13;
the past two weeks they competed&#13;
at Illinois Benedictine College and&#13;
in the qualifying meet for&#13;
Nationals at UW-Oshkosh. In&#13;
Illinois, the men came in fourth&#13;
with 36 poin ts. At the qualifying&#13;
meet no one qualified for&#13;
nationals, but a few did place. The&#13;
meet at Oshkosh was basically an&#13;
individual competition and points&#13;
were not awarded.&#13;
At Benedictine, every team&#13;
member was entered in an individual&#13;
event. Despite the fact&#13;
that the team has few individuals&#13;
who compete in field events, those&#13;
that participated in the distance&#13;
track events did very well. In the&#13;
mile, Andy Serrano took 2nd&#13;
(4:4.8.), A1 Correa was 3rd in the&#13;
600 (1:21.28 .). The 880 yielded two&#13;
places for Parkside; Rich Miller&#13;
placed 1st (2:06.49), and a 4th&#13;
from Jim Brewer (2:10.62). In the&#13;
1000, Glenn Schultz placed 2nd&#13;
(2:25.69).&#13;
"My men are mostly distance&#13;
men, and that's where the teams'&#13;
strength lies," said Lucian Rosa&#13;
in response to the men's performance.&#13;
Jim Miller and Andy&#13;
Serrano took 2nd and 3rd&#13;
respectively in the two mile event.&#13;
Miller's time was 10:10.84 with&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
TV11.U, . MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
Tr, • my home' Professional, speedy&#13;
serv.ce, student rates. Call Debbie at 681&#13;
BOOK SALE: "Presidents, Politics, and&#13;
Americana". A special collection at The&#13;
Old Book Corner, Martha Merrell's&#13;
Bookstore, 312-6th street, Racine. Used and&#13;
i ofTd »/!n.d ,ltles at Paperback prices.&#13;
LOST: Wristwatch in WLLC restroom. If&#13;
found, contact 657-0204.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
LOR I S.: Would a S4000 snowmobile be worth&#13;
another weekend together? James P.S&#13;
Thanks for the memories.&#13;
BRAD: If I could have a dream come true, it&#13;
surely would be me-n-you. —Evening Echo&#13;
BRAD: Let s make some memories, take a&#13;
chance, I'm not looking for promises See&#13;
me when you can. Evening Echo&#13;
dapv.L: Y°VKCarry my luS9age? Sharon&#13;
naDvh- ^ my lu99«ge? Jeff&#13;
dakYL: I lost my luggaqe! Steve&#13;
WANTED T° BUY: Set of soTt luggage. Ed&#13;
MAP W V°U p,ease exP,ain 'luggage'!&#13;
""J?RY: I'm STARVED!! Sharon&#13;
CAROL: The aspirin didn't work, taking&#13;
TnrcUS»^midvice " Tbanks! Tori&#13;
»if 5 stened ,0 me complain&#13;
about my pain without yelling - Thanks, I&#13;
really appreciate it! Tori&#13;
.T2.R,: " s 'ust 'cause we love you.&#13;
WOMENS TRACK: Good luck in nationals!&#13;
Keep strong!&#13;
floor of the library? C'mon,&#13;
wa!TM?r,°9/n?' You only live 5 m away. Think of CR's rep. in.&#13;
When M and B drives you crazy, try&#13;
thumb exercises, and see if the schpilkies&#13;
go away, if they don't, you can call, you&#13;
know that.&#13;
CCChhrrisi«sl!ef, fIU dSidnA Ht gAeRt5 m,! yH porwe sweanst ,B aan,tdim woere'll&#13;
have to v.sit that Marci with our lawn&#13;
chairs real soon!! Ed&#13;
V«ITE1!E: ' *aven't seen you doing your&#13;
thumb exercises lately. Why not"&#13;
PAT: Who's doing their best to try and find&#13;
their way through?? Pat&#13;
M?LLY,L Don't 9et overworked and unaerpaid.&#13;
Ed&#13;
STACEY: Sorry I missed your call, but I'll&#13;
return It soon.&#13;
Happy Bir,hday a little late. Better&#13;
late than never. Sorry I missed the party.&#13;
Pat&#13;
CB: Thanks for the green M&amp;M's! Now I need&#13;
orange!! J BP&#13;
DEAR DARLENE: Thanks for the Birthday&#13;
present. What do I get next year? Jeff&#13;
THE RANGER ENDORSES Mickey Mouse&#13;
for President!&#13;
DONALD DUCK for V.P.&#13;
JSQ: Just keep believing in yourself. Things&#13;
will get better. Tori&#13;
"r-you are the queen of my life!!&#13;
JULIE NEU: We want you!! WAFU - T he JS&#13;
Society&#13;
JOANNE H.: Aren't you glad your neighbors&#13;
nA0VT1uVH!S?,Le,S have a G" Dead Par»V&#13;
DAVE H.: Only one more big bash before&#13;
Tney go.&#13;
DAN: Friends are friends, but buddies share&#13;
feather pillows, octapus's,etc.&#13;
«£ure in ,he ,op ten ,or D.A.'s.&#13;
MEN OF PU: Wo-o here she comes. Watch&#13;
out boys, she'll chew you up!!&#13;
JULIE: How many notches do you have in&#13;
your lipstick case? JS&#13;
Serrano close on his heels at&#13;
10:11.84. Parkside's mile relay&#13;
team took a 2nd (3:46.04). The&#13;
team consisted of Correa, Pm-&#13;
Pheron, Schultz, and Miller.&#13;
Team members Rich Miller and&#13;
Jim Brewer commented on the&#13;
Oshkosh meet and the prospect of&#13;
competing in nationals. Brewer&#13;
noted, "We have been doing O.K.&#13;
despite all events not being&#13;
covered, and this makes for the&#13;
lack of points. But individually, I&#13;
think I should do better than I&#13;
have." Miller added, "I am&#13;
pleased with the races, but not&#13;
with my times. Now I just try to&#13;
relax. I'm just now getting my&#13;
racing edge back."&#13;
The Oshkosh Titan Open Meet&#13;
yielded a few places for the&#13;
Parkside men. In the track event&#13;
Glenn Schultz placed 4th in the&#13;
1000 yard run (2:21.4). In field&#13;
events with the Pole Vault was&#13;
John Anderson who placed 4th&#13;
with 13'6".&#13;
In the two mile walk, Jim&#13;
Heinng, formerly from Parkside,&#13;
now competing for Athletic Attic,&#13;
broke his old meet record of&#13;
12:50.3. The new record is 12:28.2.&#13;
Will Preischl was second in&#13;
13:29.8. Along with Coach Mike&#13;
DeWitt, these three men will be&#13;
competing in the TAC meet in&#13;
New York cm Friday.&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
In action on Feb. 20, the&#13;
following games in the Men's IM&#13;
basketball league were played:&#13;
Lone Rangers 48 — Grit's Gunners&#13;
32&#13;
The Hawks 66 — The Clash 57&#13;
McNulty's 60 — Olson's 40&#13;
The Clash 73 —Olson's 46&#13;
Reign of Pain 83—S.G.'s 59&#13;
The Why won by forfeit over The&#13;
Misfits.&#13;
Top scorers for the night were&#13;
B. McGonnegle with 27 points for&#13;
The Hawks, J. Wang with 26 fo r&#13;
The Clash, and Steve Kollman&#13;
with 20 for Olson's.&#13;
Standings in the league are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
McNulty's&#13;
The Why&#13;
The MisFits&#13;
Reign of Pain&#13;
The Hawks&#13;
S.G.'s&#13;
Lone Rangers&#13;
The Clash&#13;
Olson's&#13;
Grit's Gunners&#13;
4-0&#13;
4-0&#13;
4-1&#13;
3-1&#13;
3-1&#13;
2-3&#13;
1-3&#13;
1-5&#13;
0-3&#13;
0-5&#13;
REMINDER to all intramural&#13;
badminton players — Monday&#13;
afternoon is your day. Plan on&#13;
bringing a friend to play between&#13;
noon and 2 p.m.&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
by Carra Cariello&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 15, th e Rangers&#13;
played against Milwaukee. The&#13;
final score was 83-69 in&#13;
Milwaukee's favor. Milwaukee&#13;
had 22 turnovers, where Parkside&#13;
only had five. Coach Johnson&#13;
commented on the game, "We've&#13;
been up and down like a rollercoaster&#13;
this year. They (The&#13;
Rangers) shot well, but they&#13;
weren't good on defense."&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 17, the Rangers&#13;
took on Lewis in a home game.&#13;
The final score of this game was&#13;
78-62 in Lewis' favor. The Rangers&#13;
made two out of eight freethrows,&#13;
where Lewis made 22 out of 27.&#13;
Coach Johnson feels the loss for&#13;
this game was, "part referees and&#13;
because we're not aggressive&#13;
enough on offense or defense."&#13;
Tim Opps started in this game.&#13;
Coach Johnson feels, "His defense&#13;
is down a bit. He will be playing&#13;
tomorrow." The game is against&#13;
Northern Michigan.&#13;
Coach Johnson had these&#13;
comments Friday before they left&#13;
for the game against Northern&#13;
Michigan. "It should be an interesting&#13;
game, because there&#13;
seems to be a lot of rivalry between&#13;
the two schools."&#13;
The Rangers beat the Michigan&#13;
Wildcats 78-76 on Saturday. The&#13;
Wildcats were winning by half&#13;
time with a score of 43-30. The&#13;
Rangers came back by playing&#13;
with a solid defense. The high&#13;
scorers of this game were Brian&#13;
Diggins with 17, Erik Womeldorf&#13;
with 16, and Tom Trotter with 13&#13;
points.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 24, the Rangers&#13;
will play against St. Scholastica.&#13;
The Rangers were suppose to play&#13;
them on Feb. 12, but St.&#13;
Scholastica had to cancel because&#13;
they had too many games.&#13;
On Saturday, Feb. 26, the&#13;
Rangers will take on Eau Claire.&#13;
Both of these are home games&#13;
starting at 7:30. Coach Johnson&#13;
predicts that the Rangers will win&#13;
both games.&#13;
The Women's Track team's last&#13;
meet before indoor nationals was&#13;
held in Milwaukee last Saturday.&#13;
Team scores were: Milwaukee -&#13;
105, Parkside - 51, Carroll College -&#13;
18, UI - Chicago - 16, and&#13;
Milwaukee Tech - 14.&#13;
The team had three first place&#13;
finishes. The two mile relay team&#13;
composed of Dona Driscoll, Jane&#13;
Roszykowski, Sue Meyer and Deb&#13;
Spino won in 9:34.1. Driscoll was&#13;
also first in the 600 yard run&#13;
(1:31.3) and Spino was also first in&#13;
the 1000 yard run (2:42.7).&#13;
The 880 relay team composed of&#13;
Sandy Peligrino, Carol Romano,&#13;
Shirley Gunther, and Lin&#13;
Pfilestifer was second (1:59.6).&#13;
Sue Meyer was second in the mile&#13;
(5:20.6). Pfilestifer was second in&#13;
the 440 yard run (1:08.1). The mile&#13;
relay team composed of&#13;
Pfilestifer, Karen Jacobsen,&#13;
Peligrino, and Romano was also&#13;
second (4:31.6).&#13;
Jacobsen was third in the 1000&#13;
(2:51.2). Karling Thurman was&#13;
also third in the 60 yard dash (7.5).&#13;
Vicki Stacy recorded a season&#13;
best in the high jump, 5-0, getting&#13;
fifth place.&#13;
Gunther putted 30-6, which was&#13;
good for fifth place in the shot put.&#13;
Michelle Gross also finished&#13;
fourth in the two mile (12:36.3).&#13;
The indoor national meet will be&#13;
held in Kansas City, MO this&#13;
weekend. Trials will be on Friday&#13;
and finals will be held on Saturday&#13;
night. Those competing are: Spino&#13;
(mile), Meyer (two mile),&#13;
Driscoll (600 yard) and the&#13;
distance medley relay.&#13;
Good times offer:&#13;
Seagram&#13;
Sr.t®®1\ °z-glass mug for sale. It's the two-fisted&#13;
Slto 9 times and salute your 9reat taste&#13;
in drinks. Why not start a collection? Please send this&#13;
coupon, along with a check or money order for $4.95&#13;
nff mnnnScash P,ease)t0: Seagram's 7Crown Mua&#13;
Offer, P.O. Box 1622, New York, N.Y. 10152&#13;
Name&#13;
Address.&#13;
City. .State.&#13;
Specify quantity.&#13;
-2'P-&#13;
—Amount enclosed $_&#13;
Offer expires January 31,1984. No purchase necessary.&#13;
New York residents add 8.25% sales tax.&#13;
Please allow 4 to 6 weeks for shipment.&#13;
WPKC24&#13;
Seagram's&#13;
01982 SEAGRAM DISTlUfRS CO., NYC. AMERJCAN^WHISKEY-A</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 11, issue 20, February 24, 1983</text>
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                <text>1983-02-24</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          <element elementId="38">
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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